Tuesday, 27 October 2020

After OKing UAE F-35s, Israel Asks For F-22 Raptors

Nick Collins


After OKing UAE F-35s, Israel Asks For F-22 Raptors—Here’s Why That’s Not Likely To Fly

After OKing UAE F-35s, Israel Asks For F-22 Raptors—Here’s Why That’s Not Likely To Fly

Sebastien Roblin
Aerospace & Defense
I cover international security, conflict, history and aviation.

GEELONG, AUSTRALIA - MARCH 01 : A F-22A Raptor by Lockheed Martin operated by the USAF (United ... [+] GETTY IMAGES


Following earlier Israeli objections to the sale of Lockheed LMT -1.5% F-35 Lightning II stealth jets to the United Arab Emirates, Israeli Defense Minister Benny Gantz reportedly relented and accepted the sale following a meeting with U.S. Defense Secretary Mark Esper last Friday.

According to Israeli newspaper Haaretz, senior Israeli defense officials subsequently sought compensation: “removing obstacles” to purchasing older F-22 Raptor stealth fighters designed for greater air-to-air combat capability than the F-35.

The report notes, however, such a sale is “currently not on the table.” And it will likely remain that way because the F-22 is no longer in production, and the U.S. Air Force—the type’s only operator—is unlikely to want to give up aircraft from its own fleet.

Despite reaching an accord in August normalizing relations with the United Arab Emirates, Israeli officials initially objected to the Arab state receiving stealth fighters of the same type serving in the Israeli Air Force, citing a U.S. law requiring that Israel must be allowed to purchase equipment guaranteeing a “qualitative military edge” over other states in the Middle East.

Already, Israel requested up to $8 billion in arms sales in the wake of the peace accords. However, after acceding to the F-35 sale to UAE, Gantz reportedly renewed a long-standing Israeli request to authorize to F-22 exports.

Israel’s prior requests for F-22s were blocked due to the 1998 Obey Amendment, which specifically banned the export of F-22s. The amendment was spurred by reports of Israeli transfers of U.S. aerospace technology to China.

However, that amendment is arguably no longer the main obstacle to meeting an Israeli request. The primary issue is that the last F-22 rolled off the production line in December 2011. Restarting production could only be done at great expense.

And the United States Air Force is unlikely to willingly transfer aircraft from its irreplaceable fleet of around 180 Raptors, which are growing in relevance as the U.S. increasingly confronts China’s rapidly improving military aviation over the South China Sea.

The F-22 Reborn?

The Lockheed F-22 entered service in 2005 and lacks the modern computer systems and more cost-efficient radar-absorbent materials (RAM) found in the widely exported F-35.

However, the Raptor has a smaller radar cross-section , and is built for far greater speed and maneuverability thanks to its twin thrust-vectoring F119 turbofan engines. These give the F-22 supermaneuverable flight characteristics and the ability to cruise at supersonic speeds without afterburners.

That means while the F-35 may be less expensive to procure and fly, and is more flexible as a general-purpose warplane, the F-22 is a scarier adversary in air-to-air combat.

Nonetheless, a hypothetical new production run of F-22s would almost certainly require integration of some of the F-35’s advancements, becoming a so-called F-22/F-35 hybrid.

This possibility was studied by Japan in 2018. Tokyo too has long requested F-22s, particularly as China’s PLA Air Force improves qualitatively and probes Japanese airspace with increasing frequency. Though the Japanese military was already receiving F-35s, a dedicated air superiority fighter was closer what it had in mind.

However, Tokyo decided to pass when Lockheed’s proposal spelled out the high price of reestablishing a production line for a modernized F-22, with unit costs projected at $215 million per plane. (U.S. F-22 unit costs averaged $150 million prior to shut down of the production line.)

Japan instead chose to develop its own sixth-generation stealth fighter, a long-term project likely to cost at least $45 billion.

Does Israel Need an Air Superiority Jet?

Israel has less compelling reasons than Japan to seek an air superiority fighter. The Israeli Air Force is already by far the most capable in the region, and has not faced serious aerial opposition since an air battle over Lebanon in June 1982, when Israeli F-15 and F-16s shot down 76 Syrian MiG fighters and wiped out a ground-based air defense system in one day without losing a single jet.

True, since then Egypt and various Gulf Arab states have purchased advanced jets like the Dassault Rafale, the Eurofighter Typhoon, the Sukhoi Su-35 and the F-15QA and SA. But the IAF retains a massive qualitative edge related to superior training, tactics and operational experience. Israel also has a domestic military aerospace industry that has continually furnished the IAF with advanced new drones, missiles and avionic systems.

Most importantly, the regional actors Israel is most likely to clash with—Syria and Iran—do not pose a major threat in air-to-air combat, while many of the states with advanced jets are more likely to be allies than enemies of Israel in a conflict.

The kinds of capabilities maturing in the region that do pose security challenges to Israel—particularly affordable combat drones and accurate, long-range ballistic missiles—require solutions very different from extremely costly manned jet fighters optimized for shooting down other extremely costly manned jet fighters.

Perhaps Gantz’s F-22 request is meant to highball in advance of more realizable objectives. For example, Haaretz notes that Israel would like authorization to purchase advanced U.S. drones, or have U.S. military assistance dollars be more easily spent on Israeli companies instead of those based in the U.S.

Follow me on Twitter
Sebastien Roblin

F-22 Raptor: Details

No comments:

Post a Comment