WASHINGTON (Army News Service, Feb. 23, 2010) -- The supply requirement in Afghanistan will dramatically increase this year according to the Army's top logistician, and he said the Army is testing a new airdrop system to help meet the demand.
Speaking at an Association of the U.S. Army Land Warfare Institute
breakfast series Feb. 19, Lt. Gen. Mitchell H. Stevenson, Army G-4,
told the attendees that he hopes the new delivery system will be ready
for deployment to Afghanistan by the end of summer.
The Army Freedrop Packaging Concept Project is currently developing and
testing a new airdrop system called the Freedrop Delivery System for
Afghanistan.
The new system will allow bundles of supplies such as ammunition, small
generators and other Class IX repair parts, Meals Ready to Eat, and
bottled water of up to 150 pounds to be freedropped (no parachutes) at
about 70 knots airspeed from under 75 feet above ground level at the
current 19 Afghanistan outposts which can only receive supplies by air.
"The idea here was to develop a package that you just kick out the side
of a helicopter or airplane when you're flying very low... 50 feet
above ground," Stevenson said. "You eliminate the problem of packing,
rigging the chute and of course doing any kind of recovery operation."
The freedrop system is currently being developed and tested by the Army
G-4's Logistics Innovation Agency and involves a number of key
stakeholders, to include operational partners in the 82nd Airborne
Division at Fort Bragg, N.C.
The Army already uses four airdrop systems in Afghanistan. Getting
supplies to Soldiers there is tough because the country has no seaport
and relies on two main land routes so "airdrop has become big business"
said the Army's chief logistician.
Back in 2008, the service dropped about 600 short tons of supplies into
Afghanistan, Stevenson said. Last year that was upped to 15,000 short
tons, he said.
"Now with the force increase, I expect that will go higher this year,
so we're getting really, really good at airdrop," he said, noting that
the logistics challenge covers an area the size of Texas.
One of the fielded systems, the Joint Precision Airdrop System, or
JPADS, allows the Air Force to fly above the sand and surface-to-air
missile threats, drop supplies from 5,000 to 25,000 feet. The packages
then descend via parachute, directed by an autonomous guidance unit to
the landing site.
"It works, but it has a couple of problems," Stevenson said. "The first
problem is right now the JPADS sees in two dimensions, so it sees the
spot on the ground, but it doesn't see mountains that might be in the
way... so we've had some mishaps with JPADS right into the side of a
mountain."
He said the new generation of JPADS coming out should fix that problem.
"The other problem is this guidance device on the parachute is not
something we want to throw away... we've got to get it back," he said.
If the drop hits the side of a mountain, Soldiers still need to
retrieve the guidance system which defeats the purpose behind JPADS.
"It's a bit of a challenge, and the Soldiers don't like it as much as
we thought they would, particularly in those hard-to-get-to places, but
we'll continue to work that," Stevenson said.
Another airdrop system, which Stevenson said had been "very, very
useful" is the Low-Cost Low-Altitude, or LCLA parachute system, that
can be dropped from between 150-300 feet, but is a bit of a challenge
for Air Force C-130s because some drop sites are tough to get in, turn
and get out to avoid threats.
Over the last two years, LCLA parachutes have been well received and
used effectively by forces in Afghanistan. The chutes are very accurate
and are one-time use, which means that the retrograde of the parachutes
is not necessary. Soldiers simply recover the supplies and move out on
their missions.
The trucking side of supply will also increase in Afghanistan along
with airdrop, Stevenson said. The plus-up of 30,000 additional troops
in Afghanistan amounts to nearly a doubling of forces, he said.
"Up until about two years ago, we had about 30,000 or 35,000 forces
there, the better part of a division-plus, which you could supply
mostly by air," he said. "Nowadays, with the size of the force that we
have and will have over the course of the rest of the year, you have
got to get a lot more ground distribution and a lot more military truck
companies, so we'll be doing that."
Source and credits : http://www.army.mil/-news/2010/02/23/34848-army-testing-new-airdrop-system-for-afghanistan/
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