Air Force cutting its fighter fleet
By Bruce Rolfsen - Staff writer
Posted : Monday Feb 15, 2010 11:31:16 EST
By fall, 250 fighters will be in the boneyard and the 4000 airmen who fly
or fix them will have new jobs, according to an officer overseeing the
aircraft drawdown.
The first planes head for retirement April 1; if all goes as planned, the
last ones will be off the flight line by Sept 30, the end of the fiscal
year.
“Units have already started to put people on the move list,” said Col
Jack Forsythe, with the Air Staff’s strategic plans directorate.
The Air Force unveiled the retirement plans in May but needed
congressional approval to decommission the fighters, including primary, attrition
reserve and backup inventory aircraft. The permission came Dec 19, when
President Obama signed the Defense Department’s fiscal 2010 budget. Included in the
budget, however, are stipulations that the Air Force write several reports
explaining, for example, the rationale for the retirements and the impact
that the smaller fleet will have on Operation Noble Eagle, the military
operations related to homeland security.
“All the reports have been written and are under review,” Forsythe said. “
We expect to have them to Congress in time for the 1 April deadline.”
Retiring the planes — 135 F-15C/D Eagles, 112 F-16C Fighting Falcons and three
A-10 Thunderbolts — should save $350 million in fiscal 2010 and $3.5
billion in the next five years, Forsythe said.
The service hopes the saved dollars help pay for new aircraft.
The positions assigned to the fighters will be transferred to growing
missions such as surveillance and intelligence analysis, said Forsythe,
who was operations group commander for F-117 Nighthawks at Holloman AFB, NM,
when those jets were retired two years ago.
Planes will leave a few at a time and personnel will transfer when their
fighters are retired. Maintainers and life support personnel will be
reassigned to similar duties, Forsythe said.
Most pilots will continue to fly but may have to cross-train into new
planes.
Last year, the Air Force identified many of the wings and squadrons to be
decommissioned, but is still drawing up specific Air Force-wide retirement
plans.
WHAT’S IN, WHAT’S OUT
Changes announced by the service last year*:
F-15C/D
Eglin AFB, FL: 85th Test and Evaluation Squadron loses two Eagles.
Elmendorf AFB, AK: 19FS loses 24 jets.
Hickam AFB, HI: 199FS loses 15 aircraft.
Langley AFB, VA: 71FS loses 18 airplanes.
RAF Lakenheath, England: 48FW loses six Eagles.
Tyndall AFB, FL: 325FW loses 48 fighters.
F-16
Fort Wayne IAP, IN: 163FS loses 18 fighters.
Hill AFB, UT: 34FS loses 24 Falcons.
Kirtland AFB, NM: 188FS loses 18 jets.
Luke AFB, AZ: 56FW loses 28 fighters.
Spangdahlem AB, Germany: 52FW loses 18 Falcons.
A-10
Barksdale AFB, LA: 47FS loses three fighters.
Davis-Monthan AFB, AZ: 354FS loses three Thunderbolts
and 358FS loses three aircraft.
Moody AFB, GA: 74FS loses three aircraft and 75FS loses three Warthogs.
Fort Wayne IAP, IN: 163FS gains 18 A-10s.
Osan AB, South Korea: 25FS loses three Thunderbolts.
Whiteman AFB, MO: 303FS loses three jets.
*The aircraft numbers don’t include the backup and attrition reserve
aircraft the units are retiring.
Credits: Al Stern from MilRadioComms Group