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Home » Av Week Extra » USAF Launches Major Technology Review

USAF Launches Major Technology Review

This arti­cle first appeared in Aviation Week & Space Technology.

In the midst of a deeply entrenched iden­tity cri­sis, the U.S. Air Force is turn­ing to tech­nol­ogy as the poten­tial answer to some of its prob­lems.

Air Force Chief Scientist Werner Dahm is con­duct­ing a sweep­ing “Technology Horizons” study to lay out tech­no­log­i­cal oppor­tu­ni­ties that could pro­duce use­ful appli­ca­tions for the ser­vice.

“I don’t think in the his­tory of the Air Force we’ve been at a turn­ing point like this. Maybe the clos­est was the Sputnik launch,” Dahm tells Aviation Week. “What does the Air Force do when it is faced with a rad­i­cally dif­fer­ent future? Part of what it does is reach into its sci­ence and tech­nol­ogy domain.“

The study will look 20 years ahead, with an eye toward imple­ment­ing near-​​term invest­ment deci­sions aimed at pro­duc­ing rel­e­vant mil­i­tary sys­tems. “We are not talk­ing about pie in the sky,” Chief of Staff Gen. Norton Schwartz said last month.

The Air Force spends roughly $2 bil­lion annu­ally on sci­ence and tech­nol­ogy projects, as much as the rest of the Defense Dept. spends on sim­i­lar research. The goal of Dahm’s review is to iden­tify those projects that could real­is­ti­cally change how the Air Force accom­plishes its mis­sions — such as the advent of the GPS con­stel­la­tion. The results are expected in late February.

Air Force Secretary Michael Donley and Schwartz entered office last year with a slew of imme­di­ate prob­lems, includ­ing mis­man­age­ment of the nuclear arse­nal and ram­pant pro­cure­ment mis­steps. The global finan­cial reces­sion has also tight­ened the Pentagon’s bud­get amid the wars in Iraq in Afghanistan.

“We are going to have to envi­sion and artic­u­late things that are real­is­ti­cally doable in the likely bud­get envi­ron­ment that we are going to face in the next decade or two,” Dahm says. There has been much crit­i­cism of the Air Force’s sharp focus on air supe­ri­or­ity, which led it to pro­cure fifth-​​generation fight­ers at great expense. Some say this focus came at the sac­ri­fice of other efforts, such as irreg­u­lar war­fare (IW) tech­nolo­gies.

“What we have to do is to fig­ure out how do we aug­ment [today’s capa­bil­i­ties] with some care­fully cho­sen new capa­bil­i­ties that allow those sys­tems to con­tribute to all of the threats that we face today — the IW threat, the cyber-​​threat and [oper­at­ing] in the space envi­ron­ment,” Dahm says.

The study is being exe­cuted by 36 lead­ers from acad­e­mia, the defense research com­mu­nity, major com­mands and indus­try. They are bro­ken into three work­ing groups — air, space and cyber. The groups began their efforts soon after in the study’s June 18 launch. The sec­ond phase begins this month and is “where a lot of gold will lie,” Dahm says. The par­tic­i­pants will address “cross-​​domain” tech­nolo­gies that could enhance warfight­ing efforts in a num­ber of areas and across the spec­trum of major con­flict oper­a­tions and insur­gent fights.

Read the rest of this story, see an ejection-​​seat view of the Parthenon, pon­der why the Aussies are scared of subs down under and roll out the stars and stripes for Euro-​​Hawk with our friends at Aviation Week, exclu­sively on Military​.com.

– Christian

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October 22nd, 2009 | Av Week Extra | 461822 Comments »http://defensetech.org/2009/10/22/usaf-launches-major-technology-review/USAF+Launches+Major+Technology+Review2009-10-22+13%3A15%3A05lowe You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

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  1. Colonial-Marine says:
    October 22, 2009 at 5:50 pm

    Dennis we need to spend money on such research and devel­op­ment to always ensure we have the advan­tage in the future. This includes every­thing from very early work on “6th gen­er­a­tion” fighter con­cepts to new hyper­sonic cruise mis­siles, new stealth and radar tech­nolo­gies, focused energy weapons (lasers) and many other fields. The USAF and USN are not as strong as they should be in terms of air­craft num­bers, and USMC squadrons focus pri­mar­ily on close sup­port.
    The USAF should have a a large fleet of F-​​35As, more F-​​22s, and pos­si­bly a fighter bomber like the FB-​​22 or the FB-​​23. Soon soon enough they will also need a new strate­gic bomber to replace our remain­ing B-​​52s.
    The USN should have a “high-​​end” 5th gen­er­a­tion fighter of their own to com­ple­ment the F-​​35C and could use some­thing like the “Common Support Aircraft” con­cept that has sur­faces every cou­ple of years. This could serve as a ASW air­craft, tanker, and in other roles.

    Reply
  2. Dennis says:
    October 22, 2009 at 7:10 pm

    Colonial-​​Marine,
    I will not get into a flame war with you. When the USAF spends as much as the rest of DoD com­bined in R&D, you end up with solu­tions to non-​​problems. The cruise mis­sile is a log­i­cal out­growth of the V-​​1 buzz bomb Germany devel­oped on a shoe­string in WWII. Yes it is smarter, faster, and more accu­rate, but it is also about 10,000 times more expen­sive. The F-​​35 is the world’s most capa­ble air supe­ri­or­ity fighter, but how many air­craft in the world con­sti­tute even a poten­tial threat to F-​​15s?
    The USMC flies Harriers and the US National Guard flies A-​​10s. Both plat­forms pro­vide crit­i­cal roles in ground sup­port. The USASOC is fly­ing their AC-​​130s into the junk­yard and their is a fight to get replace­ments. The USAF had to be forced to accept addi­tional C-​​17s that are the back­bone of sup­ply­ing active the­aters.
    The USN is much more com­mit­ted to build­ing attack subs, lit­toral ships, and replace­ment Nuc Carriers than their air­craft. How many poten­tial ene­mies oper­ate blue water navies and of those how many have car­ri­ers?
    Exactly how many “strate­gic bombers” do we need to pro­vide deter­ance? With GPS guided muni­tions and cruise mis­sile tech­nol­ogy, cargo air­craft could pro­vide the plat­forms for stand­off attack of 95 per­cent of poten­tial ene­mies.
    Face it, the bad guys just aren’t that sophis­ti­cated and aren’t likely to become so for the rest of our children’s life­times. Why don’t we focus on the wars we have and are likely to have. Almost all pro­jec­tions are that these will require “Boots on the Ground”.
    I sus­pect the $2 Billion R&D the USAF gets pays for an awful lot of con­tract­ing jobs for retir­ing USAF brass and keeps a bunch of engi­neers and board mem­bers off the unem­ploy­ment roles.
    “If you need five opin­ions, as three engineers.”

    Reply
  3. Valcan says:
    October 22, 2009 at 8:32 pm

    As far as the Irforce cut­ting back it needs to decide what it is for. Is it a strate­gic force ment for con­trol­ing the high­ground and logis­tics? Or is it a every­thing that flies is mine force.
    As ive stated before in my opin­ion the air­force should act as a logis­ti­cal, air supe­ri­or­ity, strate­gic bomber and ICBM com­mand, sate­light and near space force.
    Leave the Navy the mis­sile defense role that way we dont have mis­sile locked down in one loca­tion when they can be used and redis­trib­uted acord­ing to threat.
    And as for car­ri­ers. The car­rier con­trary to most peo­ples idea is not as a anti car­rier weapon.
    It can be that. Its rea­son for being our choice for over 60 years now is this. Versatility.
    It can:
    Do ground attack
    Do air supe­ri­or­ity
    Do ASW(when the navy remem­bers bad peo­ple have subs to)
    Do amphib attacks with marines
    And about a mil­lion other things.
    That is why we have them. Do we rely on them to much. Probubly. But thats another story entirely.

    Reply
  4. nraddin says:
    October 22, 2009 at 10:13 pm

    While I agree that the air-​​force (And the Navy to some extent) tend to spend to much on the new kewl thing, rather than the things that work. I have to point out that $2billion is hon­estly not that much money. Microsoft for exacm­ple spends just under $10billion a year on R&D itself and it only has a much more nar­row focus.

    Reply
  5. Byron Skinner says:
    October 22, 2009 at 10:34 pm

    Good Evening Folks,
    here we go again, the same peo­ple address­ing the same prob­lems, dif­fer­ent answers, not very likely. Academics have no real inter­est in mil­i­tary affairs, and indus­try and the offi­cers them selves can only see new busi­ness and after ser­vice careers.
    The low awaited RMA is here, the Navy/​Marines are well along the way with the “Green Hornet”, the X47, a Green Carrier Battle Group by 2016, and dump­ing legacy sys­tems such as cut­ting the Virginia Class of SSN’s off at 30 and build­ing a new class of SSN’s. Meanwhile the AF is still whin­ing about the F-​​22.
    The mil­i­tary world is mov­ing away from weapons/​system manned plat­form cen­tric to net­work cen­tric unmanned plat­forms. The AF is mov­ing into redun­dancy and irrev­er­ence.
    ALLONS,
    Byron Skinner

    Reply
  6. David Ellicks says:
    October 22, 2009 at 10:49 pm

    Coming up with fan­tasy new air­craft that is just what we need, but how much man­power, mate­ri­als, and other equip­ment is needed to main­tain them for the life cycle of the sys­tem. Take that money and fix what we have already.

    Reply
  7. SMSgt Mac says:
    October 22, 2009 at 11:09 pm

    1. We have ONE, UNO, SOLE, LONE and SINGLULAR AF that is now and has been seri­ously under­cap­i­tal­ized for quite a few years. the mul­ti­ple AF trope is tire­some beyond belief.
    2. Note to ama­teurs: Air Forces are not used to fight Air Forces. Armies are not to fight Armies, and Navies are not to fight Navies. Each is used to project force and deter or fight aggres­sors in any form.
    3. All the ser­vices use air­craft in the exe­cu­tion of their ‘roles and mis­sions’ (a now very inad­e­quate ter­mi­nol­ogy that has been per­verted over time– a pesky prob­lem with abstract con­cepts.)
    Only one ser­vice, the AF, has the mis­sion “to fly, fight and win in air, space and cyber­space”. The Army’s mis­sion is to “fight and win our Nation’s wars by pro­vid­ing prompt, sus­tained land dom­i­nance across the full range of mil­i­tary oper­a­tions and spec­trum of con­flict in sup­port of com­bat­ant com­man­ders.” the Navy’s mis­sion is to “main­tain, train and equip combat-​​ready Naval forces capa­ble of win­ning wars, deter­ring aggres­sion and main­tain­ing free­dom of the seas”. All ser­vices use air­craft in exe­cu­tion of their mis­sion, but only one has a char­ter to ensure forces are avail­able and capa­ble of exploit­ing the aero­space con­tin­uum — the other two merely use aircraft/​space in sup­port of their pri­mary mis­sion.
    Interestingly, only the Navy’s mis­sion state­ment comes close to explic­itly stat­ing the service’s char­ters to “orga­nize, train, and equip” forces for employ­ment by the Combatant Command Commanders.

    Reply
  8. spatharios says:
    October 22, 2009 at 11:42 pm

    Just a few obser­va­tions: 1) A lot of the Star Wars project (under Reagan) was devel­oped with AF involve­ment. Many called that an amaz­ing waste of money. But the research there–not used for mil­i­tary pur­poses ultimately–ended up enabling our entire mod­ern tech capa­bil­ity and econ­omy (e.g. pho­tolith­o­g­ra­phy), which annu­ally dwarfs the entire program’s costs. So, I don’t see R&D as a waste. There are numer­ous other exam­ples. 2)Considering the Russians and Chinese are ramp­ing up AF capabilities–including design­ing 5th gen fighters–and are export­ing fight­ers bet­ter than our F15, I don’t think we are too soon with the F22. If any­thing, our dimin­ished pro­duc­tion capa­bil­ity would sug­gest we need a far big­ger head start. Consider how many and quickly China could make once they final­ize their J-​​X. Last, who­ever said the F35 is the most capa­ble air supe­ri­or­ity fighter obvi­ously knows some­thing that Congress does not. They are happy to sell the F35 to any ally. The F22, how­ever, is con­sid­ered too capa­ble for even a down-​​graded plane to be sold to our clos­est allies.…

    Reply
  9. AMMO says:
    October 23, 2009 at 9:22 am

    Right on Mac and Spatharios.
    And the argu­ment that USAF brass are only look­ing out for their after-​​service careers is unfair at best. Every orga­ni­za­tion, mil­i­tary, polit­i­cal, com­mer­cial, or oth­er­wise is guilty of the same things.
    @Stephen Russell:
    Dude, you have no idea what you’re talk­ing about. First off, the whole fire-​​old-​​blood thing, already hap­pened. About a tenth of the USAF got fired with the sev­eral oop­sies we had with our nuclear assets. And the air force is more dif­fer­ent now than you know.
    Secondly, shut up about “beau­ro­c­racy”. noth­ing will change. are you gonna tell the most pow­er­ful peo­ple in the nation to sud­denly hands-​​off all the r&d they’ve been approv­ing bil­lions for? i think not.
    The ASVAB, dude? Really? The last guy in my squadron to get his career art15ed to death was a top scorer, and the best worker in my shop got like a 40. I got 90’s on mine, and I went to take the prac­tice for kicks and gig­gles when I went home for RAP, and I bombed it. Guess what? I’m still in the Air Force.

    Reply
  10. MattMusson says:
    October 23, 2009 at 9:41 am

    Nobody knows what the future holds. Line up all the prog­nos­tic­tors end to end — and they will all be point­ing in dif­fer­ent direc­tions.
    Be flex­i­ble.
    Innovate with low cost and off the shelf.
    Trust peo­ple over sys­tems.
    For exam­ple:
    We could use a new stand­off bomber with an adapted com­mer­cial air­frame with stealth mis­siles.
    Purchase Obama OTS exec­u­tive helicopters.

    Reply
  11. Byron Skinner says:
    October 23, 2009 at 1:29 pm

    Good Morning SMSgt.Mac.,
    You hit on the insti­tu­tional prob­lem. The mis­sion of the AF is to win and secure the air, space, and cyber­space.
    The AF did a bang up job on win­ning and secur­ing the air and space the­aters. Cyberspace is an intraser­vice com­mand along with civil­ian agen­cies like the NRO, FBI, CIA and oth­ers. The cyber­space mis­sion doesn’t require many fight­ers or bombers the last I looked.
    In short MSSgt Mac., the AF has ran out of mis­sions for it’s mis­siles, fight­ers and bombers. What’s next?
    It is a waste of resources tak­ing highly trained and expen­sive airmen/​women and mak­ing them EOD or OJT Infantry as they are now doing. These peo­ple are highly skilled, in most cases edu­cated beyond sec­ondary school in a tech­ni­cal field and very train­able and need new mis­sions that use their unique and expen­sive to cre­ate and main­tain skills. The AF needs to find new mis­sions that need doing for these tal­ented women and men, not send­ing them out as bomb or sniper bait.
    The AF is fac­ing the same thing the Navies did at the turn of the last cen­tury, the dread­nought was the cap­i­tal sip and the king of the waves, the in 1915 came Jutland. So long dread­noughts, it was going to be the sub­ma­rine as the next cap­i­tal ship, not. Of course the out of the box thinkers then were on the other side of the world the Japanese.
    The AF is in the same posi­tion, and relay­ing on the same minds and mind sets to come up with the cre­ative think­ing that will move the AF into the 21st. Century just is going to hap­pen.
    ALLONS,
    Byron Skinner

    Reply
  12. Colonial-Marine says:
    October 23, 2009 at 11:46 pm

    Dennis fur­ther cuts to our mil­i­tary like you pro­pose are sim­ply unac­cept­able. Our power has already declined enough since the end of the cold war, lets put a stop to the mad­ness.
    There is no good rea­son not to con­tinue improv­ing the USAF’s abil­ity to fight con­ven­tional wars as well as COIN conflicts.

    Reply

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