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An Overview of PEO AVIATION Huntsville Aerospace Marketing Association
Paul Bogosian PROGRAM EXECUTIVE OFFICER AVIATION
2 2 Where Soldiers Go, So Does Army Aviation!
Army Global Commitments
OIF-IRAQ 119,000 SOLDIERS
OEF-Philippines 400 SOLDIERS
Army Personnel Strength Component R/C Authorized for Mobilization / On Current Orders - Active (AC) 522,000 N/A - Reserve (RC) USAR 190,000 25,000 ARNG 353,000 47,000 1,065,000
South Korea 18,000 SOLDIERS (Part of AC Station Overseas)
OTHER OPERATIONS & EXERCISES
4,690 SOLDIERS
HOMELAND SECURITY
5,000 SOLDIERS (RC Mobilized Stateside)
JTF-BRAVO 600 SOLDIERS
MFO 700 SOLDIERS
OEF-AFGHANISTAN 18,000 SOLDIERS
JTF-GTMO 600 SOLDIERS
KFOR 1,000 SOLDIERS
AS OF 27 NOV 07
AC STATIONED OVERSEAS 103 ,000 AC STATIONED STATESIDE 419,000
OIF-KUWAIT 11,000
BOSNIA 10 SOLDIERS
ALASKA 11,000 SOLDIERS USAREUR
47,000 SOLDIERS
259,000 Soldiers deployed/ forward station in nearly 80 countries oversea
* Includes AC Stationed Overseas
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• Worldwide Deployments OEF OIF Europe Korea Balkans Honduras
• Homeland Defense and Security • Humanitarian Relief--Assistance
Asian Tsunami Hurricane Katrina-Rita Pakistan Earthquake
• Reorganization • Restationing • Preset/Reset • Modernization • Unmanned Integration
Committed Army Aviation
Aviation Core Missions Reconnaissance Close Combat Attack Air Assault Sustainment C2 MEDEVAC Convoy Escort Manned/Unmanned Teaming Key Enabler: Rapid Reset!!!
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OIF OEF Army Aviation
OPTEMPO 1,901,672 Total Hours:
01 Feb 03 – 15 Jan 08
AH-64 (107) 379,934 Hours
CH-47 (47) 100,617 Hours
OH-58 (93) 339,378 Hours
UH-60 (235) 585,752 Hours
Fixed Wing (42) 100,915 Hours
258,411 Total Hours: 01 Feb 03 – 15 Jan 08
Army Fleet in OEF
AH-64 (48) 77,669 Hours
CH-47 (25) 61,612 Hours
UH-60 (64) 81,466 Hours
Fixed Wing (8) 14,831 Hours
*OH-58 (0) 3,413 Hours
Army Fleet in OIF 2,160,084 Total Flight Hours
UAS (374) (20) Shadow 237,933 Hours (2) Hunter 28,721 Hours (347) Raven 83,314 Hours (5) Warrior A 45,108 Hours UAS Total: 395,076 Hours
UAS (48) (45) Raven 9,303 Hours (2) Shadow 9,034 Hours (1) Warrior A 1,083 Hours UAS Total: 19,420 Hours
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Comanche 121 Aircraft
Low Observable On board Maintenance Diagnostics
Two Level Maintenance Design Plus Billions ($) in Planned
Upgrades
Buys 1125 new aircraft ARH – 368 LUH – 322 UH-60M – 351 UH-60L – 24 JCA- 33 CH-47F - 27
Accelerate Aircraft Survivability Equipment Fund Apache Block III Conversion Buy Armed Reconnaissance Helicopter Buy Light Utility Helicopter Buy Black Hawks Buy Chinooks Buy Cargo Fixed Wing Invest in Common Cockpit, Fly-by-Wire Invest in Aviation Munitions Initiate Joint Multi- Role Helicopter Program Resource Army UAV requirements
Requires
Fixing Army Aviation
Termination Date 2003
LUH ARH
UH-60M
UH-60L
JCA
CH-47F
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FUE JUL11
Where we are going FY07 FY08 FY09
1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4
CH-47F (ACAT 1C)
Longbow Apache (ACAT 1D) BLOCK III
JCA (ACAT ID)
Updated 29 NOV 07
ARH-70A (ACAT 1D) MS C LRIP IOTE
LUH (ACAT 1C)
UH-60M (ACAT 1D)
UH-60M Upgrade (ACAT 1D)
19 11 MY VII C/A FUE
72 48 57 5
FRP
HH-60M:
UH-60M:
1 2 SSDD
LUT SIL Cut-In IPR
OT
ADS-33, E3, CTSF, Log Demo LRIP C/A
FUE FRP
DT/Flight Test
MEDEVAC MEP 4 1 7
0 UH-60M UPGRADE
26 43 37 Full Production Line
PMR
2UE IOTE Phase II FUE
3UE IAIC
4UE
PDR CDR
First Flight
MS C
IPR LRIP Contract Award
1st Delivery IOT&E PQT PRR
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Where we are going FY07 FY08 FY09
1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4
Updated 29 NOV 07
Sky Warrior (ACAT II)
Small UAV (ACAT III)
Shadow (ACAT II)
FCS Class IV
FCS Class I
ACAT 1D
MS C
LRIP FUE
CDR First Flight
Start FRP Raven B
FUE Raven B FRP II Raven B Raven PIP BLK-0
IPR FOT CDR
Raven PIP BLK-1 Development
FRP V TCDL & Laser Designator LRIP
PDR CDR
PDR CDR
DAB APR MS C JUN
LUT NOV IOTE NOV FY10
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Raven Systems
(FY22 – Beyond)
CARGO
MISSION
UTILITY
The POM Years The EPP Years Beyond the EPP (Near Term)
FIXED WING C-12 (SHORT RANGE)
C-23 (CARGO)
CH-47D CH-47F
UAS
ASH
ATTACK
(FY08) (FY09-14) (FY15-22)
UH-1
SEMA (RC-12 and EO-5)
LUH
(Divest)
Armed Reconnaissance HelicopterOH-58D KW(Divest)
AH-64AAH- 64D LB
UH-60A/L UH-60M
(Divest)
(Divest)
(Divest)
Joint Multi-Role
Joint UAS
(Divest)
Army Aviation Modernization Plan
Current AH-64A 203 0
AH-64D (I) 262 0 AH-64D (II) 228 0
0 634 OH-58KW 345 0
ARH 0 512 Current Planned
CLASS I 0 1350 Shadow Systems 58 113
CLASS IV 0 500 Hunter Systems 4 4
Warrior A AVs 18 0 6
Current Planned UH-60A 949 0
MH/UH-60K or L 693 696 MH/UH-60M 26 1235
UH-1 156 0 LUH 14 345
Current Planned MH/CH-47 452 0
MH/CH-47F or G 61 513 Current Planned
JCA 0 54+
Joint Heavy Lift (JHL)
C-23 42 0
UH-60M/HH-60M
UH-60L
Block III
Planned
376A/340B 1900B/1900C
Joint Cargo Aircraft
2025
Additional plus-up for Nat’l Guard AEBs
Warrior Blk 0 AVs
OH-58 A&C 284 0
29 Nov 07 AAH- 7FEB08
RAVEN
Shadow FCS Class I
HUNTER SYSTEMS Maintain
WARRIOR Warrior Blk 1 Systems 11 0 18
AH-64D (III)
FCS Class IV
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The Scope of PEO Aviation
What We Do: • Centralized Management for All Assigned Army Aviation
Programs • Full Life-Cycle Management of Assigned Systems • Improve Interoperability • Enhance Reliability and Safety • Maintain Combat Overmatch thru Recapitalization &
Modernization
The Magnitude: • FY 08 PB — $33.4B over POM years FY 08- FY 13 • Includes RDT&E, Procurement and OMA • FMS Total Case Value — $7.023B • 55 FMS Cases — 36 Countries
Total Workforce: (Military, Civilian,
MATRIX & Contractors)
1852
Total FY08 Resources:
~$6.3B
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Priority Areas: 1. Aircraft flight performance 2. Aircraft survivability 3. Maintainability and reliability 4. Open architecture/reconfigurable designs 5. Target acquisition/pilotage 6. LOS/NLOS commo and network connectivity 13. Airspace management 14. Flight safety 15. Unmanned aerial systems operations 16. Lethality 17. Man/machine integration 18. Training/mission rehearsal 19. FARP operations 20. CBRNE operations 21. Cargo handling 22. Improved aircrew selection 23. Modeling and simulation
Aviation S&T Enabling Capabilities
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“The Perfect Storm”
• BRAC moves significant number of jobs to Redstone – Predicted low percentage of people moving with their jobs (Government
and contractor)
– Major increase in vacancies (both Government and contractor)
• Many of these vacancies expected to be filled from Redstone population
– Organizations leaving due to BRAC will have little balancing effect
– Questionable ability of existing workforce to absorb vacancies without negatively impacting mission performance
• Aging workforce exacerbates the number of vacancies
• Other “natural” attrition intensifies the problem
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MDA details soft
Scoping the Problem
Incoming Positions (4,592)
0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
Num
ber o
f Pos
ition
s
Contractors Civilians Military
Military 127 11 24 59 6 49 90 Civilians 776 326 101 55 44 72 443
Contractors 407 30 194 3 0 60 1715
AMC USASAC ATTC 2d Rec Bdg Rotary Wing SMDC MDA
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Summary
• Fund to President’s FY09 Budget
• Support Army’s tactical requirement for JCA and Sky Warrior
• Sustain War Replacement Aircraft (WRA) Supplemental Funding
• Sustain Reset of Aircraft Beyond End of Current Conflict
We Must Guard Against Resetting the Fleet at the Expense of Modernization
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SUPPORTING THE
FORCE