Media Room: Defence Speech
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Defence |
| 22/02/2007 | MSPA 70221/07 |
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Director General New
Air Combat Capability Air Vice-Marshal John
Harvey The
Joint Strike Fighter Project continues to make very good progress and we've got
a short video here we can show you of the first aircraft flying. We'll bring
that up now. [Video] Thank
you. As I said, The Joint Strike Fighter Project continues to make very good
progress. That's the first test aircraft and they've recently completely its
seventh test flight and at the moment it's down for a scheduled upgrade for
some hardware and some software features of the aircraft. In
parallel with the joint strike fighter aircraft itself, the 737 based
cooperative avionics test aircraft has now conducted nine, sorry, 14 test
flights for 42 hours of flight and it's testing the JSF Avionics system,
another major risk reduction feature of the program. As
well as the aircraft itself and the development of the systems, now eight of
the nine original partner countries have joined the next phase of the project,
as I
just returned from the US where I took part in what's called a Coalition
Warfare Event where we had all nine partner countries in the JSF program,
flying together in high fidelity simulators conducting advanced missions
against a whole range of future threats which, again, gives very good
confidence in the progress of the aircraft and the capability of the aircraft. In
the context of the recent US Defense Budget or the
President's Budget that went to Congress, it's true there was a proposed
reduction in the ramp-up rate, or the acquisition of JSF in the early years of
the program, but there is no plan for the US Services to reduce the total
number of aircraft. So any cost implications associated with the reduced
ramp-up rate, they're already taken into account in our submission to
Government at first pass last year. Now,
a lot of the speculation in the media is about the JSF versus the F-22 and I
think the focus has been down to those two aircraft because there are only two
fifth generation aircraft. Two aircraft, obviously both
highly capable. The F-22 is specialised more in the air-to-air role and
it can't do the full range of air-to-air and air-to-ground tasks that we want
of the Joint Strike Fighter. The
Joint Strike Fighter has a wider range of sensors. It can carry larger weapons,
a wider range of weapons and a total carriage of more weapons than the F-22. I
guess those who ask the question… there's been discussion in the press again
about why shouldn't we just have an all F-22 fleet. I think it's pretty obvious
if the F-22 could do everything, the USAF wouldn't need the JSF as well. So
they recognise the F-22 can't do everything. And
for those who argue that the F-22 would actually be a cheaper solution, again,
you can ask the question did the USAF plan to buy ten times as many JSF as they
do F-22s. Our
assessment is the F-22 costs around twice as much as the Joint Strike Fighter
and that assessment was supported by a recent ASPI report. While
we tend to focus to a certain extent on the platform itself, the total air
combat capability is more than just a platform. It's a total system that the
JSF will be integrated into. For There's
also been a fair bit of press discussion recently about the consideration of
the potential acquisition of a squadron of Super Hornet aircraft. Defence has
always made the point and is still consistent that our long-term aim is an all
JSF fleet to be the core of our air combat capability. But we've also
acknowledged that the transition to that is quite complex task with a lot of
moving pieces there. There's
the ongoing sustainment of the F1-11, working out when that should retire. The
upgrade projects to the F-18, of which there are quite a few; the AEW&C, Vigilair(*)
programs. So quite a few pieces there, and we've maintained options in the
background all along in case we needed to do something if they looked like
there'd be too much risk of a transition gap there at all. And
when the JSF was considered in the context of Again,
there have been critics of the F-18 out there as a future aircraft. I'll just
make the point that the F-18 is a highly advanced fourth generation aircraft.
It will be in-service with the US Navy until around 2030, and it will gradually
start being replaced by the JSF, or complemented by the JSF, from about 2015
onwards. So,
the Super Hornet is really the US Navy's frontline aircraft and it will be for
quite some time yet. So, it's a highly capable aircraft and certainly capable
of dealing with the likely threats that we see out there in the medium term. Media contacts: Defence Media Liaison (02) 6265 3343 or 0408 498 664 For a free subscription to Defence Direct, the Minister for Defence's
monthly e-newsletter, please follow this link: http://www.minister.defence.gov.au/defencedirect/spt/subscribe.html |
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Issued
by Ministerial Support and Public Affairs, Department of Defence,
Canberra, ACT [ back to top ] |
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