Aviation unveils life without Comanche
By Sgt. 1st Class Marcia Triggs
Editor's note: This is the twelfth article in a weekly series on the 17 Army focus areas. This one focuses on "Army Aviation."
WASHINGTON (Army News Service March 30, 2004) The Armys aviation fleet is undergoing a total overhaul, and the main priority is increasing survivability to protect the aircraft and the Soldiers it carries.
In the near future, helicopters in Iraq, Afghanistan and Kuwait will be equipped with Ballistic Protection Blankets, Missile Approach Detectors, Countermeasure Sets and Radar and Laser Detecting Sets, a Pentagon official said.
Were going to ask industry what weapon systems our potential adversaries may have, and were going to be very innovative in how we deal with those threats, said a senior official from the Deputy Chief of Staff of Operations, G3, during the Army Aviation Association of America Annual Convention.
Aviators, crewmen, commanders and the technology community gathered to unfold the Armys aviation transformation plan in Nashville, Tenn., March 24-27. By 2011, the Army will purchase 796 new aircraft, upgrade the current fleet to be more survivable, lethal and agile and work with the Marines to develop the Joint Multi-Role Helicopter.
During a four-and-a-half month study, members on the Army Aviation Task Force made more than 120 recommendations on how to turn aviation brigades into joint and expeditionary forces that are modular units of action. The total bill comes out to $12.8 billion, the Pentagon official said.
Out of the recommendations came the idea to develop three new aircraft -- a light utility helicopter, an armored reconnaissance helicopter and a cargo aircraft.
It would be premature to talk about what the helicopters are going to look like. Right now were in the capabilities phase, said the G3 official.
In a concerted effort Fort Rucker, Ala., Training and Doctrine Command and the Headquarters Department of the Army Staff will decide on the capabilities they want, and then let industry meet the niche, said the G3 official.
A more immediate addition to the aviation ranks will be unmanned aerial vehicles. The Army was given three I-GNAT UAVs as a congressional plus up and right now two are deployed to Iraq.
Its not just about I-GNAT, UAVs in general are a great contribution to the war fighter, the Pentagon official said. They perform reconnaissance and surveillance missions, and are becoming more and more important, the official added.
The Army will spend $390 million toward UAV acceleration. Currently in the Central Command area there are Ravens, which are tactical UAVs used at the platoon level. The smaller UAVs are referred to as Shadow and the larger ones, I-GNAT and Hunter, are used at division and brigade level.
The Chief of Staff of the Army Gen. Peter Schoomaker advised the Aviation Task Force to improve survivability, increase deployability, optimize capabilities and shorten the logistics tail, the Pentagon official said.
Now the aviation field is following the infantrys example of the Stryker by creating a common cockpit. Like the Stryker, which has 10 variants but same or similar parts, helicopters will share the same hardware and software.
In 2003, the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment, Fort Campbell, Ky., implemented their version of common cockpit referred to as the Common Avionics Architecture System or CAAS.
By placing common hardware and software in three of the regiments aircraft, training was simplified and the logistics demands on the unit were reduced, the G3 official said. The open avionics architecture also will make it easier to upgrade the aircraft with third-party vendor software.
The use of CAAS by the conventional Army is one of 17 initiatives that will be adopted from the Special Operations community, the G3 official said.
We always want the 160th to be the premier aviation force in the Army, said the G3 official. We always want them well ahead of the conventional force.
Schoomaker, who has served with both conventional and Special Operations forces, challenges the aviation community to use Special Operations initiatives that can be sustained and resourced, the G3 official said.
The need to purchase and upgrade the current fleet is the reason behind the Comanche termination, officials said.
Had we not terminated the Comanche, I would be absolutely concerned, the G3 official said. By 2011 we would have had to cut our aviation fleet by a sizable number.
At the termination of the Comanche, only two aircraft had been built, and $6.9 billion spent since 1983, said the Pentagon official. If the Army had continued to fund the program it would cost $14.6 billion more to purchase 121 aircraft by 2011 and up to $2 billion more to add the survivability equipment that is being added to the rest of the Armys fleet, the official added.
However, the technology that was developed for the Comanche will not be lost, but will be harvested in the Joint Multi-Role Helicopter.
We needed a place where we could take the Comanche technology and ensure that it was retained. We also wanted to make sure that we had an initiative were we could work with the joint community, the Pentagon official said.
The goal is to work through a joint solution with the Marine Corps and decide on a new rotorcraft by 2020 or 2025, the official added.
Transformation plans for the aviation field complement the combined arms fight, the G3 official said. If you take any one weapon system, a Bradley, Abrams or UAV and put it up against an enemy, the enemy will learn to deal with it, the official said. Its a combination of all those weapon systems, the official added.
(Editor's note: The Army's 17 immediate areas of focus include: The Soldier; The Bench; Combat Training Centers/Battle Command Training Program; Leader Development and Education; Army Aviation; Current to Future Force; The Network; Modularity; Active Component/Reserve Component Balance; Force Stabilization; Actionable Intelligence; Installations as Flagships; Authorities, Responsibilities, and Accountability; Resource Processes; Strategic Communications; Joint Expeditionary Army with a Campaign-quality Capability; and Logistics. To view a brief synopsis of each area, visit The Way Ahead; Joint Expeditionary Army with a Campaign-quality Capability; Resources Processes. |