Miloch
October 12th 18, 01:19 AM
more at
https://foxtrotalpha.jalopnik.com/america-s-fighter-fleets-are-in-terrible-shape-but-matt-1829684952
U.S. Secretary of Defense James Mattis has ordered this of the armed services:
get your fighter jets ready for action. Mattis has instructed the services he
wants four out of five fighter jets ready for combat within one year—which is a
far cry from current levels.
The number would go a long way toward restoring America’s aging and somewhat
dilapidated fighter fleet, but it is also an audacious, possibly even hopeless
goal that will require more time, attention, money and resources than the
services can currently spare.
For years, the Pentagon’s fleet of aircraft have been in a slow but steady
spiral to declining readiness. The Air Force, Navy, and Marine Corps have dealt
with a nonstop series of crises, starting in 9/11, then the invasion of Iraq,
operations in Libya and Somalia, and the Islamic State. Joining that list are
new emerging tensions with Russia in Europe and China in the western Pacific.
The services have pushed their fleets of ever-aging planes harder to keep up
with the demand, while replacement jets were late in coming.
At the same time, budgetary issues—including overruns—have plagued the armed
services. The military has struggled to operate within the confines of the 2011
Budget Control Act that trimmed federal spending. Even in relatively stable
years bickering over the federal budget often resulted in the passage of
so-called “continuing resolutions.”
These resolutions, which doled out just enough money to keep the government
going while the political fighting carried on, were an inefficient means of
spending money and played havoc with the Pentagon’s budgetary planning.
As a result, fighter fleets are in poor shape. In 2017, only 70.22 percent of
the Air Force’s F-16C fighter jets were considered ready for action. Just under
half of F-22A Raptors, or 49.01 percent, are ready. In the Navy and Marine
Corps, 44 percent of F/A-18 Hornets are ready for action, although those older
aircraft are relegated to the Navy Reserve and Marine Corps. The Navy’s Super
Hornet force stands at 53 percent.
The F-35 program is, of course, no exception. In March, the office that manages
the F-35 program reported readiness stood at 51 percent across all three
versions and all three services. Drilling down a bit readiness levels varied
wildly depending on the age of the plane: earlier production F-35s averaged only
40 to 50 percent readiness while newer planes averaged 70 to 75 percent.
(By the way, just today, the Pentagon grounded all F-35s. At issue is “suspect
fuel tubes” believed to be the cause of last month’s crash. Great.)
Eighty-five percent readiness is considered “good” in peacetime. Typically
readiness levels jump during wartime, as maintainers push to get aircraft ready
for combat and Congress and the Pentagon open the funding floodgates. In 1990
Air Force fighter jet readiness levels averaged 85-90 percent—numbers that
surged an average of six percent during the 1991 Persian Gulf War.
And so yesterday, Defense News broke the story that Mattis has ordered the
services to reach 80 percent readiness across the F-16, F-22, F/A-18, and F-35
fleets within one year. In a memo to the Pentagon leadership, Mattis stated,
“For change to be effective and efficient, we must focus on meeting our most
critical priorities first. These include achieving a minimum of 80 percent
mission capability rates for our FY 2019 Navy and Air Force inventories—assets
that form the backbone of our tactical air power—and reducing these platforms
operational and maintenance costs every year starting FY 2019.”
more at
https://foxtrotalpha.jalopnik.com/america-s-fighter-fleets-are-in-terrible-shape-but-matt-1829684952
*
https://foxtrotalpha.jalopnik.com/america-s-fighter-fleets-are-in-terrible-shape-but-matt-1829684952
U.S. Secretary of Defense James Mattis has ordered this of the armed services:
get your fighter jets ready for action. Mattis has instructed the services he
wants four out of five fighter jets ready for combat within one year—which is a
far cry from current levels.
The number would go a long way toward restoring America’s aging and somewhat
dilapidated fighter fleet, but it is also an audacious, possibly even hopeless
goal that will require more time, attention, money and resources than the
services can currently spare.
For years, the Pentagon’s fleet of aircraft have been in a slow but steady
spiral to declining readiness. The Air Force, Navy, and Marine Corps have dealt
with a nonstop series of crises, starting in 9/11, then the invasion of Iraq,
operations in Libya and Somalia, and the Islamic State. Joining that list are
new emerging tensions with Russia in Europe and China in the western Pacific.
The services have pushed their fleets of ever-aging planes harder to keep up
with the demand, while replacement jets were late in coming.
At the same time, budgetary issues—including overruns—have plagued the armed
services. The military has struggled to operate within the confines of the 2011
Budget Control Act that trimmed federal spending. Even in relatively stable
years bickering over the federal budget often resulted in the passage of
so-called “continuing resolutions.”
These resolutions, which doled out just enough money to keep the government
going while the political fighting carried on, were an inefficient means of
spending money and played havoc with the Pentagon’s budgetary planning.
As a result, fighter fleets are in poor shape. In 2017, only 70.22 percent of
the Air Force’s F-16C fighter jets were considered ready for action. Just under
half of F-22A Raptors, or 49.01 percent, are ready. In the Navy and Marine
Corps, 44 percent of F/A-18 Hornets are ready for action, although those older
aircraft are relegated to the Navy Reserve and Marine Corps. The Navy’s Super
Hornet force stands at 53 percent.
The F-35 program is, of course, no exception. In March, the office that manages
the F-35 program reported readiness stood at 51 percent across all three
versions and all three services. Drilling down a bit readiness levels varied
wildly depending on the age of the plane: earlier production F-35s averaged only
40 to 50 percent readiness while newer planes averaged 70 to 75 percent.
(By the way, just today, the Pentagon grounded all F-35s. At issue is “suspect
fuel tubes” believed to be the cause of last month’s crash. Great.)
Eighty-five percent readiness is considered “good” in peacetime. Typically
readiness levels jump during wartime, as maintainers push to get aircraft ready
for combat and Congress and the Pentagon open the funding floodgates. In 1990
Air Force fighter jet readiness levels averaged 85-90 percent—numbers that
surged an average of six percent during the 1991 Persian Gulf War.
And so yesterday, Defense News broke the story that Mattis has ordered the
services to reach 80 percent readiness across the F-16, F-22, F/A-18, and F-35
fleets within one year. In a memo to the Pentagon leadership, Mattis stated,
“For change to be effective and efficient, we must focus on meeting our most
critical priorities first. These include achieving a minimum of 80 percent
mission capability rates for our FY 2019 Navy and Air Force inventories—assets
that form the backbone of our tactical air power—and reducing these platforms
operational and maintenance costs every year starting FY 2019.”
more at
https://foxtrotalpha.jalopnik.com/america-s-fighter-fleets-are-in-terrible-shape-but-matt-1829684952
*