The Israeli Air Force Declares IOC for Its First F-35 Squadron: Writing the Next Chapter in Airpower History

01/31/2018

2018-01-23 by Edward Timperlake

A recent piece by Yissachar Ruas published in Aviation Photography Digest on January 16, 2018 highlighted the coming of the F-35 to the Israeli Air Force.

Following a series of rigorous inspections, the Israeli Air Force’s “Golden Eagle” Squadron which flies the F-35A “Adir” Lightning 2 was declared IOC during the first week of December ‘17.

If there was any question regarding which country took delivery of the F-35 outside of the US first, following the Italians pulling a fast one on the Israeli Air Force F-35 ferry flight through Italy last year, its pretty clear which Air Force has been ramping up its F-35 activity and pressing the aircraft’s capabilities to the max.

Incoming Israeli Air Force chief Maj. Gen. Amikam Norkin, right, shakes hands with outgoing IAF chief Maj. Gen. Amir Eshel salutes during a ceremony at the Tel Nof Air Base on August 14, 2017. (Israel Defense Forces)

The declaration of IOC for the IAF F-35 Squadron was made by Israel’s Air Force Commander General Amikam Norkin in a letter circulated to all IAF units, this is the first step towards its growing operational use.

Having received the first 2 aircraft on December 12 2016 (SN 901 + 902), the race was on to implement and integrate as much of the F-35’s capabilities as possible.

The sense of urgency may be related to foreign reports that the Israeli Air Force is currently engaged in an ongoing aerial campaign against Iranian Revolutionary Guard forces attempting to enlarge their footprint in Syria and Lebanon….

Norkin’s predecessor Gen (ret) Amir Eshel planted the directive that the IAF is to match itself to the “Adir” not the other way around.

What exactly this entails is still highly classified. Russia’s presence in Syria may well affect how the F-35 is employed. Russian SAM radars are capable of covering most of Israeli Air Force bases and this means that Israeli non stealth platforms are probably exposed from the second they take off.

With the Russian Air Force seeking a long term presence in Syria, this could be a driving force behind acquiring additional stealth or low visibility platforms over the next decade.

The skillfulness and success of fighter pilots in aerial combat is an extensively researched yet modestly understood and fundamentally complex concept.

Innumerable physical and psychological factors along with chance opportunities affect a pilot’s facility for success in air combat.

Perhaps the best narrative of the intangibles of the skill and courage of a fighter pilot was captured by the author Tom Wolfe in his seminal work The Right Stuff.

From the first day a perspective fighter pilot begins their personal journey to become a valuated and respected member of an elite community, serving as an operational squadron pilot, the physical danger is real.

But so is the most significant force for being the absolute best that a fighter pilot can feel which is day in and day out peer pressure by those they really and truly respect, their squadron mates.

“In 1948, a group of World War II pilots volunteered to fight for Israel in the War of Independence.

“As members of ‘Machal’ — volunteers from abroad — this ragtag band of brothers not only turned the tide of the war, preventing the possible annihilation of Israel at the very moment of its birth; they also laid the groundwork for the Israeli Air Force. ABOVE AND BEYOND is their story.

“The first major feature-length documentary about the foreign airmen in the War of Independence, ABOVE AND BEYOND brings together new interviews with pilots from the ’48 War, as well as leading scholars and statesmen, including Shimon Peres, to present an extraordinary, little-known tale with reverberations up to the present day.”

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2704752/

https://www.sldinfo.com/above-and-beyond-the-birth-of-the-israeli-air-force/

The partnership between the IAF and US combat fighter pilots is a bond that stretches from generation to generation.

A pilot featured prominently in the founding of IAF was Leon Frankel, a US Navy WWII Carrier Pilot who was awarded a Navy Cross:

His heroic efforts during World War II culminated in the sinking of the Japanese cruiser, the Yahagi.

http://militarytimes.com/citations-medals-awards/recipient.php?recipientid=19150

Another pilot discussed is Lou Lenart who was a USMC WWII F-4U Pilot.

“The Man Who Saved Tel Aviv” for his exploits fighting against a superior Egyptian force in May 1948:

“I owe so much to the United States and the Marine Corps, which gave a young Jewish immigrant sanctuary and an opportunity to excel,” he said. “This climax is beyond my wildest fantasies.”

Lenart flew an F4U Corsair in the battle of Okinawa and took part in numerous attacks on the Japanese mainland.

http://www.jta.org/news/article/2010/06/27/2739772/ex-marine-israeli-air-force-pioneer-to-get-his-due-in-dc

American and Israeli fighter pilots became very close, especially in the formative years of Top Gun.

The IAF was very generous in sharing their proven aerial battle tactics paid for in their blood, to help the US training syllabus. Top Gun, the Navy Fighter Weapons School, trained students on unique and successful tactics pioneered by the IAF — especially during the F-4 period.

Top Gun grads would then carry that knowledge out to the fleet.

The Marine counterpart to “Top Gun,” Marine Air Weapon Training Squadron or MAWTS, went as far as to purchase the Israeli Kfir fighter to use as a realistic adversary.

http://www.americanthinker.com/2009/07/f22_to_japan_and_israel_a_debt.html#ixzz551idssS8

Now two generations removed from the founders of the state of Israel, the next chapter is being written by the Squadron Pilots of the Israeli Air Force, lead in the air by their IAF Commander, and his full embrace of the F-35.

On Aug. 14, Maj. Gen. Amir Eshel resigned as IAF commander, after five years in that position.

Eshel was one of the most esteemed IAF commanders in recent decades.

He also led the process for acquiring the F-35s.

Eshel flew the jet many times and fell in love with it.

The IAF is the first force outside the United States to put F-35 jets into service.

Everyone is keeping an eye on the operational experience that the stealth jets are starting to accumulate in the Middle East.

According to a senior Israeli Air Force source, speaking on the condition of anonymity:

“It’s all concentrated on one table for us.

“As we all know, the F-35 can reach places in a way that others can’t.

“But in addition, it integrates high-level operational capabilities as well as the ability to read and analyze a battle map.

“The earlier, fourth-generation jets are excellent at maneuvering and activating sophisticated weapons systems, but they are not able to collect intelligence and independently analyze battle movement.

“The F-35 can do all this by itself in real time, with only one pilot sitting in the cockpit.

“We have never had such an operational capability until today.

“Until now, attack aircraft were operated independently of air support aircraft.

Photography: Celia Garion

“The former waited to receive analysis of the battle picture that came from the latter.

“But in the F-35, everything is on the same platform, and this is no less than amazing.

“When you connect that to several aircraft, you receive strategic capability for the State of Israel.”

The Israeli Air Force is an elite body with first call privilege for selecting from a highly-motivated population where military service is mandatory.

A nation serious about their true life and death constant struggle for survival are very serious warriors and especially world leaders in thinking about fighting and winning in the air –always.

There is no margin for error and their technology choices for fighting can never be second class.

The take away from the article about the IAF is that the combat insight by their most experienced pilot is the total theater threat cockpit situational awareness right after takeoff.

The important point is that with the F-35, even the least experienced Squadron Pilot will also have the same intelligence in that cockpit.

An enemy cannot kill the necessary information so essential to setting up 5th gen aircraft enabled kill webs.

A stealth enabled F/A/E-35 let lose in combat by the best plots will be a huge war tipping advantage for the entire Israeli Defense Forces (IDF).

Other countries, the US included will learn a lot because of the F-35 Global Enterprise of 16 additional nations in the consortium.

Editor’s Note: In this Israeli Air Force article published on December 19, 2017, Carmel Stern and Nadav Shaham wrote about F-35 training:

In the past few months, “Adir” (F-35I) pilots have begun performing sorties in the advanced simulator established in Nevatim AFB. An instruction center for the technicians responsible for maintaining the aircraft now operates under the same roof as well.

“This instruction center is the first of its kind in the technical division. It allows us to do things we haven’t done before in training. We teach 25 different professions that have to do with the ‘Adir’ aircraft division here”, shared Maj. Tsahi Gino, Commander of the “Adir” Technician Instruction Center.

Every “Adir” (F-35I) technician is chosen for the role ahead of time, for prior knowledge of the English language, among other things. The qualification process includes a ten week-long course in the instruction center.

“The fact that we operate from an operational base contributes to the quality of our instruction. We visit the squadron every day; feel the aircraft and the connection with the squadron”, added Maj. Gino.

Paper-Free Instruction

The simulator was integrated by the IAF as part of the aircraft acquisition deal with the “Lockheed-Martin” company, which is also responsible for its maintenance.

The simulator is comprised of personal computer stations in which the aircraft’s routine maintenance work is demonstrated and explained to the technicians via various technological means. The center is also equipped with classrooms, and its personnel are currently working on establishing a unique lab to train technicians responsible for the aircraft’s ALIS (Autonomous Logistics Information System).

Photography: Mor Tzidon

From their classrooms the technicians-in-training can hear the sounds of the HAS (Hardened Aircraft Shelter), look into the cockpit, check the fuel flow or oil in the systems, disassemble a panel or wheel and put it back.

They study technical literature with the help of advanced educational software and their instructors can see the trainees’ work from their own computers and examine their mistakes.

“Training in the simulator is completely computerized and paper-free. We are currently integrating new capabilities into the instruction center that will allow the technicians to train for additional tasks such as mounting armament.

In addition, we have already performed a pilot of a basic training program for officers from HQ, with the goal of exposing them to the ‘Adir’”, explained Master Sergeant Haim Sabah from the Material Directorate.

End-to-End Training

The center holds a number of courses simultaneously.

“The center provides end-to-end instruction. The technicians arrive when they draft and we escort them throughout their service. After completing a basic training period, they can sign off on an aircraft in their first week in the squadron”, emphasized Maj. Gino. “

Thanks to advanced simulation technology we can train the technicians with minimum interaction with the aircraft”.

Editor’s Note: An interview with the retiring COS of the IDF with Amos Harel highlighted a number of key takeaways on how the IDF was looking at the challenges and shaping a way ahead.

Major General Eshel commented:

“I don’t look at it just as a plane and capability, he explains.

Maj. Gen. Amir Eshel in 2015. IDF Spokesperson’s Unit.

“Before the plane was received, we thought about how to change the air force and adapt it to a fifth-generation fighter, and not the opposite.

“If we had done the opposite, we would have only diminished the planes capabilities.

“You need to look at it at a system-wide level – not of the plane, of the whole air force.

“How the F-35 makes the other planes far more effective, the information it shares with them and with our information centers, how they can then do so much more thanks to that information.

“It goes far beyond the fact that it can operate in places that no other plane can”

Major General Eshel was then quoted as underscoring a unique quality of what the aircraft provides the IDF.

“When you take off in this plane from Nevatim [base], you can’t believe it.

“At 5,000 feet, the whole Middle East is there for you in the cockpit.

“You see things, its inconceivable.

“American pilots who visit us haven’t seen anything like it, because they fly over Arizona or Florida, and here they suddenly see the [entire] Middle East as a combat zone – the threats, the different players, at both close range and long range.

“Only then do you grasp the enormous potential of this machine.

“We’re already seeing it with our eyes”

Squadron Fighter Pilots: The Unstoppable Force of Innovation for 5th Generation Enabled Concepts of Operations

President Macron Visit and UK and French Defense

2018-01-21 The new President of France visited the UK on January 18, 2018 to discuss a range of issues with the Prime Minister of Britain.

One of these issues was defense cooperation.

According to an article published on the UK Ministry of Defence website, the two leaders agreed to a range of measure to strengthen defense cooperation.

The Defence Secretary has joined the Prime Minister, Chancellor, Foreign Secretary and other members of the Cabinet at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst for the 2018 UK-France Summit.

 The two countries are the only European powers with the ability and political will to deploy and sustain significant military force. A number of initiatives have been announced at the Summit to strengthen UK-France cooperation, building on the 2010 Lancaster House Treaties.

The measures agreed between the UK and France today will include:

Pictured: Prime Minster Teresa May and French President Emmanuel Macron inspects the 1st Battalion Coldstream Guards as they carry out a guard of honour for the UK/France summit held at Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. Photographer: Cpl Timothy Jones Crown Copyright 2018

President Macron has agreed to further French support to the UK-led enhanced Forward Presence battlegroup in Estonia in 2019, which will help to deter Russian aggression towards NATO Allies and bolster the security of NATO’s Eastern flank.

The UK will deploy RAF Chinook helicopters to Mali to provide logistical support the French counter-terrorism mission there. This will increase British logistical support to France’s Operation BARKHANE, which up to now has been limited to RAF strategic air transport flights. The UK already supports the UN mission in Mali, along with military support to UN missions in South Sudan, Somalia and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. British military personnel are also training the Nigerian armed forces in countering the threat from Boko Haram.

The creation of a UK-France Defence Ministerial Council, creating a permanent and regular forum in which UK and French Defence cooperation can be discussed by the two Defence Ministers

Agreement between the UK and France on the importance of the ability of the UK’s defence industry to continue to be able to engage in European defence research and capability development programmes

The UK will work with France and other European partners to support the development of the proposed European Intervention Initiative (EII). The EII will be a defence cooperation framework that aims to improve operational planning and coordination of military deployments among European partners with meaningful capabilities. The EII will be separate from the EU, and will be complementary to existing NATO, EU and JEF military structures and initiatives.

Confirmation that the Combined Joint Expeditionary Force, CJEF, will be fully operational by 2020 and able to carry out a full range of complex and demanding expeditionary military combat operations on land, in the air and at sea; or to provide peace-keeping, disaster relief or humanitarian assistance.

The countries’ strong defence ties were symbolised at the summit by a flypast from a Typhoon and a Rafale jet and French and British cadets joining attendees to witness the Guard of Honour.

https://www.gov.uk/government/news/uk-and-france-commit-to-new-defence-cooperation

The Macron visit highlights a number of key questions facing France and the UK, as well as European defense as a whole.

What kind of post-Brexit deal can be made to ensure that European defense industrial working relationships and capabilities remain intact?

Clearly, Thales and MBDA and Airbus to some extent rely heavily on the flow of technology, R and D and manufacturing capabilities between France and Britain.

How to best ensure this dynamic to continue?

And any such post-Brexit relationship will clearly have an impact on US defense industrial market access as well, because of how important Britain has been to US presence in terms of military industry in Europe.

A second consideration is upon the French military itself.

The UK is in the throes of a fundamental defense transformation which is most synergistic with the Northern European allies, not France.

RAF Strategy

How best to shape a working relationship between the two militaries which enhances French transformation as well?

A third consideration is the challenge of working with Germany from the standpoint of France. As key NATO nations along with the US and core Asian allies gear up to be able to fight and prevail in the high end fight, there is very little evidence that Germany is headed in this direction.

Will France provide a leaven of change for Germany or will Germany reshape France into a military force for primarily diplomatic purposes or the low end fight?

In short, much is at stake in the UK-French military working relationship for Europe, for NATO and for the United States.

 

 

 

A Photo Update on the KC-30A: Preparing for Tanker 2.0

01/25/2018

2018-01-20 by Robbin Laird

In March, I will be back in Australia and will be writing the latest report for The Williams Foundation, with this year’s seminar year starting with a look at the key challenge of shifting from the land wars to higher tempo and higher intensity operations.

I hope to return as well to Amberley to get an update on the KC-30A and will discuss more generally with the RAAF the impact of their Middle Eastern deployment on the force and its integration.

During their time in Operation Okra, the Wedgetail, C-17 and the KC-30A along with the fighter aircraft became an integrated air package.

Currently, there are 56 orders for the A330MRTT with 29 in operation.

Below are recent photos taken by the RAAF of their tanker.

The first two photos show the tanker in an exercise in Australia which included USAF bombers.

The other photos show the KC-30A in the Middle East towards the end of 2017.

When I was in Australia last year, I had a chance to talk with Air Commodore Lennon about the transition to higher intensity conflict and preparing the lift and tanker fleet for the transition.

It is clear that the new robotic boom which is part of Tanker 2.0 is part of that transition because of the greater sortie generation rate which can be supported by the tanker fleet.

Testing the Robotic Boom for the A330 MRTT from SldInfo.com on Vimeo.

And in an article which I wrote after a visit in 2015 to Amberley, I highlighted the Aussie experience with the aircraft.

2015-09-20 By Robbin Laird

In 2008, the USAF selected the Airbus A300MRTT tanker. It was a clear winner from the standpoint of what the USAF wanted from a tanker.

But politics and the anomalies of the US acquisition process intruded and the next Administration picked a Boeing tanker, one which has yet to enter the USAF inventory.

For the USAF leadership, the Airbus tanker was clearly better, with its size and its ability to hold fuel in its wings, the potential for using the space on the aircraft, inside and out was especially compelling, notably with the introduction of the F-22 and the coming of the F-35 and its data rich generating capabilities.

The tanker could become part of the battlespace and work with fifth generation aircraft in a compelling manner.

There was much comment generated by the GAO, the press, analysts and pundits on that selection and that competition.

But the reality is the reality.

It is not just about points of view.

The A330 tanker has won every competition worldwide since the loss in the United States with the single exception of the recent announcement by Japan of adding the new Boeing tanker to their original order of a different variant of the 767 tanker. 

And the Australians, as the lead nation, have already demonstrated what a capable platform it is, and a centerpiece for the global reach of the RAAF.

With the USAF not becoming the lead nation for the new Airbus tanker, that task fell to Australia.

The Aussies normal acquisition path is to buy a foreign product, and work with the service or services who have put that platform into practice, and then work the platform into operations leveraging the work of the lead or operating force using the platform.

This was different.

The RAAF now was in the lead and worked with Airbus to bring the tanker into operation.

As Air Commodore Gary Martin, now the air attaché in Washington from the Australian government, and then head of the Air Lift Group commented:

During my time at the Air Lift Group we took ownership of the KC-30A and worked with Airbus Military and Qantas Defence to craft an operational capability for the fleet.

The Chief of Air Force of the RAAF was impatient to add the tanking capability to the fleet as we had ceased our original B-707 tanking back in 2008.  We were thin on personnel with tanking experience and knew that we would need to ramp up this capability as soon as possible.

And the new tanker was much larger than our legacy aircraft, so we realised that there would be challenges associated with our first of series aircraft fleet.

We were a demanding customer because of the pressures to get the KC-30A into operation.

Overall, our Chief was looking for the ability of the RAAF to deploy a sustainable insertion package with the C-17s and KC-30As moving out together to bring significant capability to an area of interest.

Because the KC-30A holds the fuel for its AAR in its wings, we can carry personnel and their baggage onboard the aircraft.  This means that the C-17 can carry the heavy equipment; the KC-30A the fuel for AAR and the personnel to operate the capabilities when landing in an area of operation.

This combined capability is an essential force package for operating at a distance for the Australian forces.

But to get to that point has taken time.

The aircraft is a software-enabled aircraft and we had challenges to deal with to get the entire package to work operationally.

So all of our processes in the first year were aimed at getting the aircraft safely airborne, conducting our operational training and evaluation of the squadron members. We weren’t using the boom at this stage, just the pods and bringing them into operational service.

And as you know, we started with the process of getting the hose and drogue system to work with our Hornets, and then have moved onto the boom.

We clearly see both for our own use and working with coalition partners. Having a tanker that can do both and can refuel from such a large tanker reserve of fuel is a huge operational advantage for us.

Another priority was to get the whole logistical system to kick in.

Initially, we had just taken delivery of a limited spares package and were the first nation to use the aircraft. So there was no experience with mean failure rates of parts and other data important to establishing a functioning logistics system.

But the working relationship we had with Qantas Defence and Airbus Military allowed us to work through the challenges to get where we are today.

After we established a good workflow to deal with any problems evident as we starting using the aircraft, the 24-hour work flow between Spain and Australia worked to our advantage. 

We had Airbus Military, and RAAF personnel in both Australia and Spain.  We would identify problems and craft partial solutions and then send those by electronic means to Spain where the team would then work on them while we slept; We would then be able the next day to take their solution set and continue to work on it, and then we could send at the end of our work day our work on the solution set, etc.

It was a lot of coordination.

It took us two-and-a-half years to have a stabilized tanking process with the RAAF and fighter force and for them to integrate with our tanker aircraft.

When I visited the KC-30A squadron in March 2014, there were working five aircraft into the squadron, and preparing the boom for entry into service.

In that interview, the effort to certify the tanker with other nations, and the experience to date in supporting Aussie aircraft on deployment to exercises was a focus of attention.

Fast forward to the Fall of 2015, and the KC-30A, along with the Wedgetail, and the Super Hornets, all deploy to the Middle East for what the Aussies call Operation Okra, the effort to deal with ISIS.

And here the operational experience of the new capabilities – the Wedgetail and the KC-30A – have clearly demonstrated the value of the approach followed by the RAAF of getting the new platforms into the hands of the warfighters and letting the warfighters shape the way ahead as the platforms finish what in the US would consider to still be a procurement process.

As the Chief of Staff of the RAAF, Air Marshal Davies put it:

We put these assets in the hands of the warfighter to use and to determine what systems needed to be further developed in order to achieve the operational readiness, which the warfighters actually sought.

Both platforms took time to evolve to the point where we could effectively use them; but we put them into the hands of the warfighters more rapidly than traditional procurements approaches would allow.

This is certainly part of what we mean by Plan Jericho – let the warfighters have a decisive say on what is needed from an operational standpoint, in terms of what the fleet can deliver rather than simply upgrading individual platforms organically.

And getting into operations is crucial in terms of operator confidence and coalition capabilities.

With the Wedgetail deployed, allies got use to it and considered it a very reliable asset and the radar performance to be extraordinary.

Without that operational confidence, the asset will not be used as often or as effectively.

We see this as part of the Plan Jericho approach – get into the hands of the operators to determine what capabilities are best next and from which platform?

What does a .02DB Delta on a radar range mean for an operator?

Air Marshal Leo Davies with Dr. Robbin Laird after the Second Line of Defense interview at the Air Marshal's office in Canberra, Australia, August 3, 2015.
Air Marshal Leo Davies with Dr. Robbin Laird after the Second Line of Defense interview at the Air Marshal’s office in Canberra, Australia, August 3, 2015.

I don’t know.

Let’s give it to the operators and find out.

And that’s what we’ve done.

During my visit to Australia in August 2015, I had a chance to get updates on the KC-30A and its role within the RAAF from a number of senior leaders of the RAAF. Their perspectives on actual operational deployment validated the expectations of the USAF leadership when they selected the tanker in 2008. The reality is the reality.

The initial perspective was provided by Air Marshal Davies who provided his perspective on the Middle East deployment and its ongoing impact on the RAAF.

Question: What has been the impact of the operations in the Middle East on the RAAF?

Air Marshal Davies: We certainly have deployed fighters and air lifters in exercises and operations.

But this is the first time we have taken an integrated air package to an operation. It is the first operational experience for both the KC-30A and the Wedgetail and the first time the Super Hornets operated (outside of Red Flag) with F-22s.

The Wedgetail operating with the tanker affected the scope of operation of each as well.

Historically, we operate tankers in assigned tanker tracks. With the communications and other links inside the tanker and with the ability of the Wedgetail to clear the way for the flexible operations, the tanker could move closer to where fighters in operation were most likely to move for refueling.

This means that you move yourself 60 nautical miles further north because the fighters you’re about to get next need to travel 100 miles to get to you. You could make it 40 miles and stay on station for another ten minutes.

This meant getting the job done more rapidly; and reduced the fuel burn on the fighters as well.

This operational shift was facilitated by the tanker not simply acting as a flying gas can in a pre-positioned location but able to operate as a mobile combat asset to support the strike force.

Something as simple as air-to-air refueling has been simple because it’s a track at a time at an altitude with a frequency and an upload. We’re saying we can make it more complicated with the right information and be much more effective in the battle space because of situational awareness.

The entry into service of the KC-30A led to a name change for the Air Lift Squadron to that of the Air Mobility Squadron.

The first commander of the Air Mobility Squadron was then Air Commodore McDonald who is now the Deputy Chief of Staff of the RAAF.

In an earlier interview, when then Air Commodore McDonald, the impact of the KC-30A as seen from the perspective of January 2015 was highlighted in an interview.

Operation Okra has accelerated the maturing process of the KC-30A. 

At the end of 2013, the squadron was transferred from a project focused Transition Team to Number 86 Wing – and in doing so was placed directly into the hands of the war fighter. In 2014 the Wing, in conjunction with the project office,  addressed the training and key operational issues that were preventing the full utilization of the KC-30A.

The shift in operational focus, as a result of transferring the KC-30A to the Wing, is reflected in the increase in AAR from 40% to 75%.

The deployment to the Middle East has also accelerated the certification of aircraft able to be tanked by the KC-30A.

In three months, we have dramatically increased the number of aircraft certified. 

The Honourable Kevin Andrews MP, Minister for Defence (right) is shown around a KC-30A Mutli Role Tanker Transport by then Commander Air Mobility Group, Air Commodore Warren McDonald, CSC during the 2015 Australian International Air Show. Credit: Australian Ministry of Defense.
The Honourable Kevin Andrews MP, Minister for Defence (right) is shown around a KC-30A Mutli Role Tanker Transport by then Commander Air Mobility Group, Air Commodore Warren McDonald, CSC during the 2015 Australian International Air Show. Credit: Australian Ministry of Defense.

This would not have happened without the press of events and the operational tempo associated with the deployment.

It is the tanker of choice in Iraq we are being told by coalition partners.

And in a follow-up interview in his office in Canberra, the Air Vice Marshal provided an update on the KC-30A and the ongoing operations in the Middle East.

The RAAF has deployed a single KC-30A to the Middle East operation but that single aircraft has delivered close to 30 million pounds of fuel since its arrival in late Fall 2014.

The aircraft has only needed a small technical footprint, some 10 technicians to deliver a mission success rate of around 95%.

“When you introduce a new platform like the KC-30A, you need to make sure you are not doing so under a legacy mindset.

You need to test your mindset in real operations and then draw your conclusions as to the best way to maintain that aircraft.

Once tested and verified you then need to shift your older maintenance approach to a new one, and subsequently reshape your workforce.

This does not happen right away; it is a process that will take five to seven years see fully mature.

Nothing in the personnel space happens quickly, particularly when you must adapt to such a change.

The technical workforce changes we see happening in the KC-30A will be seen in the workforces of any capability we introduce, the P-8A and F-35 are other examples.

In other words, we need to reshape our workforce to optimize the new capabilities that we are introducing, so that we aren’t stuck with a legacy of the past.

It’s not that we don’t value our maintenance personnel, they are key to our success on any operation.

However, we must acknowledge the significant advances in engineering that have occurred, and therefore reshape the balance of air maintenance personnel inside air force.”

Air Vice Marshal after the Second Line of Defense Interview at his office in Canberra, August 3, 2015. Credit: RAAF
Air Vice Marshal after the Second Line of Defense Interview at his office in Canberra, August 3, 2015. Credit: RAAF

Question: You are adding to your tanker fleet as well?

Air Vice Marshal McDonald: “Yes, we are adding two additional aircraft to our current fleet of five.

The two aircraft were purchased from the Qantas 330 fleet.

One of the two is already in Spain being modified.”

Question: You are part of the global sustainment approach of the C-17, do you see something akin to this for the KC-30A fleet?

Air Vice Marshal McDonald: Yes we are a part of the very successful C-17 sustainment system and I would like to see a similar model bought in for the KC-30A.

But what first needs to be worked out is how to tap into the commercial parts pool for the global commercial A330 fleet.

Right now the military certification of the KC-30A does not readily translate into the commercial certification of a A330 so that even though the parts are often the same we cannot tap into the commercial parts pool.

Obviously, this makes little sense.

It’s blindingly obvious, but sometimes you have to be quite innovative to make that blinding obvious come into an executable outcome.

We can have a KC-30A parked on the tarmac next to a group of A330s and know they have the parts we need in their repair and support bays but we cannot access them.

We need to solve this one.

Question: Australia has been the lead nation on the KC-30A, how has this impacted on others who are looking to buy a tanker or are introducing the tanker?

Air Vice Marshal McDonald: It was a challenge getting the KC-30A into service, but the results are there for all to see, particularly in the Middle East.

The Singaporeans talked with us at length about the aircraft and we provided them with our experiences associated with the program and aircraft. I am aware that the success of the Australian program fed into their own decision as it did in South Korea.

The thing that’s sometimes missed with being a lead customer on the KC30 means you must also forge a path for air to air refueling clearances.

Without them it is just a transport aircraft and useless to the fight.

Clearances are about enabling the tanker fleet to operate in a global context and thereby contributing meaningfully to coalition operations.

We are well underway with clearances, which then other global users can simply draw upon.

For example, Singapore is obviously watching us closely as we move into F-35 clearances the latter part of this year, because for Singapore when their tanker is delivered there will be a JSF clearance already taken care of.

We are working very hard to get as many clearances for the KC30A as possible, as such we’re working towards at the C-17 in the second quarter of 2016.

And then in the third, fourth quarter we’re looking at P8.

With Singapore and South Korea operating the KC-30A as well, means that we can mass capabilities in an area.

Operating in the Middle East also allows us to become more and more comfortable and flexible working with other countries using our platform.

And interviews with the Air Commander Australia and of the Air Combat Group, highlighted how the tanker affected operations of the RAAF and the allies, including the USMC in the Middle East.

As the Air Commander Australia, Air Vice Marshal Turnbull put it:

Question: Your chief of staff has described in his interview how the tankers are adjusting their operations to the fighters and that these adjustments are driven by increased connectivity in the battlespace and cited this as an interesting step forward.

How would you describe this evolution?

Air Vice Marshal Turnbull: It is important.

The way that we’re using the tankers is very much an innovation generated by our tanker pilots.

They are driving that change, not so much being driven.

That was the really pleasing part about how they are operating in the battle space; they saw a need and worked with the E7 (Wedgetail AEW&C) to get situational awareness that allowed them to put themselves in the right place at the right time.

Knowing that someone was going to need them shortly, they weren’t waiting to be asked.

Indeed, the KC-30A will be a key contributor to our transformation approach.

We are thinking outside of the box with regard to the tanker for there is a lot of unused real estate on the aircraft and we will work on what should be on the plane and what can be off-boarded via links to extend the operational capabilities of the platform.

As Air Commodore Roberton, the head of Air Combat Group and recently returned from Middle East operations underscored as well how the tanker contributed to operational effectiveness for the RAAF and coalition partners:

Question: Operation Okra is the first time that the RAAF took an integrated lift-tanker-reconnaissance and strike package to a long distance operation. 

You were the initial Commander of the Australian Air Task Group 630 in the Middle East in September 2014 and what has been the impact of your ability to self-deploy?

Air Commodore Roberton: This would be the first time ever that we’ve been able to self-deploy. We were able to do that well inside our normal preparedness timelines., simply because we weren’t having to rely on that critical tanker resource that the US would normally provide.

From the government saying go, we were ready for combat ops in 12 days. We’ve never been able to do that before.

The bigger issue with theater though was I think there’s yet to be a modern air war of any type where the air component commander sits around and says, “I’ve just got too many tankers.”

Question: The RAAF arrived at the outset and brought its new tanker and what was the impact of both, coming early and bringing your new tanker?

Air Commodore Roberton: By coming early, we were able to play a more important coalition role.  And with the tanker, we early on not only established a lead position with regard to the other three nations using the new tanker but also with regard to the non-US side of the tanking force.  We became, in effect, the lead coalition nation for tanking with regard to non-US assets.

When we came into theater we were cleared only to tank our Hornets and Super Hornets.  But rapidly we were cleared to tank 12 different aircraft from seven different nations, and certainly the USMC and USN became major users.

This meant that we were a net contributor to the operation rather than having to rely on US assets only.

And our tanker crews became highly valued because they were able to listen on the JTAC frequencies and able to anticipate fighter fuel demand and to move closer to where the fighters would then move to get refueled.

The flexibility to anticipate fighter demand – which clearly happened in both the US and Canadian cases – meant the difference between getting weapons away on several occasions or not.

http://www.sldforum.com/2015/09/the-commander-of-air-combat-group-operation-okra-and-the-way-ahead-for-the-royal-australian-air-force/

And in an interview which highlighted the impact of the KC-30A on the RAAF and its operations was with the new head of Air Mobility Group, Air Commodore Richard Lennon.

The key focus in the discussion with Air Commodore Lennon was upon the strategic shift from being a lifting force to becoming an engaged combat force for the Air Mobility Group.

Lifters and tankers are not simply functioning as transportation and fuel off loaders, but are operating in the battlespace and their role can expand as the concept of operations is shifted via additions of appropriate technology to allow them to shape greater capability within the integrated battlespace.

Rethinking the Role of air mobility in the transformation of jointness. Graphic credited to Second Line of Defense
Rethinking the Role of air mobility in the transformation of jointness. Graphic credited to Second Line of Defense

As Air Commodore Lennon put it:

There is a lot of real estate inside and outside of the KC-30A.

How we use that real estate needs to be determined by evolving concept of operations, not simply applying a technology solution set offered by a prime contractor.

From a support perspective, software-enabled systems of the sort prevalent in today’s C2 and ISR systems, are almost throw away systems within five years.

We need to build in cost effective systems, which do not go on forever and are not expected to be repaired beyond a certain period but simply replaced by new, better and cost effective technologies.

A final interview was with the recently retired head of the RAAF, Air Marshal (Retired) Geoff Brown, who discussed how important the Wagtail and tanker experiences are to the transformation of the RAAF.

Question: As Chief you decided to push your new aircraft – Wedgetail and the KC-30A – out to the force rather than waiting for the long list of tests to be complete.

Why?

Air Marshal (Retired) Brown: Testers can only do so much.

Once an aircraft is functional you need to get in the hand of the operators, pilots, crews and maintainers. They will determine what they think the real priorities for the evolution of the aircraft, rather than a test engineer or pilot.

And you get the benefit of a superior platform from day one.

When I became Deputy Chief of Air Force, the Wedgetail was being slowed down by the Kabuki effort to arrange specification lines for the aircraft. There was much hand-wringing amongst the program staff as to how it didn’t meet the specifications that we had put out.

I said, “Let’s just give it to the operators.”

And the advantage of basically giving the aircraft to the operators was what the test community and the engineers thought were real limitations the operators did not. Sometimes it took the operators two days to figure a work around.

And the real advantage of the development was that they would prioritize what was really needed to be fixed from the operational point of view, not the testing point of view.

In other words, you can spend a lot of time trying to get back to the original specifications.

But when you actually give it to the operators they actually figure out what’s important or what isn’t important and then use the aircraft in real world operations.

Question: Clearly, when you launched Plan Jericho, you were focused on tapping into the operational community and unleashing creativity inherent within that community.

Could you discuss your thinking in that regard?

Air Marshal (Retired) Brown: I think the KC-30A operators are a good case in point.

It is about changing what you call the mental furniture.

Here the KC-30A operators were looking at their role in the battlespace and working out new ways to execute the mission rather than the traditional way of flying around in tanker tracks and operating as a flying gas station.

They understand that they were not simply flying gas stations but a key asset in the battlespace enabling the fighters and all air assets for that matter.

The crew looked at their operational situation and determined ways to move closer to those fighter assets and anticipated when the fighters would need to be refueled BEFORE those fighters even asked for fuel.

When I was onboard the KC-30A over Iraq, and saw the operators determine that Marine Corps F-18s engaged over an area of interest, and the tanker crew then determined when they thought the Marines would need fuel and moved closer to them and picked a refueling spot and put out the hoses to get ready to tank the USMC Hornets BEFORE the Marines even had requested refueling.

That is the kind of change which we want to encourage in the RAAF.

The Marines were expecting to need 112,000 pounds of fuel for the mission but because of the repositioning of the tanker, they only needed 84,000 pounds.

You clearly are not always going to operate the tanker that way, but the point is that our tanking crew is involved and integrated into the battlespace and are thinking in terms of dynamic operations, not in any static sense.

The tanker case also shows the impact of flying new systems on maintenance as well, which will require changes in how we think about maintenance modernization and evolution as well. We only need 15 maintainers to maintain the KC-30A in the Middle East operations.

In short, the KC-30A with the Aussies as the lead nation has already demonstrated that the new tanker is a key part of the transformation of 21st century operational capabilities.

And operational performance of the aircraft in the hands of one of the most professional air force’s in the world is a a good reminder that the USAF leadership in 2008 had it right.

For a PDF version of this article see the following:

Update on Airbus Tanker

https://www.sldinfo.com/tanker-2-0-adding-the-robotic-boom/

 

Australian Hawkei Vehicles to Iraq for Test and Evaluation

01/23/2018

1/23/18:Two PMV-L Hawkei vehicles have arrived in the Middle East Region to conduct operational test and evaluation trials in Iraq.

Soldiers from Task Group Taji 6 will utilise these vehicles throughout the trial period which will assess the sustainability of the vehicles.

The vehicles were transported from Australia’s main operating base in the Middle East Region to Taji in Iraq on Royal Australian Air Force C-130J aircraft.

Australian Defence Force members are deployed on Operation Accordion and support and sustain ADF operations in the Middle East region, enabling contingency operations and enhancing regional relationship.


Australian Department of Defence

January 14, 2018

In a 2017 interview we conducted with Chris Jenkins of Thales Australia, we discussed the new combat vehicle.

Question: Key platforms are being bought which are software upgradeable.

This means a very different approach to upgrading and modernizing platforms, and if you want to shape an integrated approach you clearly need to find ways to shape cross cutting software integration.

How do you do this?

Chris Jenkins: The Defense Department for a long time have been saying open architecture’s what they want to see in platform systems.

The goal is to be able to insert, with relative ease, new software developments, new applications, new functionalities, to enable agility, the ability to adapt the capability in our systems more rapidly.

We learned a lot about that in Afghanistan with some of the land-based platforms we had.

We have also learned about the capability advantage of having open architecture in things like Australia’s submarines and surface ships as well.

Today, what we’re seeing is that open architecture capability is really being valued in the acquisition process, and we’re seeing the service chiefs and the forces being much more effective in requesting and getting open architecture implementations for the systems into ships and vehicles and so on.

It’s putting pressure into some suppliers to review their previous business model of delivering hardware and software “locked in” to a single source of capability upgrade. It could be communications systems or battle management systems or whatever.

The new model is going to be open architecture.

This brings much greater flexibility and speed to adapt to changing operational needs.

We found that in the Bushmaster vehicles going to Afghanistan, with the upgrades to systems progressively through that whole conflict.

The number of capabilities that were trying to be inserted in the vehicle required hardware changes, more and more hardware being built up inside the vehicle, more power demand, more weight and a great difficulty to ensure the safety of the people inside the vehicle.

Just the practical aspects of getting the equipment in there are a problem, but it means you have lots of equipment that can be dislodged during a blast.

It becomes very difficult for the occupants, say for example, of the Bushmaster.

Some of the work done on the Hawkei learning from the Bushmaster experience was to create only a single integrated computing system with open architecture that then allows all the suppliers that Defense wants to work with to drop in their communications systems, their remote weapons system, their surveillance system, their battle management system.

The simple matter is exactly as you say.

That’s where the market is going.

That’s what defense forces want, and of course from an agility standpoint that’s what they need to have, so industry has to adapt how it works to make sure we make this happen quickly.

There are some very good examples of that now happening.

I think it’s a great change.

It’s a real change clearly delivering the agility our forces need.

Inside the New Trump Administration National Defense Strategy

2018-01-19 The Trump Administration released today the new national defense strategy and as our colleague Colin Clark, Editor of Breaking Defense, noted, it is a significant change from that of the Obama Administration.

“The Trump Administration’s first National Defense Strategy is a vigorously and well written document that marks a major shift from the policies of the Obama and Bush Administrations, calling China and Russia the “central challenge” to the United States.

The strategy, a late draft of which we’ve read, says those countries want to create a world in line with what it calls their authoritarian model, giving them the power to veto other countries’ choicesTerrorism remains a concern for the US military but it is no longer its primary focus…..

“The strategy reserves its strongest language for China, accusing it of wielding predatory economics in combination with building its fake islands in the South China Sea to intimidate neighboring countries.

Clark goes on to note that: “One of the most intriguing elements in the new strategy is its idea that the US should be strategically predictable but operationally unpredictable.

“That sounds as if Defense Secretary Jim Mattis wants to make President Trump’s personality an asset, given his unpredictability.

“But there’s also a firm commitment to something that has persisted since the end of World War II: the key role our allies have played in helping the US maintain the international liberal political order.”

He adds: “It’s worth remembering that the National Defense Strategy is not just a policy document. It also occupies an important place in the Pentagon’s budget process known as Planning, Programming, Budgeting, and Execution (PPBE). Its policy statements drive how much is spent on what.”

Clark then concluded his piece: “If the classified version is anything as well reasoned and clearly stated as is the public summary — and the White House and Congress can pass bills and fund the military — America has a decent shot at beginning to rebuild its military and network of global alliances.”

Last month, we had a chance to talk to senior DoD officials in the Trump Administration regarding the new national defense strategy and these officials highlighted a number of key points about the approach of the new strategy.

What follows are the take-aways we learned from the background discussion.

The new national security strategy is the latest of what has been called the Quadrennial Defense Review. In the past, this has been largely a large bureaucratic exercise with a significant unclassified publication to follow.

In the case of the new strategy, the document will be largely classified with a modest unclassified summary to be for presented to the public.

It has been the work of a small group of largely Secretary Mattis, the Deputy Secretary of Defense, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs, the service secretaries and others in developing the new strategy.

They are looking to make this a prioritized document, with a clear differentiation of focus of attention. It will clearly reflect Secretary Mattis’s approach which is more like that of Sun Tzu than Claustewitz. The focus is on asymmetrical and flexible options rather than linear responses to adversaries.

Sec. Mattis is very sensitive to the unpredictability of the future security environment but sees the return of great power politics and conflicts as at the heart of what is emerging. This is a situation largely unfamiliar to the current generation of military leaders; the return of state conflict requires significant change in the approach within the Department of Defense as well.

Mattis is especially keen to underscore the importance of core allies and partners in shaping an effective strategy. For Sec. Mattis, the President in spite of whatever language he has used in the past is firmly committed to working with core allies and partners.

Notably, because of the return of great power politics or intrastate conflict, the role of partners and allies is of growing significance to the US.

We are seeing the end of a unipolar era and the return of a more diffused global power situation. The diffusion of wealth and technology throughout the world is changing the global geopolitical situation.

State actors remain fundamental players although clearly nonstate actors and transnational groups are of great significance as well.

Priorities within the national security strategy will reflect a refocus state competition and the need to do with the diffusion of global power.

Global rules along with global powers are being contested.

Sec. Mattis has made it very clear that the Asia-Pacific region is our priority region in the coming years.

We are facing a major power, China, that has radically different views of the global order rules of the game.

We are facing a country with economic resources to match our own which has a very different concept of global order.

North Korea is a major threat. It is providing significant challenges to stability in the region.

It is generating intolerable pressures on our allies and ourselves which we find unacceptable and believe we have to deal with.

The situation has been allowed by past Administrations to perpetuate far too long.

We are looking to China to step up to its responsibilities in dealing with North Korea and will judge them on that basis in part.

But we are not naïve – China might well be playing the North Korean card to demonstrate what the Chinese wish to show about the weakness of the United States and its allies in dealing with a core threat.

The primary challenge of course is the Chinese military and the aggressive Chinese behavior.

US Maritime advantage in Asia has underwritten the entire region and the stability of the rules of that have been established by the industrial democracies.

This is clearly under threat and challenge.

China’s military buildup for the last 25 years is specifically designed to undercut the American ability to guarantee regional security.

The Chinese military buildup has been designed down to the level of small details to negate American military power in the region.

The U.S. is reinforcing its commitments to the Asia-Pacific region.

And it is prudent for nations in the region to work with the United States to ensure that the rules of behavior that have been prevalent over the last 50 years can remain relevant.

With regard to NATO, the core challenges clearly are fundamental terrorism inside and outside the region and the resurgence of Russia.

The United States is looking for European states to generate more capabilities and commitments to defense.

The US will also work with adversaries where necessary to deal with the fundamental threats of global terrorism and have to figure out how to handle both the competition and the collaboration with competitors like Russia and China as well.

The US needs to sustain operations in the Middle East; they’re not going to go away but we need to maintain these at lower costs and lower level in order to build up our capabilities for higher intensity conflict and operations.

The United States intends to focus on rebuilding a high intensity and warfare capabilities and reduce the burden and frequency of lower end engagements.

The growing challenge from Asia requires more US attention.

This means that Europe needs to do more to take care of itself.

This means creating more effective European military capabilities for deterrence and defense.

There is a clear need to reduce the pressures on US forces and focus on the core challenges which matter most to us and to support those actions by our core allies who are protecting themselves against what they think are their core threats as well.

The burden sharing demand is not going to go away. Trump represents part of the US political spectrum but there is a wide-ranging consensus in the United States on the need for Europeans to develop more real capabilities.

In Asia we are seeing allies step up to the tasks — Japan being a notable example along with Australia.

We need to see the same thing in Europe.

Editor’s Note: We recommend that our readers look at the complete article by Colin Clark which can be found here:

Mattis’ Defense Strategy Raises China To Top Threat; Allies Feature Prominently

 

HMAS Warramunga Continues Counter-Drug Mission

01/22/2018

1/22/2018 HMAS Warramunga intercepted and boarded a suspect vessel in international waters in the Arabian Sea on 07 January, seizing more than 100 kilograms of heroin, valued at approximately AUD$33 million.

The operation was planned by the Combined Maritime Forces’ Combined Task Force 150 (CTF-150) which is commanded by Australia and supported by a combined Australian-Canadian staff.

Warramunga is deployed on Operation MANITOU, supporting international efforts to promote maritime security, stability and prosperity in the Middle East region (MER).

Warramunga is on her third deployment to the MER and is the 66th rotation of a Royal Australian Navy vessel to the region since 1990.

HMAS Warramunga Continues Counter-Drug Mission from SldInfo.com on Vimeo.