ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ lawmakers are vowing to fight a plan by the Air Force to start retiring some of the nation’s fleet of A-10 Thunderbolt II ground-attack jets — a major operation at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base — as part of a plan to drop some older, legacy weapon systems to help pay for new programs.
U.S. Sen. Martha McSally, R-Ariz., a former A-10 pilot, and U.S. Rep. Ann Kirkpatrick, D-Ariz., both vowed to fight the move to retire 44 of the oldest A-10s starting this year.
During a press briefing last week, Air Force officials unveiled plans to start mothballing several older platforms, including retiring some A-10s even as it refits others with new wings.
“The Air Force sustains our commitment to the Air Force’s most effective close-air-support platform, the A-10, with $161 million to continue the re-winging and avionics upgrades,†said Maj. Gen. John Pletcher, deputy assistant secretary for financial management and comptroller, during the Feb. 10 briefing.
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“We’re also continuing on the path we set last year to retire 44 of the oldest and least-ready aircraft en route to a completely modernized and combat-capable fleet of 218 A-10s — in seven squadrons — that will continue to fly through the 2030s,†Pletcher said.
In 2015, the Air Force unveiled plans to begin retiring the entire A-10 fleet starting in 2018.
Members of Congress, including then-U.S. Rep. McSally and late U.S. Sen. John McCain, beat back that plan and helped push through funding to replace wings on A-10s that would otherwise reach the end of their service life.
McSally, who sits on the Senate Armed Services Committee, said in a statement that she met with Air Force leaders “to tell them point blank that I would not allow their plan to mothball 44 A-10s starting in October to happen.â€
“It was the honor of my life to command an A-10 squadron in combat and I know firsthand that the A-10 provides one-of-a-kind close air support that saves lives,†McSally said in a prepared statement. “I fought and won to keep the A-10 from being mothballed when I first came to Congress, and because of my efforts working with Senator McCain and others, the A-10 will now fly into at least the 2030s.â€
Kirkpatrick, who sits on the defense subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee, said she plans to introduce a resolution asking Congress to continue funding the A-10.
“I am actively engaging with the Air Force to ensure that there is no negative impact to our squadrons at D-M,†Kirkpatrick said in a statement.
Kirkpatrick said her resolution recognizes the A-10 as “a critical component of America’s national security and the most effective and cost-efficient close-air-support aircraft currently in the (Department of Defense’s) inventory.â€
Davis-Monthan is home to the nation’s biggest contingent of A-10 “Warthogs,†with one combat squadron, an active-duty training unit and an Air Force Reserve training squadron comprising about 60 planes overall.
Designed as a Cold War-era tank killer built around a rapid-fire cannon, the A-10 won praise for its role in close air support in the Middle East.
The Air Force deactivated 18 A-10s, including nine at D-M, and put them into “backup inventory†status in 2015.
Last year Boeing Co. completed a 12-year, $1.1 billion Air Force contract to replace wings on 173 A-10s whose wings had passed their useful flying hours.
Also in 2019, Boeing was awarded a new contract worth up to $999 million to install 112 new wing assemblies, but that depends on incremental appropriations.
Contact senior reporter David Wichner at dwichner@tucson.com or 573-4181. On Twitter: @dwichner. On Facebook: