US Air Force, WASHINGTON: By 2010, both the Army and the Air Force may be flying the same aircraft to provide airlift inside places like Afghanistan and Iraq.
The Secretary of Defense has given approval for the Army and the Air Force to work together to purchase those aircraft. The Army has been calling it a “Future Cargo Aircraft,” while the Air Force calls it a “Light Cargo Aircraft.” But ultimately, those names will be gone in favor of “Joint Cargo Aircraft.” And it won't just be the name that is the same.
The Joint Cargo Aircraft will be a small aircraft developed for both the Army and the Air Force. It will be smaller than the Air Force's C-130 Hercules, but larger than the Army's C-23 Sherpa. Most likely, the aircraft will be a variant of an aircraft already available in the civilian sector, and the manufacturer will modify it for military use.
“What we are not going to do is go out and build, from the bottom up, a new airplane and take six or seven years to get it in the field,” said Army Brig. Gen. Stephen Mundt, director of Army aviation. “We are looking for something to fill this capability gap now. We have issues with the airframe we have.”
Purchasing an aircraft already being manufactured by a contractor would ensure a lower cost acquisition and a speedier delivery of the capability. Both the services agree the selection will be based on speed, range, capacity, and the ability to land on unimproved runways or in more austere locations.
“We have always focused on the same goal
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