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Nobody's First Choice: Another Air Force deal that doesn't pass the
smell test. The Weekly Standard Nobody's First Choice Another Air Force deal that doesn't pass the smell test. by Michael Goldfarb 04/19/2007 12:00:00 AM PERHAPS THE AMERICAN public can only digest only one helicopter- related story at a time, but the Marine Corps's recent announcement that the controversial V-22 Osprey will soon be deployed to Iraq-- which captured national headlines--is overshadowing a simmering scandal in the Air Force's CSAR-X competition. CSAR stands for Combat Search and Rescue. The Air Force currently operates 102 Sikorsky HH-60 Pave Hawk helicopters to perform that mission. The HH-60s average 25 years old, and the service is desperate to replace them. Last November, the Air Force announced a winner in the competition to select a replacement: the Boeing HH-47, a new variant of the venerable Chinook. Almost immediately, concerns arose about how the twin-rotor Chinook had beaten out the Lockheed Martin/AgustaWestland-built US101 and Sikorsky's H-92. Protests from Lockheed and Sikorsky ultimately led the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to side with the losing companies. The GAO reported that "upon our review of the record, including a hearing conducted by our Office, we find that the Air Force's evaluation of O&S [Operations and Support] costs was inconsistent with the RFP [Request for Proposal]." The GAO finds the total cost for the Boeing proposal to be $38.9 billion, including production, operations, and support, while US101 would cost closer to $35.9 billion. The cost breakdown is redacted in the publicly released report, but sources familiar with the program say that the $3 billion difference in cost is a factor of production alone, not operations and support. O&S costs were estimated at $23 billion across the board, though the Lexington Institute's Loren Thompson (who has consulted for Lockheed) says he is "incredulous that operating a helicopter with two separate rotors can be as efficient" as the single rotor aircraft from Lockheed and Sikorsky--apparently the GAO was as well. Regardless, out of the box the Lockheed helicopter is 20 percent cheaper than the Chinook. The Air Force chose the most expensive solution--nothing unusual about that.The Air Force is typically willing to pay a huge premium to bring its warfighters the best available technology. But it's far from clear that the Chinook, which first saw action more than 40 years ago in the Vietnam War, is the best available technology. Further, it's not clear that the Chinook met the most basic requirements of the RFP. Though the protests were sustained on the basis of cost, Thompson reported last month that GAO had informed the Air Force of "numerous other issues raised by Lockheed Martin and Sikorsky that could be a basis for further protests if not addressed." Those other issues may now be moot, as the GAO's lead examiner explained in an email on March 9: As a further clarification, we note that because the recommended remedy includes reopening discussions with offerors and then requesting revised proposals, necessarily leading to a new evaluation, it is our view that the recommended remedy renders the issues not addressed in our decision academic. Therefore, we do not believe it is appropriate to discuss the merits of the issues not addressed in our decision. As an "academic" exercise, it is still worth examining those other issues, the most troubling of which is that the RFP specifically called for a "medium lift" aircraft, and according to nearly everyone, including Boeing at various times, the HH-47 is a "heavy lift" helicopter. Here's how Defense Daily described the problem in December: Although Boeing's own informational materials describe the HH-47 as a "tandem-rotor, heavy-lift, high-altitude" platform, the Air Force actually considers it to be a medium-lift helicopter, say Susan Payton, assistant secretary of the Air Force for Acquisition . . . Payton defended the decision based on an Air Force document, described as a matrix, which judges the HH-47 to be a medium lift helicopter. But reporters were suspicious, and repeated requests for the Air Force to produce this matrix led Defense News to report a month later that "there is scant evidence such a document exists." The Boeing HH-47 costs more and doesn't meet the requirements for consideration, but that's not all. The aircraft is, simply put, not a good fit for the search and rescue mission. And this is where Congress has gotten involved. In February, Air Force chief of staff General Michael Moseley told a Congressional hearing that "the Chinook would have not been his first choice, but that the Air Force would make it work," according to the Hill. And later told reporters that "I am not sure [the HH-47] is the one that I would have picked, but I am not the guy that picks." Senator Hillary Clinton took up the issue in front of the Senate Armed Services Committee last month as well, where Moseley conceded that "I'm not aware that anyone uses the 47 in a combat rescue role." And when Secretary of the Air Force Michael Wynne was asked by Rep. Joe Sestak, whose district hosts a major Boeing facility, "Is the HH-47 the correct aircraft, then, for the CSAR mission?" Wynne responded: "That's the one that we selected." Not a ringing endorsement. The Chinook is an impressive heavy-lift helicopter, but it has a raft of shortcomings as a CSAR platform, which were somehow excluded from the criteria used to determine a winner in the CSAR-X competition, according to those same sources. Among the criteria not evaluated: * Downwash: The dual-rotor Chinook produces a tremendous downwash that is capable of knocking soldiers over when coming in for a landing--particularly in the area directly above the hoist, where both rotors overlap. Both Sikorsky and Lockheed would have outperformed Boeing in evaluations of downwash. * Acoustic Signatu The Chinook is loud, a major disadvantage when performing search and rescue. * Brownout: In the desert environments of Afghanistan and Iraq, brownout--when the downwash kicks up dust to an extent that it disorients the pilot--is a major problem. The Chinook has proved acutely susceptible to brownout-- of the nine Chinooks lost in action in Afghanistan (more than any other rotorcraft), at least two were the direct result of brownout, and the phenomenon likely played a role in several other incidents. * Footprint: The HH-47 has a significantly larger footprint than either the US101 or the H-92. Further, because of its size the Chinook cannot land on 80 percent of U.S. naval vessels, while the Lockheed U.S. 101 can land on any vessel with a helicopter landing pad. Both Sikorsky and Lockheed would have outperformed Boeing in evaluations of footprint. * Field of Fi In CSAR missions, there is a high likelihood of encountering enemy fire. On the HH-47, "sponsons" for carrying extra fuel effectively obstruct a gunner's field of fire. Further, those sponsons have, on other variants, been described as the aircraft's "largest potential vulnerability . . .associated with projectiles entering the fuel tanks in the volume above the liquid fuel." Sikorsky and Lockheed likely would have outperformed Boeing in evaluations. * De-icing: Early documents show the Air Force was determined to replace the current fleet of HH-60s, described as "unable to perform tactical missions in adverse weather," with an all-weather CSAR aircraft. But the HH-47 has not been certified to fly in moderate icing conditions as required for the CSAR-X mission. Upgrading the HH-47 with a de- icing capability will be risky given the chance that ice could fly off one rotor and hit the other. Both the Sikorsky and Lockheed helicopters are capable of operating in conditions with moderate ice, and the US101 can fly in heavy ice conditions. Of the criteria that were evaluated, some appear irrelevant to the CSAR mission, and were not included in the initial RFP, while other crucial factors seem to have been given little weight. The Lockheed US101 has three engines, and can fly on just two. The Chinook has two engines and in theory might fly for a time with one, but "how long and how far it can fly that way depends on load and conditions," according to the company spokesmen. For some reason this was not scored by the Air Force in its evaluation. Cargo requirements, at which the Chinook excels, were given preference by the Air Force in evaluations--though cargo would seem to be a secondary consideration in search and rescue missions. When the Air Force briefed industry representatives in March 2004, the presentation listed downwash and deployability as two of four "key performance parameters." Downwash wasn't evaluated in the event, but deployability was. Each aircraft was to be taken apart in three hours or less for transport and reassembled just as quickly. Sikorsky and Lockheed came in at two hours each; Boeing's HH-47 just barely squeezed in at two hours and 58 minutes. In that same briefing, under the heading "concepts,"the presentation listed Sikorsky's S-92 and Lockheed's US101 as "examples"of a possible "medium lift" replacement for the current fleet. The Chinook was nowhere mentioned. So how did Boeing end up winning the competition? The "cozy relationship" between Boeing and the Air Force has become a primary focus for reporters and lawmakers alike. John McCain, whose one-man crusade against a deal the Air Force inked with Boeing in 2001 to replace an aging fleet of tankers led to prison terms for top officials from both organizations, recently sent this letter to Secretary of the Air Force Michael Wynne requesting a list of documents related to the acquisition process. McCain wrote: Given the regrettable history of the Air Force's plan to update its aerial refueling fleet, it is critical that the Air Force procure Combat Search and Rescue Vehicles (CSAR-X) in a manner that befits the Air Force's second highest acquisition priority--behind only its current tanker recapitalization plan. Unfortunately, recent developments in this program do not inspire confidence that this is the case. From the information available, I am concerned about the possibility that what arose from a requirement for medium-lift personal recovery vehicle resulted in a contract award for a system that provides a very different capability. According to Chris Paul, a minority staffer on the Senate Armed Services Committee whose name appears on the letter, the fact that the Air Force selected "the largest helicopter in the government inventory" as the winner in a competition for a medium-lift helicopter immediately "raised red flags." (The Sikorsky H-53E is actually the largest in the inventory, the H-47 is the second largest; they are the fifth and sixth largest helicopters ever built, respectively.) But Paul said the staff would have to review the paperwork before determining whether "requirements may have been changed to prejudice [the selection process] against the smaller helicopters." The letter set today, April 19, as the deadline for delivery of all related materials. Paul did say that the Air Force was plagued by a "systemic problem with acquisition," pointing to the fact that between 17 and 20 percent of protests filed with the GAO in relation to Air Force contracts are sustained--for the other services that number stands at roughly 4 percent, he said. Boeing spokesman Joseph LaMarca defends the HH-47, saying that determining criteria for selection is "a decision for the Air Force," and that based on those criteria the Air Force had determined the HH-47 to offer "the greatest capability for the least amount of risk." "It's what the customer wants," LaMarca says. The lukewarm statements from General Moseley and Secretary Wynne cast some doubt on that. McCain got the Air Force to scuttle the corrupt tanker deal, but that scandal was about whether the Air Force would pay through the nose for an aircraft well suited to the mission--an aircraft that remains the frontrunner still. A corrupted CSAR-X competition, however, risks saddling the Air Force with a search and rescue helicopter that is poorly suited to the mission was nobody's first choice. The Air Force is likely to release a new RFP later this week, which Thompson says will be "almost identical" to the original. Thompson also said the Chinook would likely come out on top in a rematch, even though "it sure isn't the airframe we expected." Maybe. But if McCain sinks his teeth into this, all bets are off. Michael Goldfarb is deputy online editor at THE WEEKLY STANDARD. |
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