Times Colonist

NATO’S aging eyes in the skies scheduled for one last overhaul

- LORNE COOK

BRUSSELS — NATO and U.S. aircraft-maker Boeing agreed Wednesday on a $1-billion US contract to refurbish the military alliance’s aging fleet of surveillan­ce planes, ensuring that they can continue to serve as the organizati­on’s eye in the sky until 2035.

The agreement, which was not actually signed Wednesday, was made public just days before U.S. President Donald Trump joins his NATO counterpar­ts in London for a Dec. 4 summit marking the 70th anniversar­y of the world’s biggest security alliance.

Trump is expected to make fresh demands on his European and Canadian partners to significan­tly step up defence spending. Critics say he is intent on drumming up business for the U.S. defence industry.

NATO’s contract announceme­nt provides a timely reminder that money is going to Boeing, although other European contractor­s will be involved in the refurbishm­ent, which is expected to be completed by 2027.

Purchased in 1977 at the height of the Cold War, when Jimmy Carter became U.S. president and as a missile crisis with the then Soviet Union was beginning to fester in Europe, the 14 Boeing E-3 planes cost $8 billion US.

“The modernizat­ion will ensure NATO remains at the leading edge of technology,” NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenber­g told reporters at a military airport outside Brussels, not far from the alliance’s new billion-dollar headquarte­rs.

He said the upgrade will provide the Airborne Warning and Control planes, known as AWACS, “with sophistica­ted new communicat­ions and networking capabiliti­es so these aircraft can continue their vital mission and contribute to our security.”

The planes were deployed in

U.S. skies after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on New York and Washington to help protect cities and nuclear power plants. They were used during the Russia-Ukraine crisis, to assist Turkey during the war in Syria and to help the coalition fighting the Islamic State group.

Beyond their role as NATO’s eye in the sky, the planes can be used for air-policing, support in counter-terrorism or evacuation operations, and provide help during natural disasters. They can stay aloft for eight hours at a time and watch over an area of 310,000 square kilometres.

Developed years before the internet and mobile phones were in common use, they seem almost quaint in an age where a pilotless drone has flown for 40 consecutiv­e hours, and stealth technologi­es wreak havoc with many modern surveillan­ce systems.

But the maintenanc­e program will see their computer hardware and software upgraded to turn around double the intelligen­ce informatio­n, data and imagery that they currently handle, whether it be of air, ground, sea or space origin.

The surveillan­ce aircraft, which are based in Germany, are among the few military assets that NATO owns as an alliance. Member nations own all the other equipment. A new drone program has also been set afoot, with the first of five Global Hawks delivered to a base in Italy last week.

NATO experts have warned for years that this plane-based surveillan­ce platform will not work after 2035. They have urged the alliance’s 29 member nations to quickly decide how to replace the fleet by then; given the roughly 20-year time gap required to develop new surveillan­ce technologi­es.

A decision on what will come next — probably an integrated network of equipment such as a combinatio­n of drones, satellites, planes — is expected in 2022.

 ??  ?? A NATO AWACS plane is parked on the runway at Melsbroek military airport in Melsbroek, Belgium.
A NATO AWACS plane is parked on the runway at Melsbroek military airport in Melsbroek, Belgium.

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