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Research Note no. 32 2005–06
The F-35 (Joint Strike Fighter) Project: progress and issues for Australia
Alex
Tewes
Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade Section
9 June 2006
The need for new aircraft to replace the ageing F/A-18
and F-111 was formally identified in the Defence 2000 White Paper. At
that time, the Australian Government foreshadowed that about 100 new
aircraft would be purchased and should be in service in 2012.(1)
Since then, the estimated cost of the purchase, designated Project AIR6000,
has increased from about $10.5 billion to between $12 billion and
$15.5 billion.(2) The uncertainty about future growth
in the final cost of the aircraft makes it difficult to gauge the total
budgetary impact of this project.
The decision to purchase new aircraft raised two
major questions: what to purchase and how much to pay. Initially, the
Government set up a competitive evaluation process to examine its options.
In June 2002, it dispensed with this aspect of Project AIR6000 and signed
up to the developmental phase of the United States-led Joint Strike
Fighter (JSF) program, at a cost of $195 million.(3)
The F-35 JSF is a new-generation stealth aircraft—specifically designed
to carry out both the fighter and strike aircraft roles—and thus able
to replace both the F/A-18 and F-111 in those two respective roles.
It is expected that in late 2006 the Australian Government
will sign the next memorandum of understanding in the JSF project, covering
the multilateral production-development phase of the work, which should
lead to a final purchase decision in 2008.(4) On signing
the memorandum, the Government will give Lockheed a firm estimate of
the numbers of aircraft to be ordered and the preferred delivery schedule,
as well as $180 million, to cover Australia’s portion of the non-recurring
costs of moving to full production.(5)
These decisions will be made in an environment where
several questions remain about the overall wisdom of committing to the
JSF so early in the project’s development. Such questions focus on the
eventual cost of the aircraft and whether it represents value for money,
whether advances in unmanned systems will make it obsolete before it
enters into service, and whether the multinational partnership underpinning
the large number to be built—which lowers the price per unit—will endure.
This Research Note summarises the current status
of these arguments in the period leading to the Australian Government’s
proposed signature to the production-development phase of the JSF project.
Australian industry involvement
Latest reports indicate that some 15 Australian firms
have gained over $100 million worth of contracts for work on the
JSF project, ranging from engineering drawing to the manufacture of
engine stands and composite panels.(6) However, such industry
participation during the system development and demonstration phase
is in the lower end of value-adding for the project as a whole and does
not guarantee similar success in winning contracts for the much larger
production and support phases of the project, even if Australia does
proceed to acquire the aircraft.
Current project issues
Access to the source code
While earlier problems such as aircraft weight and
range have apparently been solved, questions about the release of the
computer source code that makes the aircraft so unique have emerged
as a potential showstopper for international clients. The source code
in question refers to the millions of lines of computer code that allow
this 21st-century aircraft to fly and to fight. Without complete access
to this source code, Australia will be unable to modify or even maintain
the aircraft independently—as it has done so successfully for many years
with the F-111.
The question about the release of the source code
to Australia has not been confirmed publicly. It is understood that
maintenance of the JSF will be undertaken in a regional logistics and
maintenance centre run by Lockheed Martin. Without access to the source
code, Australia may in coming decades be put in the invidious position
of having no option but to pay whatever Lockheed Martin asks during
future contract negotiations for the ongoing maintenance of Australia’s
strike fighters.
Cost implications of wavering participation
Recent reports indicate that the United Kingdom is
considering opting out of the JSF project due to source-code release
issues and because of the threatened cancellation of a second (British)
version of the JSF engine.(7) By having an alternative engine
design available, aircraft manufacturers can keep prices down through
competition while at the same time encouraging further development.
In this case, however, the second engine is threatened because of the
need to reduce overall project costs.
The UK vacillation with regards to the JSF has a
major implication for Australia. The UK is expected to be the largest
overseas purchaser of the JSF, and a major client for the Short Take-Off
and Vertical Landing (STOVL) version. Should the UK choose not to buy
the aircraft, then the unit cost for other overseas purchasers would
very likely climb significantly. The price could then escalate further
if the higher cost resulted in other overseas purchasers also reconsidering
their acquisition decisions.
The JSF project is already comfortably the largest
defence acquisition in Australia’s history. Yet, even at the currently
estimated $15.5 billion price tag, there are real questions about
how many airframes can be bought at the price. A significant price increase
may either cause a significant blow-out in the budget, or reduce the
number of aircraft bought to a number too low to be operationally effective.
How much stealth will it provide?
In short, ‘stealth’ is not a fungible concept. The
stealth capacity of the JSF has been marketed as one of its major drawcards,
but it is worth remembering that the Australian JSF will have only a
‘third tier’ stealth capability. The American F-22 Raptor has the highest
stealth configuration, followed by the US version of the JSF, and then
the JSF version sold to countries such as the UK and Australia.(8)
Technical commentary indicates that the JSF stealth
design appears to be optimised against a narrow set of radar types.
These are known as narrowband X-band and Ku/K/Ka-band. These radars
are found in other fighter aircraft and battlefield air defence weapon
systems. However, the JSF stealth design may be less capable against
so-called L-band and S-band radars, which are used in static or semi-mobile
early warning radars, as well as on Airborne Early Warning and Control
(AEW&C) aircraft similar to the Wedgetail aircraft currently being
acquired by Australia. (9)These capabilities are widespread
in the region where, for example, both India and China operate A-50
Mainstay AEW&C aircraft. Air power analyst Dr Carlo Kopp notes that,
given the availability of Russian beyond–visual-range missiles with
advanced infrared seekers:
If an Su-30 can be positioned close enough, [through, for
example, vectoring by an AWEW&C aircraft (ed.)] it can engage the
JSF regardless of stealth, and with a kinematic and missile performance
advantage the odds are unlikely to favour the JSF.(10)
Although the limited stealth capability of the Australian
JSF is worth something, its value may be confined to circumstances where
the adversary air defence capabilities are not supported by AEW&C
aircraft or equivalent ground-based installations.(11) However,
such capabilities are already widespread in the region and will be even
more so by the time the JSF enters service with the RAAF sometime after
2012.
The US ‘Quadrennial Defense Review’
Every four years, the US Department of Defense conducts
a congressionally mandated review of defence strategy, programs and
policies, a practice without an exact equivalent in Australia.(12)
The Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR) aims to keep strategy, forces and
budgets in some sort of agreement. It differs from Australia’s Defence
White Paper series in that the White Paper has a direct relationship
with the government’s defence budget, while the QDR must be negotiated
between the Administration and the Congress as part of the normal budget
cycle. Nevertheless, it provides a useful guide to the overall direction
of defence expenditure in the United States.
Prior to the release of the latest QDR on 3 February
2006, it was widely expected that the review would include a significant
cut to the number of JSF airframes to be acquired.(13) However,
references to the JSF are conspicuous for their absence, and it would
be wrong to read this as an endorsement of the project as it currently
stands. As Steve Kosiak, from the U.S. Center for Strategic and Budgetary
Assessments, notes:
Moreover, some of the proposed shifts in priorities—such
as the accelerated fielding of a new long-range strike aircraft—are
likely to be dependent, for their implementation, on the willingness
and ability of a future administration to make offsetting cuts in other
DoD priorities. The QDR has, for the most part, deferred these difficult
choices.(14)
Even an endorsement of a reduced number of airframes
would remain an endorsement of the project. One interpretation of the
QDR’s silence about the JSF is that even such a limited endorsement
could not be negotiated, and that hard decisions on this, and other
projects, may have been left for future administrations.
How many for how much?
While the Australian Government’s original statements
indicated an intention to purchase about 100 aircraft, a recent
paper from the Kokoda Foundation set out the arguments for various
purchase numbers ranging from as few as 75 aircraft up to more than
120 aircraft.(15) However, it should be noted that this study
made assumptions about the number of aircraft that would be allocated
to each JSF squadron. If other arrangements were made—for example, the
number of airframes per squadron was reduced—even fewer aircraft would
be required.
After being in development for nine years, the JSF
program is still to fly its first test aircraft.(16) Therefore,
it is unsurprising that many questions remain about the eventual cost
of the aircraft and its ongoing support. While the budget allocated
to the project in Australia has grown significantly over the past few
years (from $12 billion to $15.5 billion), the current ‘fly
away’ cost per aircraft—currently expected to be $100 million—may
grow larger still as the project matures.(17) This is because
considerable development work still remains to be done, including:
-
fully maturing seven of the eight critical technologies
-
completing the designs and releasing the engineering
drawings of all three variants
-
manufacturing and delivering 15 flight test aircraft
and seven ground test articles
-
developing 19 million lines of software code, and
-
completing a seven-year, 12,000-hour flight-test program.
(18)
Other factors likely to affect the ‘through-life’
price will be the overall number of airframes produced, and whether
Australia is given access to the entire source code, just as the UK
is currently demanding.
While a smaller-sized fleet structured around three
squadrons is attractive because of its affordability, maintaining or
increasing the current number of combat squadrons would open the way
for consideration of relocating one or two squadrons to Western Australia
(either to RAAF Pearce near Perth, or further north to an upgraded RAAF
Gin Gin), so as to provide a local air defence capability for the navy
ships based at Fremantle.
Should the eventual cost of the JSF become—politically
or objectively—unaffordable, then it is reasonable to ask what alternatives
would then be considered. The demise of the competitive evaluation aspects
of Project AIR6000 means that there is no ‘order of merit’ for alternatives
to the JSF. Nevertheless, arguments in the media and elsewhere have
raised the prospect of the F-22 Raptor being a suitable next-generation
alternative.(19) Others suggest that the ongoing development
of current-generation aircraft like the F-15 might yet provide a suitable
alternative, albeit missing the crucial element of stealth design.(20)
Conventional or STOVL?
Project AIR6000 currently envisions that Australia
will acquire the conventional version of the JSF. This version is the
cheapest, and has the longest range as well as the largest bomb-carrying
capacity. However, with the Navy planning to acquire very large amphibious
vessels—roughly twice the size of the old HMAS Melbourne aircraft carrier,
and capable of hosting significant aviation assets—it is understood
that some quarters within the ADF are suggesting that Australia purchase
several of the STOVL version of the JSF so that they may be deployed
on, and operated from, the amphibious ships, thus providing dedicated
air combat capabilities to their embarked forces.(21)
While such a purchase might complicate the maintenance
of the aircraft due to there being two versions, the seaborne deployment
of the JSF would answer one significant strategic question, that is,
how Australia can maintain an expeditionary strategy—in an era of ‘coalitions
of the willing’—when forward bases may be unavailable or too vulnerable
to enemy use of weapons of mass destruction.
Should Australia look at the F-22?
With the US having decided to keep producing the
F-22 at least until 2010, the question of whether to forgo the JSF in
favour of the F-22 has resurfaced. However, three fundamental problems
stand in the way of any serious consideration of the F-22 as an Australian
option.
First, the F-22 is an air-superiority fighter with
some—limited—ground-attack capability, whereas the JSF is a purpose-designed
strike platform. Given that it is now more than half a century since
Australian combat aircraft were engaged in air-to-air combat, it would
seem that a focus on strike might better meet Australia’s strategic
requirements.
Second, the F-22 is undoubtedly the ‘crown jewel’
in the USAF armoury. While some recent reports suggest that an ‘export
version’ of the F-22 might be possible for selected allies, a deep concern
remains within US military circles about the potential of a security
breach around the F-22’s unique electronic architecture, stealth aspects
and next-generation data links.(22)
Third, the price of the F-22 is unlikely to drop
much below double that of the JSF. With a relatively small budget, Australia
could afford only a limited number of aircraft. In addition, as the
production process is already established, Australia would forgo the
benefits arising from Australian industry participation and in-country
maintenance facilities that make the JSF such an attractive proposition.
What about a current aircraft like the F-15?
A number of countries such as Singapore and South
Korea have recently faced the same questions as Australia in terms of
air defence needs, and have decided that the JSF is not the only possible
alternative.(23) For example, South Korea chose a variant
of the strike-version of the F-15 (known as the F-15K). This is an upgrade
of the venerable F-15E Strike Eagle with an option for up-to-date Active
Electronically Scanned Array (AESA) radars and sensors, networking capability,
able to carry the latest stand-off weapons and with an impressive range.(24)
In recent days, Boeing has demonstrated the ability
to link a tactical fighter in flight—in this case its F-15E1 technology
demonstrator—to the Global Information Grid. Using intelligent agent
software, the aircraft systems were able to ‘pull’ data relevant to
the aircraft’s simulated mission off the network and datalink it to
the fighter. This is one of the aspects of what is termed ‘network-centric
warfare’ that is a key selling point for the JSF. Furthermore, as can
be seen with the introduction of AESA radars to the F-15 and other current-generation
fighter aircraft like the F/A-18 EF, it is likely that market forces
will ensure that all the key features of the JSF—except its stealth
design—will eventually be introduced into current generation fighters
well before the JSF achieves operational status.(25)
Unmanned Combat Air Vehicles (UCAVs)
The global War on Terror has significantly increased
the speed of developments in both unmanned reconnaissance and strike
air vehicles. Both have the ability to loiter for extended periods over
the battlefield—critical in a network-centric warfare context—and their
loss to enemy action would not have the same political impact as the
loss of a manned aircraft. While the tension between unmanned combat
air vehicles and the JSF has long been apparent, it is only recently
that serious questions have been posed about the long-term suitability
of a(ny) manned platform in the long-range strike role.(26)
It is increasingly apparent that the US will use
the F-22 and a new unmanned long-range strike platform, which is due
in service by 2018, to achieve/maintain air supremacy.(27)
Such developments would leave little room in the US armoury for the
JSF. When considered in this context, it is an open question whether
the JSF will actually be built at all in the numbers envisioned, or
whether it will be cancelled before its in-service date, as was the
RAH-66 Comanche stealth helicopter, which was cancelled in 2004, two
years before achieving operational status.(28)
Conclusion
The project schedule for the JSF is forcing the Australian
government to make significant decisions about its ongoing participation
in the project at a time when the options available for the maintenance
of air superiority in the region are both clouded and changing rapidly.
It is clear that the JSF will most likely become much more costly by
the time it is delivered and fully effective, while its only next-generation
contender, the F-22, is already in operational service and will likely
reduce in price—though not necessarily to the level of the JSF—over
the coming years.
In the meantime, aircraft like the F-15 are available
today and have no developmental costs attached. Furthermore, commercial
imperatives will most likely see the inclusion of the latest-generation
radars, sensors and other components into current-generation aircraft
well before the JSF achieves operational status. Given the ongoing costs
and airworthiness issues surrounding the F-111 and F/A-18, this option
may be both the safest and cheapest in an environment where the real
growth in defence budgets cannot be guaranteed.
Finally, the day of the unmanned combat aircraft
is dawning faster than most experts could ever have anticipated. As
stated above, the US will field an unmanned long-range strike aircraft
by 2018 or earlier, given the current pace of developments in the field.
It may be that, in choosing the JSF, the Australian Government is essentially
buying the last of the manned fighters. Like the last of the propeller-driven
fighter planes, the JSF’s day may pass before the aircraft even soars
into the sky in RAAF livery.
-
Dept of Defence, Defence 2000: Our Future Defence Force,
Commonwealth of Australia, Canberra, 2000, p. 87.
-
Dept. of Defence, Defence Capability Plan 2004-14 Public Version,
Commonwealth of Australia, Canberra, 2004, p. 45.
-
http://www.jsf.mil/program/prog_intl.htm.
accessed 7 June 06
-
C. Jay, ‘Sun never sets on the design of jet fighter’, Australian
Financial Review, 23 September 2005, p. 64.
-
G. Ferguson, ‘JSF: No miracles needed’, Australian Defence Magazine,
February 2006, pp. 20–4.
-
S. Creedy, ‘Aussies strike it rich in US fighter deal’, The
Australian, 27 January 2006, p. 26.
-
At the time of writing, the U.S. House Armed Services Committee
had reinstated US$408 million into the 2007 Defense Authorization
Act to allow for the purchase of the alternative engine for the
JSF. See DefenceNews.com, ‘GOP Lawmakers Trim Bush Defense Budget’,
27 April 2006.
-
This was confirmed by the then US Ambassador Tom Schieffer in evidence
to the JSCFADT on 21 June 2004.
-
C. Kopp, ‘Is the Joint Strike Fighter right for Australia? Pt2
– JSF V Risk Factors’, Australian Aviation, May 2004, pp.
29–34.
-
ibid., p. 30.
-
It is worth remembering that the F-117 Stealth Fighter shot down
over Serbia on 27 March 1999 was detected using 1950s technology
and brought down by an SA-3 anti-aircraft missile which has been
in service since 1961.
-
S. M. Kosiak, ‘QDR
does little to improve affordability of long-term defense plans’,
Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, 3 February 2006,
www.csbaonline.org.
-
M. Fabey, ‘Analysts predict QDR will bring JSF cuts, http://www.defensenews.com/story.php?F=1160436&C=america
10 October 2005.
-
S. M. Kosiak, op. cit.
-
P. Nicholson, D. Connery, Australia’s
Future Joint Strike Fighter Fleet: How much is too little?,
Kokoda Foundation, October 2005.
-
Government Accountability Office (GAO), Tactical Aircraft: Recapitalization
goals are not supported by knowledge-based
F-22A and JSF business cases, 28 March 2006.
-
T. Allard, ‘Jet fighter costs go skyward as price of rival nosedives’,
Sydney Morning Herald, 20 April 2006, p. 4.
-
GAO Report dated 28 March 2006, op. cit.
-
http://parlinfoweb.aph.gov.au/piweb/TranslateWIPILink.aspx?Folder=PRESSCLP&Criteria=CITATION_ID:VP2J6%3B
accessed 7 June 2006.
-
J. Thorn, ‘Korean F-15 Order has Implications for Australia’, Australian
Aviation, September 2002, pp. 22–24.
-
‘Australia Issues Official Tender for A$ 2.0B Large Amphibious
Ships Program’, Defense Industry Daily, 3 May 2006, http://www.defenseindustrydaily.com/2006/05/australia-issues-official-tender-for-a-20b-large-amphibious-ships-program/index.php.
-
‘F-22
Raptors to Japan?’ Defense Industry Daily,
20 February 2006.
-
‘Singapore
Announces F-15SG Contract’, Defense Industry Daily, 14 December
2005.
-
http://www.boeing.com/defense-space/military/f15/f-15k/f15kavionics.htm.
-
http://www.raytheon.com/products/apg79aesa/
accessed on 3 May 2006.
-
‘One could very easily imagine the JSF program getting substantially
truncated because UCAVs turn out to be able to do everything JSF
can’, John Pike, GlobalSecurity.org
(a well-regarded independent US-based think tank). Quoted in the
Seattle Times, 26 October 2001.
-
M. Z. Vickers, ‘A Revolutionary Review’,
TCS Daily.com, accessed on 15 February 2006.
-
http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/systems/aircraft/rah-66.htm,
accessed on 7 April 2006.
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