Germany seeks to continue Tornado training at Holloman AFB

The Defense Security Cooperation Agency notified Congress Wednesday of a possible Foreign Military Sale to the Government of Germany for base services for its Tornado aircraft operations, including associated equipment, ammunition, parts, training and logistical support for an estimated cost of $300 million.

The Government of Germany has requested the continuation of base services for the German Air Force Tornado aircraft operations at Holloman Air Force Base (AFB), New Mexico. Base services provided will be for operations and logistics support including training, fuel, munitions, base operating support, and other related operational/logistics requirements.

Holloman AFB is the only location where the German Air Force trains aircrews in Tornado aircraft operations and tactics. These operations began at U.S. Air Force facilities in 1989.

Implementation of this sale will not require the assignment of any additional U.S. government or contractor representatives to Germany.

Source: Department of Defense

A New Reaper Squadron for RAF

The Chief of the Air Staff announced Sunday that a new Reaper Squadron will form at RAF Waddington in Lincolnshire, which will mean the aircraft over Afghanistan will be controlled from the UK for the first time.

Speaking at the disbandment of Number XIII Tornado Squadron at RAF Marham, Air Chief Marshal Sir Stephen Dalton announced that the Squadron number will transfer to a second Reaper Squadron next year. The remotely piloted aircraft will continue to be based in Afghanistan.

With its array of high tech sensors and precision guided weapons, the Reaper can carry out a wide range of missions that are currently controlled by 39 Squadron crews on the other side of the world at Creech Air Force Base in Nevada. Reaper can use its sensors day and night to spy on insurgent activity for hours at a time and at a range where they are undetectable from the ground.

“The Royal Air Force is today delivering air power operations in Afghanistan, Libya and the Falkland Islands and, as XIII Squadron’s Tornados have shown, making a fantastic contribution to the very positive progress in the military campaigns in all these locations. I am confident that XIII Squadron’s reputation and distinguished history will be carried forward as it transitions to be a part of our Remotely Piloted Force employing the Reaper over Afghanistan,” expressed Sir Stephen Dalton.

“This transition will see us bring Reaper mission control to the UK, make more efficient and effective use of our resources in exploiting this growing capability and enable the operation of significantly more Combat Intelligence Surveillance Target Acquisition and Reconnaissance aircraft over Afghanistan 24 hours a day.”

Defence Secretary, Dr Liam Fox, added “Reaper aircraft are providing valuable support to our front-line troops in Afghanistan. We are committed to providing the best available equipment to our Armed Forces. The formation of this new Squadron follows our doubling of the Reaper capability to ten aircraft, which represents an increased investment of £135M.”

Source: Air-Attack

RAF chief: Harrier retirement was unavoidable

Debate has escalated over the UK government’s controversial decision to retire its last BAE Systems Harrier GR9 ground-attack aircraft late last year, with the Royal Air Force’s current involvement in action over Libya having focused attention on the issue.

An article published April 18th in the UK newspaper The Sun showed mothballed Harriers in storage at RAF Cottesmore in Rutland under the headline “Harrier dump jets”. The article says that the UK’s contribution to the NATO-led campaign to protect Libyan civilians from attack by forces loyal to leader Col Muammar Gaddafi’s regime could be delivered more cheaply by using Harriers from a Royal Navy CVS-class aircraft carrier.

Speaking before the article’s publication, chief of the air staff Air Chief Marshal Sir Stephen Dalton has defended the Ministry of Defence’s decision to retire the Harrier in favor of safeguarding the bulk of the Tornado GR4 fleet, describing it as “in cold logic, unavoidable”.

With reference to the Libyan operation, Dalton said: “The Tornados have delivered Storm Shadows to penetrate hardened buildings and the dual-mode Brimstone, neither of which could have been delivered by the Harrier.”

“I am not knocking the Harrier, just those who have, often willfully, overstated its relative utility in this scenario,” he told the Royal Aeronautical Society’s Aerospace 2011 conference in London on 13 April.

Source: Flightglobal

Libya Possess Russian SAMs

Establishing a no-fly zone over ­Libya may not be a massive challenge for the coalition trying to enforce United Nations Security Council Resolution 1793, but the operation has nevertheless exposed serious military and political pitfalls.

One of those surprises is the unexpected and elusive threat from a sophisticated surface-to-air missile (SAM) that Libya fielded virtually unnoticed—the NATO-designated SA-24Grinch.” Its presence on the battlefield underscores the need for coalition partners to draw on the full spectrum of electronic warfare capabilities to prosecute their air campaign. The missile also poses a latent threat to low-flying cargo aircraft once relief, medical, evacuation and rebuilding missions begin. Expectations are that these much-sought-after weapons will slip into the black market and into the hands of lawless groups that will want to stop aid to any of the sides involved in the Libyan conflict.

The presence—not announced yet—of the jam-resistance weapon was a surprise to U.S. and international military analysts because there have been only rumors of a possible Igla-S/SA-24 sale to Libya and no mention of it in officials sources, such as the U.N. Arms Register. Pictures of the SA-24 have appeared on television since the start of the war, but were not publicly identified by the intelligence community.

“The SA-24, or Igla-S, is an improved variant of the SA-18Grouse’—or Igla—with better performance, lethality and countermeasures resistance,” says Douglas Barrie, senior fellow for military aerospace at London’s International Institute for Strategic Studies. “It is believed to have a maximum slant range of up to 6,000 meters [3.7 mi.] and a maximum engagement altitude of 3,500 meters. Development of the system appears to have been completed early in the last decade. The SA-24 represents a credible threat to aircraft, helicopters and unmanned aerial vehicles operating within its engagement envelope.”

There is a question about whether the SA-24 systems sold to the Libyans can be removed from their small-truck mounts and used as man-portable air defense systems (manpads), or if they are instead considered part of an integrated system. From the pictures, the weapon’s flexibility is not apparent.

“If you were to ask me which SAMs are the threat right now, I would say the unlocated mobile ones [SA-6Gainfuls’ and SA-8 Geckos’ on tracked vehicles and SA-24s welded into the beds of pickup trucks] rather than the fixed-site, easily targeted ones,” says a U.S. defense official. “The mobile ones are extremely dangerous—both radar-guided and manpad-based systems.”

Concern over radar-guided, pop-up SAM threats has driven the Pentagon to operate its EA-18G Growlers over Libya. Italy also has contributed radar-locating Tornado ECRs to the coalition operation.

The surviving longer-range SAMs are radar-guided SA-6s (7-km altitude) and SA-8s (5-km altitude). The mobile SAMs are still on the loose, but radar-guided missile systems and their supporting communications and data links are being degraded by an active electronic attack campaign that includes jamming and some cybernetwork penetration activity, say U.S. officials who are analyzing the campaign on a real-time basis. That leaves optically guided and infrared-guided weapons as the main threat to coalition aircraft flying over Libya, which makes the IR-guided SA-24 the most potent current threat.

“This is not an operation without risk,” says the U.S. defense analyst. “We are putting people in harm’s way. [The coalition aircraft] are the only things in the sky right now, so target de-confliction is not an issue for the bad guys.”

Airborne electronic attack and information warfare are being conducted by Navy Growlers in a “stand-in” role and by Air Force EC-130 Compass Calls and RC-135 Rivet Joints. Also participating are EP-3 Aries II and advanced, specially modified P-3s that were designated as patrol utility units before being integrated into standard patrol squadrons as an operational disguise. EC-130J Commando Solo aircraft conduct specialized media broadcasts and other information operations.

Britain also dispatched several high-end, intelligence-gathering systems—including the Sentinel R1 ground surveillance and Nimrod R1 signals intelligence aircraft—to support the operation from RAF Akrotiri, Cyprus. All these assets aided in destroying Libya’s fixed, air-defense force of SA-2 “Guideline,” SA-3 “Goa” and SA-9 “Gammon” SAMs by providing precision targeting for more than 160 Tomahawk and several Storm Shadow cruise missiles. U.S. officials indicate the campaign against fixed sites has been successful; and Air Vice Marshal Greg Bagwell, the RAF officer in charge of the air operations, says the Libyan air force is effectively destroyed.

While states are supposed to report the transfer of man-portable missiles to the U.N. Arms Register, many do not and they are not in violation of national or international law. Also, transfers can been made through third parties.

Questions raised by the photos involve identifying who sold the systems to Libya and when.

Matt Schroeder, director of the arms-sales-monitoring project for the Federation of American Scientists, says there is no record of such an arms transfer in the U.N. registry. “One of the key concerns regarding the SA-24 missiles and launchers is their utility to terrorists who tend to favor man- or crew-portable systems over vehicle-mounted systems should the weapons be diverted to the black market,” he says. “It’s not clear whether [the Libyan missiles] fit that description.

“We must first identify the model of the SA-24 missile launcher and whether it can easily be taken off the light truck on which [it is] currently mounted and used as a stand-alone weapon by a small, autonomous crew of dismounted infantry,” Schroeder says. Another key question is “whether the SA-24s used with the [truck-mounted] launchers can be used with man-portable gripstocks. If the answer to both is ‘no,’ then the danger of the system being acquired and used by terrorists is significantly diminished.

“If the answer to either question is ‘yes,’ then more questions follow, including when were the systems transferred, since manpad transfers were not required to be reported before 2003 and submissions for 2010 have not been published yet,” he says. Yet another determinant would be whether “they come directly from Russia or were they transfers [from an intermediate buyer]?” Venezuela, for example, is buying thousands of SA-24s, and international watchdog groups worry that they will end up in the hands of narco-traffickers and insurgent groups.

There will be ample need for political after-action fine-tuning of the coalition. Although France and the U.K. pushed no-fly zone approval through the U.N., and France kicked off the air campaign with attacks near Benghazi, the bulk of the operational heavy-lifting was initially carried out by the U.S. France—only recently re-admitted fully into the alliance—has been positioning itself to take the helm. Germany, for its part, has decided to stay entirely on the sidelines and withdrew from enforcing NATO’s arms embargo. Arab state contributions that were to provide political top cover have been slow to emerge. Qatar’s four Mirage 2000s were not scheduled to begin operation until late last week. The campaign also has exposed fissures over how the long-term enforcement action should be directed.

Strike aircraft involved in the early operations against Libya included B-2 stealth bombers from the 509th Bomb Wing at Whiteman AFB, Mo.; F-15Es from the 492nd and 494th Fighter Sqdns. from RAF Lakenheath, England; and F-16CJ Wild Weasels from the 480th FS at Spangdahlem AB, Germany. The B-2s struck Ghardabiya Airfield in Libya.

The U.K. initially participated with submarine-launched Tomahawks and Tornado GR4s firing Storm Shadow cruise missiles. The Tornados then switched focus to direct-attack roles using Paveway IV laser/GPS-guided bombs and dual-mode Brimstone weapons. The U.K. also employed the Raptor reconnaissance pod. The aircraft—from RAF Marham, England—redeployed as part of the 906 Expeditionary Air Wing based at Gioa de Colle in southern Italy, which was already hosting the RAF’s Eurofighter Typhoons. The Typhoons, in their first combat missions, flew air patrols.

France has been operating Mirage 2000s and Rafales. It also began operations from the Charles de Gaulle aircraft carrier for both reconnaissance missions and no-fly-zone enforcement. French aircraft employed Scalp EG cruise missiles, AASM air-to-ground modular weapons and GBU-12 precision guided bombs Other allies have been weighing their contributions. Norway and the Netherlands late last week were readying their F-16s, pending assignment of missions by NATO. Canada and Spain are contributing F-18s, while Sweden may dispatch 6-8 JAS39 Gripens.

The single coalition aircraft destroyed so far is an F-15E that suffered mechanical problems. The pilot and weapon systems officer were rescued. A MiG-23 flown by the Libyan rebels was shot down near Benghazi by friendly anti-aircraft fire. The third air casualty was a Libyan air force G-2 Galeg trainer.

 

-aviationweek.com

 

First female Eurofighter pilot sees action in Libya

 

As the RAF readied itself for another day imposing the no-fly zone over Libya, the first female British Typhoon pilot flew into the skies and in action.

The pilot’s identity is yet to be known. She is the only woman who flies the fighter plane for the air force. A member of the British contingent stationed at the southern Italian airbase of Gioia del Colle, she clambered into the fighter plane Wednesday morning and took off before midday. (see above photo)

A total of three RAF Typhoons and two Tornadoes took off to the skies that morning.

RAF planes fly from Brize Norton airbase in Oxfordshire helped refuel GR4 Tornadoes operating over Libya to enforce the no-fly zone earlier on Wednesday. Many of the planes are refuelling over Cyprus, which hosts two British bases, but has said it does not want any involvement in military operations over Libya.

Western warplanes have flown more than 300 sorties over Libya and more than 162 Tomahawk cruise missiles have been fired in the United Nations mission to protect Libyan civilians against government troops.

President Demetris Christofias said that his government opposed any use of the British bases on the island to enforce the no-fly zone, but conceded it had no power to stop their involvement.

 

Source: The Telegraph

RAF to disband two Tornado squadrons

The last government announced in December 2009 that the RAF would need to reduce the number of Tornado or Harrier squadrons, but left the detail of the reductions to the Strategic Defence and Security Review (SDSR).

In the event the SDSR had to consider how best to make these reductions against the background of the fiscal situation. And as a result of this the RAF has announced today that 13 Squadron, based at RAF Marham, and 14 Squadron, based at RAF Lossiemouth, are to be disbanded.

These squadrons have been selected by the Air Force Board Standing Committee, taking into account operational commitments and the relative seniority of the squadrons at each base. The squadrons will be formally stood down on 1 June.

The RAF will retain five front line Tornado squadrons with a total fleet of 136 GR4 aircraft.

The RAF anticipates that the majority will be found other permanent roles, although not necessarily in their current location. Those personnel working in areas which the RAF has identified as containing surplus staff will of course be able to apply for, and be considered for, redundancy, alongside exploring other options within the Service.

GR4 Tornado

- mod.uk

RAF could see Tornado fleet cut in half

 

The Royal Armed Forces are braced for another round of drastic cuts as the Ministry of Defense has to make up a £1.6 billion shortfall for the next financial year.

The RAF is bracing itself to its fleet of 134 Tornado GR4 fighter-bombers being slashed in half to just 60 jets to save up to £300 million a year. Key defence officials are meeting on Tuesday to thrash out the details of how to make immediate savings to the 2011/2012 budget.

Despite challenging the previous government over the helicopter shortages in Afghanistan a key decision will be the likely announcement to cut 12 extra Chinooks that were part of a package ordered by Gordon Brown.

Other important equipment programmes are going to be axed in what will be an embarrassing revision of last October’s Strategic Defence and Security Review. The MoD has been forced into making the extra cuts after it miscalculated savings in the next financial year.

It was supposed to save £8 billion by 2014-15 as a 7.5 per cut real terms cut to its budget. Half of this was meant to come through headline equipment cuts such as the Harriers, Nimrod reconnaissance planes, frigates and the aircraft carriers Ark Royal and Illustrious. The rest was to come through axing 17,000 Servicemen and 25,000 MoD staff as well as “efficiency savings”.

“We have 34 major procurement programmes and it’s a question of what’s nice to have and what’s necessary to have but no one can see how to take that decision because they’re all regarded as vital,” said an officer involved in the planning.

“There is not an endless supply of money and people need to realise there is a serious financial situation and there are difficult choices to make,” one MoD official said.

- The Telegraph

RAF to retire Hawker Siddeley 125 Dominie

 

 

The Hawker Siddeley 125 Dominie aircraft, the oldest aircraft in the Royal Air Force (RAF), is to retire from service at the end of January.

Operated by 55 (Reserve) Squadron at RAF Cranwell, the Dominie currently provides training for all rear crew in the RAF. However the cancellation of the Nimrod MRA4 and a reduction in the number of Tornado GR4s has resulted in the RAF ceasing any further Weapons System Officer (formerly Navigator) training following graduation of the current course.

It has also removed the requirement to train Weapons System Operators in the Sensor Operator role for the next few years.

The HS125 Dominie was originally procured in the 1960s to train Navigators, in particular for the V Force. The aircraft has been in service for over 45 years and over that time has been based at former Royal Air Force bases Stradishall, Finningley and Manby.

Initially 22 aircraft were built, with 55 (Reserve) Squadron operating the last remaining seven aircraft. To commemorate the outstanding service provided by this venerable aircraft the Squadron will fly a number of formations towards the end of the month culminating in a final flypast at RAF Cranwell on 20 January 2011.

- Royal Air Force

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