And When She Looked There ...
In 1993 the aircraft
carrier USS John F. Kennedy was taken off of regular deployments and
put into a three year maintenance cycle in the Philadelphia Naval
Shipyard.
There was nothing unusual about this. The
three year maintenance stand-down is standard for long service ships.
The sea is hard on materials and everything from fragile electronics to
the very hull plates have to be recertified and inspected, a laborious
and expensive process. In the case of the Kennedy it was particularly
important; as the second oldest carrier in the fleet she naturally had
quite a few "issues" to be resolved. And she was one of the very few
remaining non-nuclear carriers. Only the Philly Yard was equipped to
fix some of her particular complaints.
But, after only
two years of the three year "rebuilding" process, she was pulled from
the dry-dock and sent back into service. The Philadelphia Naval
Shipyard was being "decommissioned" and she suddenly was moved to
Jacksonville where she sat at dockside where sailors and contractors
tried to fix the thousands of remaining problems. To make matters
worse, she was put on the "Fleet Reserve" list both cutting her
maintenance budget and putting her bottom of the list for spare parts.
It seemed that she would be a dockside queen for the remainder of her
time in service.
But then, whether to keep a stained
dress off the front-page or in an ongoing effort to stem the tide of
barbarism, take your pick, Billy Boy Clinton decided that even though
our armed forces had been cut and cut again, they didn't have enough to
do. And suddenly the half repaired Kennedy found herself back in
regular service plowing the ocean wave. The creaky old lady, having
been pulled out of the hospital, was back on the beat.
Last
month she failed her basic operational readiness examination and the
skipper was relieved. The fault was Clinton and the Republican
Congress, but as usual the military took the blame.
This
isn't an article about the Kennedy, though. This is an article about
reality of which the Kennedy is just a very visible example. The
reality is that units have been first stripped down below the bone then
put to unremitting work and the combination is kiling us. Let's take a
look at a few more examples of the shambles that are the US Armed
forces.
A few weeks ago a wing fell off of a C-141 cargo
plane. Why did the wing fall off? There is a pressure release valve on
the fuel tank, it is manually activated from the cockpit. If the
pressure isn't released, the tank swells and pushes at the wing root.
The valve had been activated, but the pin that is connected to the
valve and the driver line was never put in place. Why? Let me guess.
Might that be a maintenance airmen (airperson?) who is overworked and
undertrained? Go figure.
Once upon a time, maintenance
positions were "slotted", that is if there were supposed to be eight
maintenance personnel working in a section, knowing that at any time
three to four of them would be away at schools or on leave or detailed
to other duties, the service would assign ten to twelve people.
But,
by golly, that wasn't "efficient." Remember "reinventing government?"
Remember the thousands of people cut from the federal rolls? 89% were
military personnel or DoD civil service. And a good few of them were
people like the "unnecessary" four mechanics.
So instead
of having the necessary eight there were only four or five "on duty."
Since that meant that maintenance wasn't getting done, the units in
question stopped sending mechanics to schools (since that was the only
control they had.) Which meant less qualified mechanics trying to do
more while working longer and harder hours. Which meant that when the
newbie mechanics arrived from AIT, they were faced with "experts" that
were half trained themselves, low on morale and not reenlisting. Good
luck getting on the job training. Especially with no tools or spare
parts. Spares, and tools and parts oh my!
The military
is always short on spares and tools. Or at least that was the image
until about 1984 when the Reagan Buildup really got in high gear. In
1983 if you needed a spare for your vehicle, you were looking at 6
months to get it. If you were lucky and availability of vehicles in the
82nd Airborne was about 70%. By 1985 it was close to 100%, simply by
supplying a real sufficiency (indeed, at times an overabundance) of
spare parts.
But right now we are in the same condition
we were in 1983. Or worse. Only eight in ten of the helicopter fleet is
operable, which is bad, but it's even worse than it appears. There are
many units, by prioritization of parts and maintenance personnel, at
nearly 100%, including such groups as the Special Operations Aviation
Regiment and the Pentagon Wing. While at the same time there are units
like the 4th Infantry Division that are at close to 20% availability.
The aircraft that supported the Special Forces in Afghanistan were
there at the expense of dozens of other units with grounded aircraft.
Ammunition
is short; units for years have not been able to get really proficient
at basic rifle marksmanship because their training allotment had been
cut to what was necessary solely for qualification. Not too long ago
there wasn't enough ammunition in the Army for everyone to fire for
qualification at the same time. And that included war-stocks.
Parts
are short; Navy personnel go down to Radio Shack for equivalent parts
that they can't get though the system. And buy them out of their
pocket.
We're just about out of smart bombs; the Air
Force has called for three times as many to be produced in the next
nine months as have been produced in the life of the program. Since
it's a "crash" program, by the way, they're going to cost three times
as much per unit. I'll let Iraqi intelligence do the leg-work on hard
numbers. I know them. I'm not going to broadcast them.
Personnel
are short. Because of the critical shortage of trained maintenance
personnel, who often can get out and get paid five times their military
pay on the civvie street, persons with special qualifications who are
on "regular reserve" status are being absolutely screwed. Just one
example is pilots.
Reserve pilots are being called up
for six months, deployed to combat or peacekeeping zones, then being
deactivated and sent back to the civilian world only to be called back
up again. Excuse me? These aren't book-keepers from AccuTemp, guys!
They
are not the only ones. From aircraft crewmen to prime power operators
to MPs, persons with a regular civilian life, who have already spent
their time as full-time soldiers, are being told that they have to go
"fill in" because we don't have enough of the regular forces. That's
LUDICROUS.
Face facts, the cupboard, in ammunition and people and parts and working weapons systems, is bare.
This
is all a matter of funding. Period. Dot. End of story. The reality is
that at least since the Kosovo Action we have been on a low-level war
footing and since September 11th the fact of that continuance is clear.
Secretary Rumsfeld and President Bush need to stop pussy-footing around
and submit a real war budget. They need to start a "Reagan" style
military rebuilding program that looks reality square in the face and
says "this is what we need." The numbers will make the Congress, and
the American people, gasp; at least a doubling of the current budget.
At least. Four hundred to six hundred billion dollars a year. Deficit
spending? Hell yes. If you have a problem with that, go to Ground Zero.
We're at war. Wars are expensive. And the damage to the
military that Clinton did, by reducing it's support while increasing
the number of operations, is going to make it much more expensive. We
need to fix stuff. Big stuff and lots of it. Carriers and planes and
tanks and trucks. We need more bodies to do that. We need full-time
pilots, who are in the regular service and can expect to stay there for
years, not months. They need flight training time, not just combat
hours. We need to send SF to the Defense Language Institute for new
languages. We need to send Marines and soldiers to the range. We need
enough people, in every slot, that the slot stays filled and the people
can still get advanced training. And stay happy enough to stay in. Good
training, good missions and good leaders will turn this military
around. It's... not... that ... hard.
If we're not
willing to do the job right, we might as well not do it at all. And if
we're not willing to do it at allSwellSdon't spend a lot of time in the
Empire State Building.