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AIR FORCE WANTS TO LIQUIDATE ITS TINY LIGHT ATTACK PLANE FLEET


WITH JUST FIVE AIRCRAFT PROCURED UNDER ITS LIGHT ATTACK EXPERIMENT, THE AIR
FORCE IS ALREADY LOOKING TO DISPOSE OF ITS A-29S AND AT-6ES.

byThomas NewdickAug 11, 2022 7:58 PM
The War Zone

USAF
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Thomas NewdickView thomas newdick's Articles

CombatAir

The saga of the U.S. Air Force’s Light Attack Experiment could be finally
nearing its end, with the service now apparently looking to offload the tiny
force of turboprop aircraft it acquired over the last couple of years. The three
A-29 Super Tucanos and two AT-6E Wolverines will likely be passed on to foreign
operators if the Air Force gets its way.

The latest development in the ever-complicated Light Attack Experiment was
addressed by Edward Stanhouse, the Air Force’s Program Executive Officer for
Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance (ISR) and Special Operations
Forces (SOF), speaking to journalists at this week’s Life Cycle Industry Days
conference.


One of the two U.S. Air Force AT-6E Wolverines taxis on the flight line during
its arrival at Moody Air Force, Georgia, on January 12, 2022. U.S. Air Force
photo by Andrea Jenkins

The Air Force Special Operations Command (SOCOM) A-29s and Air Combat Command’s
AT-6Es “will end up being probably declared Excess Defense Articles, and we’ll
look for other mission partners that may want to pick those up,” Stanhouse said,
according to Air Force Magazine.



Excess Defense Articles are military materiel that can be provided to partner
nations either at a reduced cost or as a grant and are frequently transferred to
aid foreign governments in their modernization plans. Partner nations pay for
transport and delivery of the assets, as well as refurbishment, if applicable.

At this point, it’s worth noting that such a move, even if the Air Force backs
it, may still be blocked by Congress.


A Nigerian Air Force A-29 pilot fires two .50-caliber machine guns at a target
at the Grand Bay Bombing and Gunnery Range near Moody Air Force Base, Georgia,
on September 1, 2021. This Nigerian-owned aircraft was at Moody as part of the
U.S. Air Force-provided training effort \. U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman
Rebeckah Medeiros

The Air Force may also choose to sell off the second-hand aircraft under the
Foreign Military Sales, or FMS, process, which is what Stanhouse, at least,
seems to have in mind.

“I think the probability is potentially FMS, because we currently have FMS
partners who are flying both the AT-6 and A-29,” Stanhouse said, noting that he
thinks “there’s quite a bit of foreign interest.” In fact, no FMS partners
currently fly the AT-6E as used by Air Combat Command, but the T-6 Texan II
trainer from which it was derived is in widespread use.



In total, the Pentagon spent more than $200 million on buying the five aircraft.


A Colombian Air Force A-29B Super Tucano sits in front of two A-10 Thunderbolt
II aircraft during Exercise Green Flag East at Barksdale Air Force Base,
Louisiana, in August 2016. U.S. Air Force photo/Senior Airman Mozer O. Da Cunha

At this point, we don’t have a timeline for the planned withdrawal of the Air
Force’s A-29s and AT-6Es, although it may well be significant that Stanhouse is
already talking about them in the past tense:

“They were used for demonstrations, proof of concept demonstrations by both
SOCOM and Air Combat Command,” he said.

Among those demonstrations was the Airborne Extensible Relay Over-Horizon
Network, or AERONet, described as “a low-cost, exportable datalink solution for
countries that don’t have access to U.S. systems.” In June this year, the Air
Force revealed some details of those trials, which involved pilots from
Colombia, Nigeria, Thailand, and Tunisia flying in the back seat of the AT-6E to
test these technologies. At the same time, the Air Force announced the departure
of partner nation personnel and the two AT-6Es to bring to an end a
five-month-long collaboration.



A cell phone linked to the AERONet system displays the real-time locations of
personnel, vehicles, and aircraft during an exercise outside of Rionegro,
Colombia, in September 2021. U.S. Air Force photo by Tech. Sgt. Kenneth New

Whether or not there exists a requirement for future AERONet testing is less
important, since this is a ‘platform agnostic’ system, meaning there’s no
particular need for a niche aircraft (the AT-6E) to support the project should
it resume. The Wolverine was also lined up to take part in other experiments
with the U.S. Marine Corps and other partner countries, again with a focus on
common architecture and intelligence-sharing networks, but the status of these
trials is less clear.


Colombian Air Force Carreno “Tifon”, a copilot, poses for a photograph before an
experimentation flight in the AT-6E Wolverine at Moody Air Force Base, Georgia,
April 14, 2022. The flight focused on digitally tracking friendly forces and
potential enemy movement using AERONet software. U.S. Air Force photo by Airman
1st Class Courtney Sebastianelli

Meanwhile, the Super Tucano was acquired to support AFSOC’s Combat Aviation
Advisor (CAA) mission. This involved helping train CAAs, U.S. personnel who then
pass on their expertise by training allied air forces.

With senior officials already talking about plans to get rid of the
five-aircraft Light Attack Experiment fleet, it certainly looks like the program
is close to being wound up. In the past, Sierra Nevada Corporation, the prime
contractor for the A-29, has said it expects to provide training and support for
these aircraft continuing through 2024.

According to A-29’s manufacturer, 15 air forces around the world have selected
the type, which remains a popular choice for light attack and ISR missions in
Africa, Asia, and Latin America. CAAs work with many other aircraft types too,
so it may have been determined that operating a tiny fleet of A-29s just to
support this mission doesn’t make long-term sense.



The second A-29 Super Tucano for Air Force Special Operations Command, which
received this one-off heritage scheme honoring the 1st Air Commando Group of
World War II. Sierra Nevada Corporation

Even if the aircraft remain in Air Force use until 2024, that will make it a
notably short-lived initiative, at least in terms of time since aircraft
delivery. The first AT-6E was handed over in February 2021 and the first A-29
for Air Combat Command arrived the following month. The last of the A-29s,
ordered under a follow-on contract, was delivered in March this year.

However, the Light Attack Experiment’s predecessors, date back many more years,
during which they repeatedly failed to actually put aircraft in the hands of Air
Force operators.

Beginning in 2007, different branches of the U.S. military began evaluations
involving either the A-29 or the AT-6, or both, in the light attack role, on six
different occasions since 2007.

Between 2008 and 2012, the Air Force juggled two separate light attack aircraft
efforts, one for itself and one primarily on behalf of foreign partners, known
as Light Attack/Armed Reconnaissance (LAAR) and Light Air Support (LAS)
respectively.



Members of the Air National Guard look at an example of what was then known as
the AT-6C during tests in 2010. Interestingly two AIM-9X air-to-air missiles are
among the ordnance laid out in front of the aircraft. USAF

The LAAR program collapsed ignominiously in 2012, as you can read about here,
although LAS did see the A-29 selected and then provided to Afghanistan. The
aircraft did also enter service with Air Education and Training Command (AETC),
whose 81st Fighter Squadron was reactivated to fly these same aircraft to train
Afghan and later also Lebanese and Nigerian pilots. The squadron graduated its
final class at Moody Air Force Base, Georgia, in September 2021.


A group photo after the arrival of the first A-29 for the Afghan A-29 Light Air
Support training mission at Moody Air Force Base, Georgia, in September 2014.
U.S. Air Force photo/Airman 1st Class Dillian Bamman

At the same time, U.S. Special Operations Command was also running its own
experiments with similar aircraft types, primarily through Imminent Fury, but
also other light attack aircraft efforts. As well as testing A-29s, USSOCOM
deployed a pair of OV-10G+ Bronco aircraft to Iraq in 2015 for the Combat Dragon
II trials.


One of the two OV-10G+ aircraft that were deployed to Iraq for combat
trials. John Lequerica

A decade after these first light attack experiments began, the Department of
Defense was still engaged in gathering data on light attack and intelligence,
surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) aircraft under the Capability Assessment
of Non-Developmental Light Attack Platforms or Combat Dragon III, which began in
2017.

Latterly, there was the Air Force’s Light Attack Aircraft (LAA) program, the
immediate precursor to the current Light Attack Experiment.



You can read more about the saga of the LAA program here, but suffice to say,
when it was launched in 2018, the A-29 and AT-6 — both single-engine turboprop
aircraft — were expected to be the only aircraft that would meet its
requirements. The A-29 and what was then known as the AT-6C had already taken
part in two rounds of experiments between 2017 and 2018, together with
Textron’s Scorpion light jet and the AT-802L Longsword armed crop-duster from
Air Tractor and L3.


A Beechcraft AT-6 experimental aircraft flies over White Sands Missile Range
during the second phase of the Light Attack Experiment in July 2017. U.S. Air
Force Photo by Ethan D. Wagner

But in early 2019, LAA became the latest Air Force light attack aircraft effort
to be deferred indefinitely. The then Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. David
Goldfein bemoaned a lack of data on how these aircraft would be used, especially
with other platforms, uncertainty over funding, as well as a lack of
interest from potential foreign partners.

Ultimately, LAA was abandoned and with it went the hopes of fielding a fleet of
as many as 359 aircraft, enough for eight operational squadrons and three
training units, as the Pentagon had at one time planned. As it was, the
projected buy was repeatedly trimmed back, down to a fleet of less than 100
aircraft and then as few as 20.

In the meantime, the requirement for a light attack aircraft of this type became
less pressing, with the wind-down of large-scale air operations in Afghanistan
and the Middle East.



“We’re going to broaden the scope a little bit,” said the then Under Secretary
of the Air Force, Matt Donovan, suggested of LAA, speaking in early 2019, but by
this stage it seemed there was no real way back for a large-scale light attack
aircraft acquisition program.



Rather than broadening its scope, therefore, the Air Force ended up buying just
five of the two turboprop types once LAA had been reworked as the Light Attack
Experiment, with initial contracts being announced in March 2020.

In the background, however, AFSOC was following a different path to introduce a
light attack and ISR aircraft suitable for missions in uncontested airspace,
with minimal support infrastructure. That program is known as Armed Overwatch,
and although Congress blocked a fiscal 2021 request for funds to begin buying
the aircraft, more recently it has made significant progress.



Perhaps surprisingly, the A-29 was not among the five contenders for Armed
Overwatch, although the AT-6E was. Earlier this month, SOCOM awarded a contract
to L3 Harris Technologies for its AT-802U Sky Warden, based on an agricultural
aircraft.

The contract has a cost ceiling of $3 billion and could eventually include
delivery of up to 75 AT-802U aircraft.


The AT-802U Sky Warden demonstrator over Eglin Air Force Base, Florida. Air
Tractor Inc.

That decision, which you can read more about here, was the latest twist in a
long-running story that has, so far, seen multiple efforts to buy light attack
aircraft for the U.S. military falter. Should the Armed Overwatch program meet
its aim of achieving full operating capability should in 2029, it can be said
that the light attack story has properly turned a corner.

Before that happens, however, it seems the Air Force will continue with its
efforts to offload its A-29s and AT-6Es to foreign nations that already operate
the types. There is no shortage of existing Super Tucano operators who may take
up the offer, although the AT-6E has found a much smaller market so far, with
only Thailand having ordered this light attack version of the popular T-6
trainer.



During 15 years of efforts to field a light attack aircraft, the Air Force
worked its fast jet and bomber fleets hard, including in combat theaters, where
aircraft like the A-29 or AT-6 could have taken on many important missions. They
would have been able to fly these at a tiny fraction of the cost of a fast jet
and be able to operate from forward bases, without the need for aerial tanking,
and with a modest logistics footprint. Instead, while light attack was debated
seemingly endlessly, the Air Force was literally flying the wings off its legacy
combat fleet and the service is now paying the price.

Despite high hopes through its initial iterations, it looks as if the Light
Attack Experiment could be destined to become little more than a footnote in Air
Force history.

It will be left to SOCOM and its Sky Warden to carry the torch for the light
attack concept, as far as the U.S. military goes.

Contact the author: thomas@thedrive.com






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