June 8, 2007:
The U.S. Air Force has, for decades,
maintained hundreds of KC-135 aerial tankers to refuel its bombers and fighter
bombers. Currently, it costs the air force about $17.50 per gallon to deliver
this fuel in the air. The U.S. Navy, which has much more modest aerial refueling
needs, has been outsourcing much of this work. The navy also has some smaller
aerial tankers of its own, but has used a civilian firm when larger refueling
aircraft were needed. The outsourcing firm, Omega Air, has equipment similar to what the air force
uses (two Boeing 707s, the civilian version of the KC-135, and a DC-10), and
can deliver fuel for $7 a gallon. Noting this, Congress has ordered the air
force to establish a pilot program, to see if this kind of service would work
for the air force. On paper, it should. Most of the aerial refueling takes
place outside of combat zones. Congress sees outsourcing a lot of in-flight
refueling activity as a way to solve the problem of replacing the 40 year old
air force KC-135 tankers, while also saving a lot of money. The air force
objects because of qualms about being able to order contractor refueling
aircraft to a combat zone. That's an official qualm. Unofficial objections have
more to do with losing aircraft and people in uniform. Those numbers are one of
the ways you keep score in the Pentagon. Historically, armies and navies have been outsourcing
logistical functions for thousands of years, and even some combat functions as
well. The air force knows this, but fears that the contractors will demonstrate
a cheaper way to run parts of the air force, bringing into doubt the quality of
current and past air force leadership. Congress ought to be careful with this
one, as many inefficiencies in the air force are because Congress wanted
something done a certain way, and wrote that into the legislation providing
money for the air force.