link : USAF Claims 100% Availability for F-35 Over 8-Month Deployment to Middle East
USAF Claims 100% Availability for F-35 Over 8-Month Deployment to Middle East
Hill AFB Airmen Demonstrate Combat Flexibility, Reliability of F-35 During Deployments
An F-35A of the 34th Fighter Squadron breaks off after refueling from a KC-135 tanker. The US Air Force claims that, over an 8-month period, the squadron “did not lose a single sortie to a maintenance issue,” implying an improbable 100% availability rate. (USAF photo)
Each of the wing’s three squadrons, alongside Reservists from the 419th Fighter Wing, have deployed in support of the Air Force Central Command mission at Al Dhafra Air Base, United Arab Emirates. The 4th Fighter Squadron, deployed in April 2019, was the first. The 34th FS deployed in October 2019 and returned home in June and July. The 421st FS is currently deployed.
“Our Airmen continue to carry out the combat mission the Air Force asks of us,” said Col. Steven Behmer, 388th FW commander. “Not only that, but they are truly on the leading edge of developing how our service employs this very capable fighter, now and in the future.”
The building blocks the 4th FS deployment put in place, helped when the 34th FS was tasked with the first short-notice F-35 deployment, and the largest F-35 combat deployment to date.
“I was flying a local exercise sortie at Hill (AFB) at the time. I got recalled by the command post while I was airborne to return to base,” said Lt. Col. Aaron Cavazos, 34th FS commander. “That normally means somebody got hurt or we’re being deployed. It ended up being that we were heading out for AFCENT on a short-notice tasking. A couple weeks later we had people flying combat sorties.”
When the squadron arrived at Al Dhafra (AB), they generated their first combat sortie within 24 hours, and they didn’t lose a single sortie to a maintenance issue for the next eight months. (Emphasis added—Ed.)
“During this deployment we demonstrated to senior leaders in theater what we’ve known to be true: the F-35 is formidable, it is adaptable and it is less needy in terms of maintenance than people may expect,” said Capt. Susan McLeod, officer in charge of the 34th Aircraft Maintenance Unit.
The squadron demonstrated the flexibility of the multi-role F-35. On a given day, pilots performed strafing runs on close air support missions, and maritime escorts for U.S. Navy carrier strike groups.
“We proved the F-35 can carry out a variety of missions,” Cavazos said. “While the F-35 is just another asset to be tasked, there are some other cool fifth-generation capabilities that we bring to the table and have to be used the correct way. We can go take away a chunk of airspace at a moment’s notice and give it back at a later point if we want to. It was a pretty neat role to be able to support AFCENT and we're doing our best to communicate to combatant commands exactly what we can offer them.”
The deployment was the first time an F-35A unit successfully sustained agile basing at a forward location. For more than three months, a third of the squadron forward deployed and flew missions from an undisclosed location. The groundwork for how to implement agile basing was laid by the 421st FS during the “Rapid Forge” exercise in Europe last year.
This agile basing construct gave AFCENT the ability to “project power across thousands of miles and numerous countries with a single fighter unit,” Cavazos said.
“We now have unpredictability against potential adversaries,” Cavazos said. “They are so used to us showing up in country, staying in the same place for half a year, doing the same things, and leaving. They know it. We know it. Now we proved we can be more agile. That principal can carry over operationally to other regions and any potential adversaries there.”
Some doubted that split operations could be successfully sustained, Cavazos said. But even with a deployment extended months longer by the coronavirus pandemic, (which also slowed global supply chains) the maintainers were able to support every operational requirement.
“To support the forward-deployed location and the extension to our deployment at the same time was a challenge,” said Senior Master Sgt. Westley Calloway, 34th AMU lead production superintendent. “We had to think creatively to solve logistics and communication challenges, because in a lot of ways, we’re writing the playbook. But once those chains were established, we were able to maintain the health of our fleet and complete every task asked of us.”
The deployment experience wasn’t just a success operationally, but also helped young pilots and maintainers experience joint operations, the unpredictable nature of warfare, and will increase confidence and perspective, Cavazos said.
“We’re becoming our own F-35 community. We aren’t just a hodgepodge from other airframes anymore,” Cavazos said. “It’s really cool to have that experience with the younger guys in the squadron and see them progress on their first deployment.”
(EDITOR’S NOTE: Given that audits by government agencies ranging from the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to the Pentagon’s Director of Independent Operational Test and Evaluation have found that the average availability of the F-35 hovers at less than 75%, it is difficult to believe the Air Force’s claim that, over an eight month deployment to the Middle East, “they didn’t lose a single sortie to a maintenance issue.”
It is regrettable that no details are provided to substantiate such an implausible claim.)
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