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The Hog That Saves the Grunts ...... A-10 Warthogs to be retired.
New York Times | 05/27/03 | Robert Coram

Posted on 05/27/2003 4:37:01 PM PDT by haole

The Air Force is planning to give the A-10 Warthog an ignominious homecoming from the Persian Gulf.

In early April, Maj. Gen. David Deptula of the Air Combat Command ordered a subordinate to draft a memo justifying the decommissioning of the A-10 fleet. The remaining eight active duty A-10 squadrons (in 1991, the number was 18) could be mothballed as early as 2004.

This is a serious mistake. The A-10 was one of the most effective, lethal and feared weapons of the Iraqi war. Its absence will put troops on the battlefield in grave danger. The decision to take this aircraft out of service is the result of entrenched political and cultural shortsightedness. About the same time that the general's order was issued, a crucial battle of the Iraqi war was unfolding. The United States Army had arrived at a Tigris River bridge on the edge of Baghdad to find Iraqi tanks and armored personnel carriers positioned at the other end. A deadly crossfire ensued. A call for help went out, and despite heavy clouds and fog, down the river came two A-10's at an altitude of less than 1,000 feet, spitting out a mix of armor-piercing and explosive bullets at the rate of 3,900 rounds per minute. The Iraqi resistance was obliterated. This was a classic case of "close air support."

The A-10 was also the most storied aircraft of the first gulf war. It flew so many sorties the Air Force lost count. The glamorous F-117 Stealth fighter got the headlines, but Iraqi prisoners interrogated after the war said the aircraft they feared most were the A-10 and the ancient B-52 bomber.

To understand why the corporate Air Force so deeply loathes the A-10, one must go back to 1947, when the Air Force broke away from the Army and became an independent branch. "Strategic bombing," which calls for deep bombing raids against enemy factories and transportation systems, was the foundation of the new service branch. But that concept is fundamentally flawed for the simple reason that air power alone has never won a war.

Nevertheless, strategic bombing, now known as "interdiction bombing," remains the philosophical backbone of the Air Force. Anything involving air support of ground troops is a bitter reminder that the Air Force used to be part of the Army and subordinate to Army commanders. For the white-scarf crowd, nothing is more humiliating than being told that what it does best is support ground troops.

Until the A-10 was built in the 1970's, the Air Force used old, underpowered aircraft to provide close air support. It never had a plane specifically designed to fly low to the ground to support field troops. In fact, the A-10 never would have been built had not the Air Force believed the Army was trying to steal its close air support role - and thus millions of dollars from its budget - by building the Cheyenne helicopter. The Air Force had to build something cheaper than the Cheyenne. And because the Air Force detested the idea of a designated close air support aircraft, generals steered clear of the project, and designers, free from meddling senior officers, created the ultimate ground-support airplane.

It is cheap, slow, low-tech, does not have an afterburner, and is so ugly that the grandiose name "Thunderbolt" was forgotten in favor of "Warthog" or, simply, "the Hog." What the airplane does have is a deadly 30-millimeter cannon, two engines mounted high and widely separated to offer greater protection, a titanium "bathtub" to protect the pilot, a bullet- and fragmentation-resistant canopy, three back-up flight controls, a heavy duty frame and foam-filled fuel tanks - a set of features that makes it one of the safest yet most dangerous weapons on the battlefield.

However, these attributes have long been ignored, even denied, because of the philosophical aversion to the close air support mission. Couple that with the Air Force's love affair with the high technology F/A-22 ($252 million per plane) and the F-35 fighter jets (early cost estimates are around $40 million each), and something's got to give.

Despite budget problems, the Air Force has decided to save money by getting rid of the cheap plane and keeping the expensive ones. Sacrifices must be made, and what a gleeful one this will be for the Air Force.

The Air Force is promoting the F-35 on the idea that it can provide close air support, a statement that most pilots find hilarious. But the F-35's price tag means the Air Force will not jeopardize the aircraft by sending it low where an enemy with an AK-47 can bring it down. (Yes, the aircraft will be that vulnerable.)

In the meantime, the Air Force is doing its utmost to get the public to think of the sleek F-16 fighter jet as today's close support aircraft. But in the 1991 gulf war and in Kosovo, the Air Force wouldn't allow the F-16 to fly below 10,000 feet because of its vulnerability to attack from anti-aircraft guns and missiles.

Grunts are comforted by the presence of a Hog, because when they need close air support, they need it quickly. And the A-10 can loiter over a battlefield and pounce at a moment's notice. It is the only aircraft with pilots trained to use their eyes to separate bad guys from good guys, and it can use its guns as close in as 110 yards. It is the only aircraft that can take serious hits from ground fire, and still take its pilot home.

But the main difference between those who fly pointy-nose aircraft and Hog drivers is the pilot's state of mind. The blue suits in the Air Force are high-altitude advocates of air power, and they aren't thinking about muddy boots. A-10 drivers train with the Army. They know how the Army works and what it needs. (In combat, an A-10 pilot is assigned to Army units.)

If the Air Force succeeds in killing the A-10, it will leave a serious gap in America's war-fighting abilities. By itself, air power can't bring about victory. The fate of nations and the course of history is decided by ground troops. The A-10 is the single Air Force aircraft designed to support those troops. For that reason alone, the Air Force should keep the A-10 and build new close support aircraft similar to the Hog, demonstrating its long-term commitment to supporting our men and women in the mud.

Robert Coram is author of "Boyd: The Fighter Pilot Who Changed the Art of War."


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: a10; fighterpilots; stupidgenerals; thunderboltii; warthog
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To: nightdriver
The F111 was the best example of how NOT to build a military airplane

It actually was a kind of test platform for things like side-looking radar. I seem to remember that it also had a little problem with parachutes not opening when the crew ejected.

I also read somewhere that the F111 was used in developing the F14. But it never did do all of the things it was originally commissioned to do.

41 posted on 05/27/2003 6:41:10 PM PDT by Tom Bombadil
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To: haole
After 20+ years in the Army, one thing I know is that soldiers love to complain about the Air Force (soft, spoiled, elitist, etc., etc.). I'm sure the Air Force has its own set of jokes and complaints about the Army. However, put an Air Force A-10 pilot in an Army Officers' or NCO club and he won't be buying a beer all night.
42 posted on 05/27/2003 6:50:17 PM PDT by arm958
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To: SMEDLEYBUTLER; FreeInWV
This man has a link up that speaks volumes . I do hope for the sake of anyone needing CAS will reconsider . Damn it .
43 posted on 05/27/2003 6:53:20 PM PDT by Ben Bolt
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To: SJSAMPLE
Couple of comments -

A-10: There is a modification program to give the A-10 digital avionics, data link, targeting pod and the ability to use precision weapons. It is called the Precision Engagement upgrade, and I'm told ACC put it at the TOP of their list to be canceled. The F-16 is more capable at CAS than it used to be - as targeting pods improve, it becomes possible IN CLEAR WX to target with great precision at 35,000 feet. The new targeting pods (Litening and maybe someday Sniper) offer awesome performance. However, in cr@ppy wx, you have to get low & slow. Not all wars are fought in clear weather!

As for the F-111: it was given an avionics upgrade in the mid-90s that turned it into a highly reliable and very precise aircraft, with operating costs equivalent to an F-15E. It was retired almost immediately after modification. In fact, one of the EF-111s went directly from the mod line in Sacremento to the boneyard in Tucson - one flight post mod.

The USAF could have kept 24 F-111Fs and 36? EF-111s - all modified - for the cost of operating 20 Prowlers...and each Prowler carries (typically) 60% of the EF-111's transmitters. In addition, the EF-111 had been modified to PREVENT it from carrying HARM missiles - the wires to the wing station were cut to prevent competition with the Block 50 F-16s. Had they been spliced, the EF-111 could have carried 4 HARMs and 10 transmitters on every sortie with twice the loiter time of a Prowler - with twice the numbers and 24 F-111Fs thrown in for free...but the USAF killed the remaining 111s while the Navy agreed to fund the 20 Prowlers.

Wish I could be more optimistic about the A-10 surviving - I would like to work on the upgrade - but the F-111 example shows how stupid the USAF can be about their 'second class' aircraft. BTW - when I was an ALO, I loved the A-10 and despised the F-16.
44 posted on 05/27/2003 7:12:24 PM PDT by Mr Rogers
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To: Reagan Man
This would be a great project for the Air wings of the USMC!
45 posted on 05/27/2003 8:07:06 PM PDT by BnBlFlag
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To: toddst
I cant beleive they would kill this. I think that there was work on an A12. We should be building the next gen built out of Kevlar or something.

But we need the flying tank.
46 posted on 05/27/2003 8:51:47 PM PDT by fooman (Get real with Kim Jung Mentally Ill about proliferation)
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To: x1stcav
The revised A-51 was a counter to the A-10 -- to save money.
For the record, the A-10 replaced the A7 and the A7 pilots were none to happy. None of the wiz-bang avionics. I worked on the A10 OT&E at Nellis in the early 70s. First time they fired the gun, an engine flamed out because of injestion of powder residue....A WHOLE lot of work went into the plane to make it work.

You may remember when, in GW1, the A10s got close to ZSU-23/4 they got shredded big time. The A10 was originally made for 'nam as a COIN support A/C like the Mohawk or Bronco. The Bronco and F4 had a 30mm gun pod for busting tanks as well.

A Preditor with a Hellfire sounds like a good deal to me.

BTW, the USAF will still provide CAS for the Army and Corps - weather permitting.....which is why the smart commander will insist on arty to go along to the field.

Hoo-ah
47 posted on 05/27/2003 9:33:00 PM PDT by ASOC
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To: cavtrooper21
No kidding. Hopefully someone will slap some sense into the AF CoS. Better yet, let the Army have 'em.

Scouts Out! Cavalry Ho!

48 posted on 05/28/2003 3:08:08 AM PDT by wku man
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To: SMEDLEYBUTLER
The Army is not allowed to operate fixed wing combat aircraft: Key West Agreement 1948. The Marine Corps does not want nor does it need the A-10.

I would like to know more about the "Key West Agreement." The Army could decide it wants this weapon system IMO. The same goes for the Marines. I hope we'll see some "out of the box" thinking. The A-10 has application well beyond next year and already exists - NO R&D costs.

49 posted on 05/28/2003 4:36:07 AM PDT by toddst
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To: haole
I know a lot of USMC buddies that would love to add the A-10 to their air arm. But then again that would mean the Pentagon would become logical and that will never happen in my lifetime.
50 posted on 05/28/2003 4:41:05 AM PDT by Beck_isright (When Senator Byrd landed on an aircraft carrier, the blacks were forced below shoveling coal...)
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To: RaceBannon
ping
51 posted on 05/28/2003 4:48:16 AM PDT by Cacique
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To: toddst
They said the A-10 was dead after the first Gulf War also.
52 posted on 05/28/2003 4:58:34 AM PDT by razorbak
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To: haole
The "fighter mafia" mentally among the Air Force brass is to blame for the talk about retiring the A-10 --- however we've been hearing about the impending retirement of the A-10 since the first Gulf War, and the Warthog is still defending the troops.
53 posted on 05/28/2003 5:10:04 AM PDT by Beowulf
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To: toddst
The Marine Corps doesn't want or need any more airframes that are pushing or are over 20 years old. Can't operate an A-10 from the deck of a LHA/LHD. The Marine Corps is on it's way to operating one tactical airplane, the F-35, and spent the 90s getting rid of the A-4, F-4, A-6 and OV-10. Logistically it would be a nightmare. Wishful thinking won't change reality. It doesn't matter what the Army wants, it only matters what they are allowed to have.
54 posted on 05/28/2003 7:26:53 AM PDT by SMEDLEYBUTLER
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To: Beowulf
"the A-16", an F-16 with a 30mm cannon pod was proposed back in the late '80s. What a joke.

The A-12 "kite" was a disaster as far as trying to land a flying wing on the deck of a carrier-it was designed for lo-observable, not to be a Navy craft.

The F-111 "McNamras Folly" never made it performance goals, was a flying dog.

The F-14 was a brilliant effort/design by Grumman to satisfy the Navy's fleet air defence req't. Also, the A-6 Intruder was also a brilliant design to accomplish its task, fly far with many bombs.

In contrast, the fuel hog that is the F-18 (either version ), is being trumped up to relace the A-6. They just started putting on composite wings on the A-6s when klintoons DOD wanted them mothballed.

55 posted on 05/29/2003 8:46:39 PM PDT by haole (John 10 30)
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