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US Air Force is considering this new low-cost fighter for counterterrorism missions

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http://www.businessinsider.com/us-air-force-low-cost-fighter-2017-1
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The Air Force intends to conduct an informal experiment of a potential light attack fighter aircraft the service could use in ongoing counterterrorism air campaigns, the service’s top general said Wednesday.

Chief of Staff Gen. David Goldfein said the Air Force is looking to programs such as Textron’s Scorpion to potentially provide an inexpensive fighter capable of performing close-air support missions.

“We’re right now just having this dialogue with industry partners,” Goldfein told reporters after speaking at an American Enterprise Institute event in Washington, D.C. “Making sure they know that we’re putting this on — dates, still to be determined. But probably around the springtime.”

Goldfein, saying there is no request for information at this time, did not elaborate on how the experiment would be conducted or what it would entail — whether it would be just a viewing of various industry light attack aircraft, simulation trials or flight demonstration.

His comments come days after Arizona Republican Sen. John McCain released his white paper assessment on how the Defense Department should move forward in military spending.

The former Navy pilot stressed that, while the service should sustain its A-10 Thunderbolt II fighter fleet for close-air support, “the Air Force should procure 300 low-cost, light-attack fighters that would require minimal work to develop.”

“These aircraft could conduct counterterrorism operations, perform close-air support and other missions in permissive environments, and help to season pilots to mitigate the Air Force’s fighter pilot shortfall,” McCain said. His comments echo those of officials such as Lt. Gen. James “Mike” Holmes, the service’s deputy chief of staff for strategic plans and requirements, who recently said the aircraft could help dilute the fighter pilot shortage and gradually increase readiness.

McCain suggested the Air Force could procure “the first 200 of these aircraft by fiscal year 2022.”

Goldfein said it is important to note, “This isn’t a competition, it’s an experiment.”

“We’re going to do this experiment and see what’s out there, and I’m expecting many of the companies to come forward,” he said.

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Brig. Gen. Edward Thomas, director of Air Force public affairs, said Goldfein — who hasn’t officially signed off on the experiment, dubbed OA-X — “believes it does make sense to look at opportunities to provide a … cheaper, attack-type aircraft that can do the close-air support mission, that other countries, allies, can fly also. And do this in a way that doesn’t require an F-22 or an F-35 over a permissive environment,” he said, mentioning Iraq and Afghanistan.

With the current budget, “I don’t believe there is anything specifically programmed for it right now,” Thomas said, noting the experiment is in its early stages and doesn’t have any funding attached.

The additional light attack aircraft — which would not replace the service’s beloved A-10 Warthog — “would relieve the pressure on other aircraft, maintenance crews, [and] it would give us some turning space with our other combat platforms,” Thomas said.

In September, Holmes told Defense News that a less expensive aircraft could help the service alleviate the strain of maintaining its infrastructure, growing and training new pilot ranks, and adding more resources while simultaneously contributing to ongoing conflicts.

“We don’t think it would cost a lot of money, and it’s designed just to help us get our arms around [questions like], ‘What can you actually do? Does it actually contribute? Can it survive in different threat environments?’ ” Holmes said at the time.
 
Its actually old news , but I love this aircraft thanks for sharing.
 
Given the pace of drone and AI development, does Air Force need a manned light fighter aircraft?
 
India and UK should offer weaponised bae hawk

Given the pace of drone and AI development, does Air Force need a manned light fighter aircraft?
Yes....because it's far more cheaper
 
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https://sputniknews.com/military/201706121054565936-air-force-to-kill-a10/

A Washington lawmaker is pushing hard to keep the aging A-10 aircraft flying, as the Pentagon pushes money elsewhere.

US Representative Martha McSally (R-AZ) seeks to upgrade the venerable A-10 ground support attack airplane, even as Congress and the Pentagon are making moves to spend money on other projects.

After indicating its intention to eliminate up to three squadrons of the 1970s-era warplane, the US Air Force appears to again be moving to retire the fleet, as the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter program is ramped up to take its place.

McSally, however, a former Air Force pilot who has flown the A-10 "Warthog" in combat, is seeking additional funding to keep the old fleet flying, and is asking for new replacement wings for the squadrons that have not yet already received them.

If the Air Force has its way, however, three grounded A-10 squadrons will reduce the fleet total of nine to just six — not enough, she says, to cover ongoing missions in the Iraqi and Syrian conflicts, as well standing ready in South Korea and deployed in Europe.

Decrying the Pentagon move to eliminate a large percentage of an A-10 fleet currently in demand around the world, McSally stated: "How are you going to maintain something like that with six squadrons?"

"It doesn't make any sense to me," she added, cited by Stripes.com.

When it comes to the Warthog, the US Air Force changes its mind consistently, signaling in February that it would keep the entire A-10 fleet flying until at least 2021, in the wake of a previous announcement that the aircraft would begin to be phased out starting in 2018, to be completely retired by 2022.

McSally, in echoing the popularity within the US Air Force of the Warthog, suggested that it could be several years at least to get funding for the remaining 110 A-10s to be upgraded with replacement wings, if the funding can be found.
 
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