During its eight years in office, the Bush Administration has
tried to transform every facet of the military enterprise. In some areas,
such as joint cooperation against irregular threats, it has made real progress.
In other areas, it has failed miserably. The area where failure seems
most pronounced is weapons acquisition. Successes such as the Stryker
armored vehicle and GPS IIR satellite have been few and far between. Most
of the time, weapons programs end up over cost and behind schedule.
A case in point is helicopters. During the cold war,
helicopter purchases were considered a relatively uncontroversial aspect of
military procurement. Not now. In
the age of net-centric warfare, even rotorcraft have gotten sucked into the
"system-of-systems" Sargasso Sea from which escape into serial
production seems nearly impossible. The standard media response when
problems arise is to blame contractors. But an examination of rotorcraft
programs from each service reveals that fault usually lies with the government.
The VH-71 presidential helicopter is a
Navy-led effort to replace 19 aging rotorcraft used to transport the president
with modern airframes offering greater range, versatility and
survivability. The need for better helicopters became clear
after 9-11, and the replacement program was put on a fast track that cut
normal development time nearly in half. In 2005, the Lockheed Martin
US101 was selected as the airframe that could best reconcile all of
the president's requirements with the need to land in confined
spaces. But White House urgency collided with the Navy's unbending
airworthiness standards, and the result was a series of costly delays
driving up the price-tag of the program from about $7 billion to $11 billion.
The Navy now concedes it set unrealistic goals for VH-71 that no contractor
could have met, and that it needs to restructure the plan to build the more
challenging second increment of helicopters.
The
CSAR-X combat search and rescue helicopter is an Air Force
program to replace HH-60G helicopters that are deficient in range, speed,
carrying capacity and other features. The Air Force is the only service
that maintains a fleet of search and rescue helicopters, which retrieve an
average of 100 warfighters per year from dangerous locations. In 2006 the
service selected a variant of the Boeing CH-47 Chinook as its replacement
airframe, but losing competitors complained that key performance differences
had been overlooked and the Air Force had incorrectly estimated life-cycle
costs. The Government Accountability Office partially upheld the
protests, leading to a re-competition. But one of the competitors
(Lockheed) is saddled with an inaccurate past-performance rating from the VH-71
effort that could doom its attempt to get back in the game. The end
result is that fielding of a better helicopter has been delayed, and there are
still doubts whether the process correctly measures the merit of competing
airframes.
The ARH-70 armed reconnaissance helicopter is an
Army program to replace decrepit OH-58D helicopters in the battlefield
reconnaissance role. The program was begun in 2004 after the service
canceled an earlier reconnaissance helicopter called Comanche.
ARH-70 has met all of its key performance requirements, but Army
managers complain it is likely to cost more per airframe than
planned. What they don't mention is that the initial cost estimate was
based on fast-track modification of a commercial rotorcraft, and the service
has insisted on adding features beyond the scope of the original
effort. Some Army managers want to cancel ARH-70 the way they
canceled Comanche, and start over -- an approach sure to delay the delivery
of better recon into the field. Why they think that would be a good
outcome for soldiers is unclear.