http://news.investors.com/082815-768701-f35-vs-warthog-matchup-isnt-silly-after-all.htm
I think this is a great idea - please note the part I bolded. When I was in the AF I provided wx support for the IOT&E of the F-111D model early in my career and was involved with the NEXRAD doppler weather radar IOT&E during my last tour.
Conducting an IOT&E to "understand the differences between the close-air support provided by the two planes and identify any gaps in the F-35's abilities" makes perfect sense to me. Hopefully knowledge of the "gaps" will help the AF figure out how they can ameliorate them with new tactics, software tweaks, etc.
I am somewhat surprised that Gen Welsh, a former A-10 driver, thinks it "would be a silly exercise". I think it says a lot about the mindset of the AF about CAS and I applaud the Pentagon's OT&E community for making this happen.
quote:
A matchup between Lockheed Martin's F-35 vs. the older A-10 Warthog isn't so "silly" after all. The Pentagon's Office of Operational Test and Evaluation said late Thursday that it would run tests to evaluate how the F-35 stacks up in close-air support vs. the A-10, according to Defense News. The tests will use the latest upgrade of the 3F software for the F-35 and take place in 2018.
The announcement comes after Air Force chief of staff Gen. Mark Welsh told the press Monday that he wasn't aware of any tests between the two planes and said a matchup "would be a silly exercise."
He (Welsh) said the planes were expected to perform different functions: The F-35 can survive in high-threat, close-air support environments with its advanced stealth and other high-tech features, while the A-10 can't.
But Michael Gilmore, director of the Pentagon's Office of Operational Test and Evaluation, said the tests would help the Pentagon understand the differences between the close-air support provided by the two planes and identify any gaps in the F-35's abilities.
I think this is a great idea - please note the part I bolded. When I was in the AF I provided wx support for the IOT&E of the F-111D model early in my career and was involved with the NEXRAD doppler weather radar IOT&E during my last tour.
Conducting an IOT&E to "understand the differences between the close-air support provided by the two planes and identify any gaps in the F-35's abilities" makes perfect sense to me. Hopefully knowledge of the "gaps" will help the AF figure out how they can ameliorate them with new tactics, software tweaks, etc.
I am somewhat surprised that Gen Welsh, a former A-10 driver, thinks it "would be a silly exercise". I think it says a lot about the mindset of the AF about CAS and I applaud the Pentagon's OT&E community for making this happen.