What's wrong with this
picture? The Air Force plans to
spend over a hundred billion dollars to buy 2,000 new fighters, but it can't
find the money to upgrade a handful of radar planes with better technology for
tracking insurgents. Even though it has already spent a billion dollars
to develop the new technology it now says it can't afford to install. And
even though warfighters in Iraq
have identified an urgent operational need for the new capability.
What's wrong with the picture is
that the Air Force is in such a budgetary bind over replacement of its decrepit
cold war aircraft fleet that it is being forced to make bad choices -- choices
that put the lives of soldiers at risk to save modest amounts of money.
The program in question is the Joint Surveillance and Target Attack Radar
System, or JSTARS. It consists of 17 old Boeing 707
airframes equipped with radars that can track moving ground targets
and snap pictures even through clouds.
The planes need new engines, but
their airframes -- the fuselage, wings and so on -- are basically sound. They
can fly for another 40 years if maintained correctly. In
fact, their mission-capable rate is high compared with other types of
military aircraft. But the surveillance system carried on
the planes was conceived in the 1980s, and although it has revolutionized warfighting it is
so dated that suppliers of key parts are beginning to disappear.
Air Force planners saw this
problem coming a long time ago. In December 2000 a plan was funded to
adapt the radar technology being developed for future fighters so it
could provide a replacement for the JSTARS radar. Not just a new radar,
but one with much greater capability -- pictures with ten times better
resolution, ground tracking capabilities for a more diverse collection of
targets, and a capacity to do both missions simultaneously. It could
also track stealthy cruise missiles.
About $1.3 billion has been spent
on versions of the new radar to be carried on both manned aircraft and the
Global Hawk unmanned aircraft. It is called the Multi-Platform Radar
Technology Insertion Program, or MP-RTIP. The technology works, and it could
greatly improve the ability of U.S.
forces to track ground vehicles, whether they are fast-moving
tanks or aged Toyotas getting into position for a suicide
attack.
Both the target tracks and the
pictures of a vehicle can be transmitted instantaneously to forces on
the ground. But the Air Force says it only has money to install the new
technology on unmanned aircraft, not on the bigger JSTARS. Unfortunately,
the quality of target tracks and pictures is proportional to the
size of the radar's antenna, so there are many objects that can't be seen by
the small antenna on the unmanned aircraft that could be seen by
the much bigger antenna on a JSTARS plane.
The Air Force has nebulous
plans for someday installing MP-RTIP or a similar radar on a manned
aircraft. But that won't happen for a long time, and meanwhile
the supplier base for the existing JSTARS radar is beginning to
atrophy. The bigger, more capable version of MP-RTIP will disappear
this summer unless money is included in the 2008 supplemental appropriation for
the Iraq
war. Which means a lot of soldiers whose lives are going to be
on the line in this or a future war could be deprived of life-saving
reconnaissance about the threats they face from an increasingly elusive
adversary.