USAF, Army Both To Select, Operate New Airlifter
by Aero-News Senior Correspondent Kevin R.C. "Hognose"
O'Brien
It was a year ago that Aero-News last looked at the question of
the US Army's need for intra-theater airlift, and its proposal to
buy a commercial off-the-shelf aircraft for what it calls the
"Future Cargo Aircraft" requirement. The latest developments of
this proposal include a change to a joint USAF-USA requirement and
a re-opening of the contract, which had been narrowed to the Alenia
C-27J (below) or the EADS C-295, to all comers.
The order size is also substantially larger -- instead of the
original 33 aircraft, the order now looks like 145 planes -- the
slightly "bigger half" of 75 for the Army, and 70 for the Air
Force. These changes push back the initial operational capability
of the aircraft to no sooner than 2010. This raises the stakes
precipitously. These changes are seen against the backdrop of the
failure of an attempt to close the light airlift gap with civilian
contract aviation.
Why light airlift? Well, sometimes you need to move stuff around
the far-flung and voluminous Mid-East and Asian theaters in which
we find ourselves engaged. And often, you don't have enough stuff
to fill up a C-130 (that's thirty tons of stuff, even for an old
C-130, and more for a J model). The joint airlift management
system, despite the "joint" fig leaf, is operated by the Air Force,
and it likes order and routine -- which is to say, it chokes on ad
hoc, one-time deliveries, however urgent; and it responds to its
own internal bureaucracy, not to combat commanders' needs.
The Army has a "sort of" cargo plane, the pathetic C-23 Sherpa
(below). The Shorts Brothers product was acquired, originally, to
provide training airlift for National Guard Special Forces units
(another abdicated Air Force mission). The Sherpa is slow. ("It's
not fair to call it a bug smasher," one pilot told Aero-News. "It
just kinda sneaks up on them and roughs them up a little." It's
actually good for about 170 knots). It is unpressurized, which
means it flies in range of enemy weapons -- in Iraq, it usually
flies right on the deck for safety.
It makes up for being slow by its short range and long runway
requirements (that's a joke, but not a very funny one; a fully
laden Sherpa needs nearly a mile to clear a 50-foot obstacle on a
standard day at sea level; almost twice the length of a C-130
carrying nine times the payload). If this weren't enough, a
highly-publicized lawsuit alleged shortcuts in the process of
remanufacturing short-haul airliners into Sherpas, shaking crew and
passenger confidence.
The Sherpa crews have been making them work in Iraq (they can't
handle the altitudes in Afghanistan) through sheer guts and
persistence -- not because the USA gave them a good machine. It
can't handle standard cargo pallets, so cargo has to be broken down
to go between Sherpas and other airlifters, and it doesn't
accommodate standard Air Force ground handling equipment, so that
cargo has to be broken down by hand -- soldiers and airmen working,
essentially, as coolies.
None of these limitations were problems when the mission was to
show up four or six times a year at an airfield and spend a day or
night dropping Special Forces teams for a proficiency drop or a
team infiltration on a nearby drop zone. But pushed into the cargo
mission, the Sherpa community is running out of baling wire and
duct tape. Each Sherpa deployed to Iraq is flying five years' hours
in a year, and the machines are already showing the wear. CH-47
helicopters are also being flogged to death's door in all theaters,
in part to pick up the slack for absent fixed-wing light airlift,
and in part because the brawny Boeing helicopter has more margin
for dealing with high and hot conditions than the Army's other
machines.
The Army had planned to have a contract competition underway
already between the C-295, which is represented in the USA by
Raytheon, and the C-27J, which is represented by L-3 Communications
in the USA. (These contenders are discussed in more detail in our February 2005 report).
But the Air Force, organizationally, resists the idea of
Army-operated cargo planes and succeeded in cancelling the original
competition. Instead, this year's Quadrennial Defense Review
foresaw, and a new Memorandum of Understanding between Air Force
and Army procurement officials, which was signed Jan. 30, provides,
that the two will work together to select the new plane from a
completely open field by December.

Most of the Army-written requirements still stand, as they are
defined largely by the mission the Sherpas can't quite fill. The
aircraft must be able to operate off a 2,000 foot prepared runway,
off an unprepared or damaged runway, it must carry cargo pallets
compatible with the USAF/NATO standard, and it has to be
pressurized.
The Army had such an aircraft (less pressurization and pallets)
until 1966, when the Air Force took over the planes -- the
DeHavilland Canada DHC-4 Caribou, called the CV-2 and C-7A in US
service -- and the mission. They swore that they would support the
Army seamlessly -- and they did, for almost four years. But the Air
Force wanted to get rid of piston powered planes a lot more than
they wanted to keep a promise to the Army, and the Caribous went to
the National Guard on their way to the boneyards. Proposed jet
replacements, the YC-14 and YC-15, were cancelled in the defense
cutbacks of the 1970s.
The Army shares responsibility for the shortfall with the Air
Force, because its highest airlift priority has long been lift for
items like M-1 Abrams tanks and other fighting vehicles that
require outsized airlift such as C-17 or C-5 aircraft. It long
envisioned future wars as climactic tank battles, like the first
month of the war in Iraq, and not long-term support for small
elements like Special Forces teams, Army task forces of Battalion
or smaller size, or Provincial Reconstruction Teams in remote
places.
An attempt to plug the gap by hiring civilian contract aircraft
has not been a success. Cargo lines from nations of the former
Soviet Union are inexpensive, competent, and have suitable
aircraft. But political pressure has led to the hiring of American
firms, such as the politically well-connected Blackwater, which
have been unable to "walk the walk" in theater. Evidence of
organizational slackness and gross disregard for safety shocked
Army aviation and Air Force officers who have been involved in the
investigation of a Blackwater CASA-212 crash in Afghanistan. Air
Force officials in Washington awarded a no-bid contract for up to
$38.5 million to the controversial Moyock, NC firm, to partly
remediate the light airlift shortfall in Afghanistan.
The new light-airlift contract can't help much before 2010, and
that's assuming that the two services agree on a current
off-the-shelf aircraft by December, and don't lard the plane with
gadgets that require testing. An off the shelf buy seems to lead
back to the C-27J and C-295 (above), but BG Stephen
Mundt, who as Director of the Army Aviation Task Force is deeply
involved in the process, told Reuters, "Everybody keeps telling me
there's only two contenders, and I say, 'How do you know that?'
There may be a whole bunch of people. It will be interesting to see
what industry comes back in with once that hits the street."
Mundt even suggested that a tiltrotor might be considered, which
raises the question of how serious he is about a December decision
-- or a 2010 fielding. The troubled V-22 Osprey (below), which
cannot meet the mission requirements for weight lifting, altitude
performance, or pallet carrying, has been under development since
1983 (23 years), flying since 1989 (17 years), is still not
operational, and unit costs have exploded into the $120-150 million
dollar range, each. It might deploy for its original USMC
requirement... some time in 2007. (The civil BA609 tiltrotor, now
in flight test, is also off budget).
In the meantime, contracting may be the only way to get the
mission done, and certainly all will learn lessons from the tragic
Blackwater mishap, which claimed six lives: three Blackwater
contractors and three active-duty soldiers... one of whom bled to
death while the Army and Air Force searched desperately for the
airplane, which was being flown by a pair of Afghanistan novices
who launched without navigation equipment, and had not told anyone
their intended route.