Good point, hadn't thought about that.Wonder how many brigades this deal was worth?
"You keep the MC-12's and we'll keep x number of troops."
Wonder how "big Blue" is going to pay for it.
Wouldn't it be a waste to have all those relatively newly trained airmen to have their A/C sold out from under them?
Dammit, I wish I could get my brother on this site. He's a sensor operator on the MC-12 and he might have some inside info. I'm assuming Free and/or SOWT would hear anything through the grape vine that my brother would know though.
Wouldn't it be a waste to have all those relatively newly trained airmen to have their A/C sold out from under them? If the deal had gone through, would the equipment from the MC-12 be used on a different airframe and the same type of missions flown? or would the entire program, missions, capabilities all go over to the green side?
If any of this is OPSEC, could you just shoot me a PM. I'd still be interested in knowing. Thanks!!
I've heard talk/ rumors of two previous plans to send AF assets over to the Army: MH-53's and A-10's. IF what I heard was true, or close to it, the Army balked at both once the details were sorted out. Basically, the Army would inherit airframes (and in the case of the -53's the crews would be allowed to cross over), but not the money to run them. I also want to say that the A-10's wouldn't come with any support equipment (AGE) and then there's that pesky deal struck in Key West back in the 50's (1956?) which gave the AF control over armed fixed-wing a/c.
In short, the AF could divest itself of airframes and their operating costs, keep the money, and the Army wouldn't see a budget increase to support the airframes.
Dammit, I wish I could get my brother on this site. He's a sensor operator on the MC-12 and he might have some inside info. I'm assuming Free and/or SOWT would hear anything through the grape vine that my brother would know though.
Wouldn't it be a waste to have all those relatively newly trained airmen to have their A/C sold out from under them? If the deal had gone through, would the equipment from the MC-12 be used on a different airframe and the same type of missions flown? or would the entire program, missions, capabilities all go over to the green side?
If any of this is OPSEC, could you just shoot me a PM. I'd still be interested in knowing. Thanks!!
I want to say C-12 maintenance is contractor. For the reasons you stated.I can't speak from an AF perspective or even an informed opinion on the difference between the Army and AF missions.
Having worked in the airline business. The logistics and cost associated with maintaining a very small fleet of aircraft is huge. If you have the Army and AF both maintaining the same basic airframes it's much cheaper to have one service maintain all those airframes. You get rid of duplicate spare parts inventory, duplicate parts acquisition operation, mechanic training programs, pilot training etc. Plus the work necessary to maintain the policies and procedure for the operation and maintenance on an aircraft can be huge. You still have many of the same requirements for maintaining a fleet of 12 planes as you do for a fleet of 500 aircraft.
I think the intentions of merging the two programs has a lot of merit when looking at all the back-end cost. It would be much cheaper to have one service maintaining one larger fleet than having 2 smaller fleets. My comments are of course not knowing enough about the particular missions of each programs.
http://www.afcent.af.mil/news/story.asp?id=123423007
ACC appears to be pulling the MC-12's out of Afghanistan, but I doubt they will be gone long as the airframes are transferring to the Guard and AFSOC.
They could request support via theater commander, but the frames would stay AFSOC.43 airframes...maybe the pilots would receive some type of career path instead of "Who wants to fly C-12's for a year?" or "Hey recent UPT grad turned instructor, go fly C-12's for a year and we can find you an actual airframe and mission instead of burying you at the schoolhouse."
I also have to wonderif there's an agreement for the a/c to return to ACC if needed. That would be hilarious for them to request the birds and AFSOC deny the request. At least we're keeping some of them around.
Bagram's ramp looks like a ghost town now.
This all boils down to the willingness to scrap the 1948 Key West Agreement. Basically - the short version is the Navy got to keep NavAviation. The Army got to keep recon, rotor, and medevac birds. The new Air Force got all the fixed wing stuff. This has been the basis of maintaining an aviation status quo within the E Ring for most of my so called adult life.
For your further edification and boredom.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Key_West_Agreement
http://www.stimson.org/images/uploads/research-pdfs/KeyWest.pdf