Secretary of the Air Force Public Affairs / Published
October 29, 2015
WASHINGTON (AFNS) -- Seymour Johnson Air Force Base, North
Carolina, has been chosen as the preferred alternative for the first
Reserve-led KC-46A Pegasus main operating base, Air Force officials announced
Oct. 29. The KC-46As are expected to begin arriving in 2019.
Tinker AFB, Oklahoma; Westover Air Reserve Base,
Massachusetts; and Grissom ARB, Indiana, were named as the reasonable
alternatives.
"It is absolutely critical that we replace our aging
tanker fleet with the KC-46A Pegasus aerial tanker," said Secretary of the
Air Force Deborah Lee James. "I am pleased to announce Seymour Johnson AFB
as the first Reserve-led location because it is a testament to the Air Force's
commitment to the total force.
“We must use all three components -- active, Guard and
Reserve -- operating cohesively and seamlessly as one team so we can realize
the full potential of airpower."
James also explained the 179 planned KC-46A aircraft are
just the first phase of a three-phase effort to replace the aging tanker fleet.
The first phase of tanker recapitalization will complete deliveries in fiscal
year 2028.
During detailed, on-the-ground site surveys of each
candidate base, the major commands evaluated the bases against operational and
training requirements, potential impacts to existing missions, housing,
infrastructure, and manpower.
The site survey teams also developed cost estimates to bed
down the KC-46A at each candidate base. The results of the surveys were briefed
to James and Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Mark A. Welsh III, who selected the
preferred and reasonable alternatives for this mission.
"Seymour Johnson (AFB) was selected based on
operational analysis, results of site surveys, cost, and military judgment
factors," said Jennifer Miller, the Air Force deputy assistant secretary
for installations. “The primary drivers for selecting this location as the
preferred alternative were its lower costs and its highly successful existing
active-duty association, which will lead to the lowest active-duty manpower
required to stand up the KC-46A Reserve unit.”
Selection of this total force unit will minimize costs and
the challenge of fielding a new weapons system while simultaneously
establishing a new active association.
"Bringing the KC-46A online is a huge first step in
recapitalizing a tanker fleet that has been the world leader in air refueling
for more than five decades," Welsh said. "The incredible Airmen who
will fly this great machine, and the joint and coalition partners they support
in contingency and humanitarian operations around the world, deserve the
improved aircraft availability rates, reliability and capability it will bring
to the fight. Rapid global mobility has always been a core mission of our Air
Force; the KC-46A will help us take it to the next level!"
The Air Force will also ensure Reserve component involvement
from day one by establishing active/Reserve associations at all U.S. main
operating base locations.
“The Air National Guard and Air Force Reserve are vital to
accomplishing our air refueling mission,” James explained. “Therefore, the
ability to recruit for and maintain a strong Reserve component association was
a major consideration in this basing action.”
“We will now begin the Environmental Impact Analysis Process
(EIAP),” Miller said. “We look forward to the inputs provided from the
communities as we proceed through the environmental impact analysis.
“Once the requirements of the environmental impact analysis
process are complete, the Air Force will make its final basing decision.”
Reasonable alternatives will continue to be evaluated during
the EIAP. Subsequent KC-46 decisions will use similar criteria; therefore,
candidate installations will likely compete for future continental U.S. basing
decisions.
The KC-46A will provide improved capabilities, including
boom and drogue refueling on the same sortie; worldwide navigation and
communication; cargo capacity on the entire main deck floor; receiver air
refueling; improved force protection and survivability; and multi-point air
refueling capability.
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