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     Mar 11, 2008
Page 2 of 2
Why Boeing lost the $40bn tanker deal
By Julian Delasantellis

the seeds of the insurgency. According to Washington Post writer Thomas Ricks' 2006 book Fiasco, if you favored abortion rights in the US, no matter how you might be otherwise qualified, (like, maybe if you were one of the very few in the shop that spoke Arabic) you need not have applied to work for L Paul Bremer's Coalition Provisional Authority in Baghdad.

So is the tanker deal just another punishment of foes, and reward to friends? Possible, but I doubt it. The air force is saying that Northrup-Grumman and EADS just have a better product, and maybe just this time they're playing it straight.

You should not think of US Air Force aerial refueling tankers as just big flying bladders of fuel, as just gas stations in the clouds. They're much more than that. In reality, they are a critical



component of the entire Bush and neo-conservative foreign policy ideology apparatus and heritage Bush hopes to leave to his successor.

During the American Civil War (1861-65) naval planners of the Western world saw the obvious superiority of ironclad, coal-to-steam-powered warships, over the traditional wooden-hulled wind-powered sailing ships.

For one thing, the ironclads were essentially impervious to anything the light cannons of the sailing ships could shoot at them. Also, the ironclads could serve as platforms for much heavier and extended-range naval guns. In the classic arms race dynamic, the obvious operational superiority of the ironclads led all the major Western naval powers to junk their sailing ships in favor of ironclads by the last decades of the 19th century.

But coming along with the benefits were drawbacks, specifically in terms of the availability of their fuel for propulsion. Sail-powered ships didn't have to load fuel (at least not for the ship - for the sailors, that was another story), they were powered by the wind, which was, most of the time anyway, all around them. Ironclads were propelled by coal, which wasn't.

European naval powers soon discovered that, if they wanted to project power and national influence on the other side of the globe, say in the Pacific or Indian Ocean, they needed a reliable place where the ships could stop for fuel - a coal-powered ship just couldn't leave Plymouth in England or Cherbourg in France, or Bremerhaven in Germany, with enough fuel on board to operate effectively that far away.

Born were the coaling stations. Since it was obvious that God had given the white Christian men of the West the right to just take any place on the planet for their own uses, the search went out for ports where supplies of coal could be stored for use by incoming warships. While Europe itself enjoyed the 43 years of relative peace between the Franco-Prussian War and World War I, beyond the horizon of the polite drawing rooms and fine fancy dress balls of the Belle Epoque, a furious, bare-knuckled brawl was going on all over the world for territories, ports and power.

British naval heritage meant that it got off to a fast start, they got, among other places, Bermuda, Halifax, Vancouver, the Falklands, Cape Town, Bombay (now Mumbai), Aden, Singapore, Sydney, Hong Kong. The French mostly considered themselves a European land power, but they still got Guadeloupe in the West Indies, Djibouti, on the entrance to the Red Sea, Saigon (Ho Ch Minh City) in Indochina, and New Caledonia in the South Pacific. With German unification occurring in 1871, it got into the game late; they had to settle for Dar es Salaam in Tanganyika (now Tanzania), Doula in Cameroon and Apia in Western Samoa.

The manifest destiny of the United States did not stop at the Pacific beaches. On March 21, 1894, the New York Times reported that president Grover Cleveland "is disposed to use at least a portion of the fund of $250,000 placed at his disposal to establish ... a coaling station in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii". (It looks like government officials were leaking to the Times even then.) With Spain's defeat in the Spanish American War of 1898, America also got coaling stations in Manila, in the Philippines, and Guantanamo, in Cuba.

Many of the coaling stations acquired in colonialism's full flowering in the 19th century became points of dispute or conflict in the decolonization wave that followed World War II. Oil had replaced coal as the fuel for naval ship propulsion, and Germany had been crushed, divided and left without any colonies or navy. As for the British and the French, except for the ignominious French effort to recolonize Indochina, nobody in Europe had much of a stomach to travel long distances to fight anybody for much of anything anymore.

Now it's the 21st century. Only one great navy, great power, bestrides the seas of the world, that of the United States. Up until very recently, its preferred tool of power projection has been jet fighters and bombers launched off its 11 long-deck aircraft carriers. These ships do not use coal for propulsion; all except the oldest, the USS Kitty Hawk, are nuclear powered.

But along with the benefits are drawbacks. The 1982 Falklands War between Argentina and Great Britain proved that small, cheap, essentially off-the-shelf missile technology, as exemplified by the Argentinean Exocet missiles that struck hard against the British fleet, can be devastating against modern naval assets.

To deal with these and other threats, US aircraft carriers operating in potentially hostile waters are accompanied by groupings of five to 10 combat and support ships and submarines called carrier battle groups. These act as screens to defend the carriers.

Carrier battle groups are not cheap either to acquire or to operate. The carriers alone cost about $4.5 billion each, and the almost 6,000 sailors and naval aviators aboard them mean that it costs about $300 million a year to operate one - not including the costs that will be needed to safely store the spent nuclear fuel for 100 years or more. Add in the acquisition and operating costs of the ships of the battle group, and you can see why, even with its currently swollen Pentagon budgets, the US can only afford to have 11 carrier battle groups in its fleet at the present time - half of them usually in port for maintenance of the ships and rest and family time for the crews.

If a crisis breaks out some place in the world and America decides it wants to project power and influence, like if it wants to bomb someone, there's no guarantee that, like a cop on the beat, that there will be a carrier battle group around when its needed.

Also, there are inherent limitations as to just how much power an aircraft carrier can actually project. The relatively small flight deck area means that planes taking off from the carriers just can't carry a very large bomb or missile payload.

Many of these problems can be solved by using land-based air assets in the power projection role. The US Air Force's three main strategic bombers, the B-52, the B-1B and the B-2 (also known as the Stealth bomber) each carry, depending on model, between four and 10 times the bomb payload of the carrier navy's main bomber, the various versions of the F-18.

In addition, in contrast to the huge effort and expense the navy spends to protect its carrier battle groups at sea, the modern, technological, Western air force's assets have proven to be essentially invulnerable once they're airborne, as demonstrated by the relative impunity with which the US Air Force over Iraq, or the Israeli Air Force over Syria and Lebanon, conduct their ground attack operations.

But the drawback of land-based aviation is, of course, the land. Unlike carrier-based airpower, in which the runway essentially floats over to near where the target is, the inherent range limitations of land-based airplanes means that they must take off from a fixed runway at an airbase, and then return to land, from some point no more than a few thousand kilometers from where the target is.

But what if your foreign policies have alienated so many people, like the 1.5 billion or so Muslims living in an arc between Northwest Africa and Indonesia and Malaysia, that no national leader in the area would dream of allowing an American airbase on his territory? What if, in many of the non-Muslim countries as well, your belligerent, unilateral "cowboy" diplomacy means you can't get an airbase in there, either?

What if, stripped of all the flowery rhetoric you deliver once a year at the United Nations, the essence of your foreign policy is simply a never-ending search for new countries to bomb?

You need a way to get the benefits of land-based aircraft for power projection, without the drawbacks of needing to find friendly countries willing to host your local airfields.

In short, you need really good airborne refueling tankers - the coaling stations of the modern age.

This is what I believe led the Bush administration to forsake Boeing. The company's own data states that the Northrup-Grumman and EADS contender for the KC-45 had a fuel cargo capacity almost 25% greater than Boeing's. How many more bombing runs over Iran, over Syria, over Pakistan, or any other Muslim or other country that gains investiture to the "axis of evil" could you do with the extra bomber flight distances implied by the added capacities of the Northrup-Grumman and EADS refueler?

And unlike Britain and its coaling stations, using refueling tankers as imperial force projection multipliers means you don't even have to put your young soldiers' boots down on these foreign soils, separating them from their beloved cultural icons of Taco Bell and flush toilets, making them susceptible to all those yucky diseases that all "those people" always have.

An aircrew can leave on a mission from a base in Middle America, get refueled a few times in mid-air, drop a few dozen tons of ordnance on some dusty corner of the Middle East, and still get home in time to watch their kids' soccer game, or to vote on that night's American Idol.

Who needs diplomacy when you have aerial refueling? In much the same way that Vladimir Lenin said that communism was Soviet power plus electricity, it now appears that neo-conservatism is jingoistic arrogance plus the KC-45.

But this is all little solace to poor Seattle. To paraphrase Ernest Lawrence Thayer's famous 1888 poem, Casey at the Bat.

"Oh, somewhere in this favored land the sun is shining bright,
The band is playing somewhere, and somewhere hearts are light,
And somewhere men are laughing, and little children shout;
But there is no joy in Seattle - mighty Boeing has struck out."

Julian Delasantellis is a management consultant, private investor and educator in international business in the US state of Washington. He can be reached at juliandelasantellis@yahoo.com.

(Copyright 2008 Asia Times Online Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us about sales, syndication and republishing.)

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