Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S.’ two best fighter jets can’t talk to each other

- JUSTIN BACHMAN BLOOMBERG NEWS

DALLAS — With the F-22 Raptor and the F-35 Lightning II, the U.S. has fielded two of the world’s most sophistica­ted, maneuverab­le and stealthy fighter jets. They both function as airborne shepherds of America’s flock of older combat aircraft, using their stateof-the-art systems to communicat­e threats and targets on the ground and in the air.

And yet they have a difficult time communicat­ing with each other.

The F-22, originally designed as an air superiorit­y fighter, dates to the mid-1980s and was created to dispense near-invisible lethality against Soviet targets before the enemy knew it was there. The plane’s requiremen­ts for maximum stealth extended to its communicat­ions systems, since those can betray an aircraft’s location. But budget considerat­ions and initial optimism about a post-Cold War world cut short its production. In 2009, then-Defense Secretary Robert Gates ended the program.

And that’s where the problem begins. Had the Air Force acquired all the F-22s it wanted — more than double the 183 or so it has — integratio­n of its systems with another fleet of “fifth-generation” fighters wouldn’t have been as critical. The F-22’s Intra-Flight Data Link is a much older system than the Tactical Link 16 system used on the newer F-35. While the F-22’s flight data link protocol can receive data from the F-35 and other allied aircraft, such as the F-16 and Eurofighte­r Typhoon, it can’t transmit the vast array of situationa­l data it collects.

In a recent report, Air Force Magazine likened U.S. combat communicat­ions among the various aircraft to “a kind of Tower of Babel.” And the necessary modificati­ons haven’t been fast in arriving. “There’s a lot of improvemen­ts that could have been done and should have been done 15 years ago,” said David Rockwell, a senior defense electronic­s analyst with Teal Group. “The Air Force postponed a lot of things for [the] F-22.”

Both the Raptor and Lightning II are known as “fifth-generation” aircraft because of their stealth, sensors and other capabiliti­es. Jets such as the Air Force’s F-15 and F-16 and the Navy’s F/A-18 are “fourth-generation.” Russia and China also are fielding and refining their fifth-generation fighters, the Su-57 and J-31, respective­ly.

The U.S. fifth-generation jets are adept at disseminat­ing a more detailed view of the battle space to older aircraft, increasing the former’s “survivabil­ity” in combat. The F-35 fleet also has what’s called a multifunct­ion advanced data link, or MADL, to gather and share informatio­n with other F-35s. That fusion of sensor data — and the ability to distribute it with allied aircraft — allows the F-35 to serve as a “quarterbac­k” during a conflict. “You hear it from the [F-15] Eagles and the Marine Corps,” said Billie Flynn, an F-35 test pilot at Lockheed Martin Corp., which also made the F-22. “We’re keeping our own forces much more engaged and boosting survivabil­ity.”

“The thing that’s great about having Link 16 and MADL onboard and the sensor fusion is the amount of situationa­l awareness the pilot has,” Lt. Col. George Watkins, a squadron commander, said in an Air Force statement last year. “I can see the whole war, and where all the other players are, from a god’s-eye view. That makes me a lot more effective.”

“We don’t have data anymore,” said Flynn, a former squadron commander for the Canadian air force. “We have knowledge.”

When it comes to talking to each other, however, the F-22 and F-35 pilots currently must use secure voice links. This temporary fix has worked in training and simulated combat, Flynn said.

Keeping the F-22 relevant has been a 15-year effort. The Air Force establishe­d a modernizat­ion program in 2003, with 10 unique upgrades and enhancemen­ts. To date, the program has awarded contracts totaling as much as $12.9 billion, according to a Defense Department inspector general audit on F-22 modernizat­ion released last month. The inspector general’s office criticized the Air Force’s software developmen­t and contractin­g strategies.

“We’re always working on ways to improve connectivi­ty wherever the mission requires additional informatio­n sharing,” an Air Force spokesman, Maj. Ken Scholz, said in an email. “As well, the F-35A and F-22 are very complement­ary assets, particular­ly in highly contested areas.”

Still, the Air Force doesn’t plan to fix the communicat­ions problem until 2023, when the F-22 fleet is scheduled to get the same Tac Link 16 system F-35s currently have.

While these two fighters have a ways to go until they share the same communicat­ions and sensor systems, there’s at least one thing they already have in common: They’re budget busters. The F-22 is the most expensive aircraft in the U.S. arsenal, in terms of cost per flight hour; the program ended up costing taxpayers more than $330 million per unit.

Operating and maintenanc­e costs have grown daunting for the F-35 as well. The Air Force may need to cut almost 600 from its planned order of 1,763 if upkeep costs can’t be lowered by more than a third. It also faces annual maintenanc­e costs of almost $4 billion for a fighter fleet that’s likely to top $1 trillion in sustainmen­t through 2070 across the three service branches.

Meanwhile, Lockheed and others are working on nearterm fixes for the F-22’s communicat­ions problems. Longer term, the Air Force would like to find a way to extend the existing stealth profile to its upgraded communicat­ions and radar systems, Rockwell said.

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