There is no time to delay NGAD if the Air Force is to meet the China challenge

Forget the Chinese. There are days when the Air Force seems like its own worst enemy.

After a decade of priority investment and confident endorsements from leaders, the Air Force is getting antsy about NGAD, the sixth-generation fighter plane planned to replace the F-22 as the centerpiece of air dominance. Just this week, Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall expressed more concerns about the cost, the concept and the engine, capped off by hinting the Air Force is knee-deep in “trade-offs.”

That’s a big risk. The service’s entire next-generation plan — Collaborative Combat Aircraft, the B-21 bomber, upgraded tankers and F-35s — has been built on the assumption a sixth-generation fighter would be fielded in the 2030s. Yanking the NGAD plane out of the mix while the program gets some sort of redesign puts air dominance for the joint force in jeopardy.

There seem to be only two explanations behind Kendall’s statements. One, it’s the budget. Or two, the Air Force has been swept up in a wave of enthusiasm for CCA and all its promise, which is starting to dilute the role for the NGAD plane.

Either way, moving away from NGAD could be perilous.

The crewed component of NGAD has been an Air Force priority for well over a decade. Surfacing occasionally under different names such as Penetrating Combat Aircraft, the mission has remained about the same: Penetrate at longer range, using all possible stealth, speed and altitude in order to hold the most difficult targets at risk. The manned NGAD fighter would replace the F-22, a brilliant 1980s design that first flew as the YF-22 in 1990.

NGAD was structured all along to include a new, crewed, sixth-generation fighter aircraft and drones and weapons in a “family of systems.” And real progress was made: Secretary of the Air Force Frank Kendall acknowledged a secret X-plane program flew technology demonstrators for NGAD before 2020.

Laisser un commentaire

Votre adresse e-mail ne sera pas publiée. Les champs obligatoires sont indiqués avec *