JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER
Dr JENSEN (Tangney) (4:49 PM) —Concerns about the Joint Strike Fighter,
the actions of its proponents and Australia’s plans to buy the troubled
aircraft are continuing to deepen. I recently received a document
prepared by the RAND Corporation think tank as part of a major US war
games exercise, in which the JSF was pointedly criticised. The blunt
assessment was that the JSF could not turn, could not climb and could
not run. That is an assessment shared by many air combat experts around
the world. The document’s findings were also supported by the results
of the war games themselves.
The RAND report, and some
leaked details of the related Pacific Vision war games, held at Hickam
Air Force Base in Hawaii, were released to the media by me in a bid to
stimulate debate on what could be a disastrous purchase for Australia
and may ultimately put at stake our very sovereignty. The storm of
publicity predictably drew angry reactions from proponents of the
projected US$500 billion project, particularly from the manufacturer,
Lockheed Martin, some elements within the US defence department and
even our own military, which apparently briefed the defence minister on
the subject and told him the reports were false.
RAND
Corporation itself, whose Project Air Force section was behind the
document, is funded by the US military and eventually issued a brief
and puzzling statement denying reports on the matter but failing to
address any of the substance. At the same time, the lead author of the
report suddenly departed from RAND and had his email address cancelled
and his biography removed from their website. The author, a very senior
and highly respected analyst named John Stillion, had worked for RAND
for many years and was one of the top staff at Project Air Force. His
abrupt departure amid the controversy over his report raises some
deeply disturbing questions.
There are suggestions in some
quarters that he was dismissed over the document and that his removal
was ordered by the US military. I sincerely hope that this is not the
case. My office contacted the head of Project Air Force and was told
that Dr Stillion no longer worked there. No other information was
provided. I should stress that Dr Stillion was not my source, regarding
the document he wrote. I have never had any contact with him.
With so much money and so many careers riding on this project,
obviously criticism or even debate is unwelcome. If any forces within
Australia wish to pursue a witch-hunt in a bid to stifle debate on this
issue, then I have a warning: I will make it my personal duty to pursue
those conducting the witch-hunt. I will not accept people taking such
action for any reason other than the demonstrated national interest.
The program general manager of the JSF project, Lockheed Martin
President Tom Burbage, and the program executive officer within the
USAF, Major General Charles Davis, intimated that those who released
the RAND Corporation document and made statements about it had a vested
interest. Well, that person is me, and I do have a vested interest. I
want to ensure that Australia purchases the capability that it
requires, not merely a capability it has been sold.
I
expect the Defence department or DSTO, or both, to have conducted their
own studies comparing the JSF to the Russian-built Flankers that are
beginning to proliferate in the region. Presumably those results would
prove the same as those suggested by the RAND document. Have Defence
done any such analysis? If so, what were the results of that analysis?
If they have not, why not?
The frantic reactions to reports
on this subject—and I am aware there have been many aggressive and
angry behind-the-scenes approaches, to journalists and others, as well
as the public statements—would appear to prove that the criticism is
justified. The planned JSF purchase would be central to Australia’s
defence up to 2040, or even beyond. If the product is flawed, then our
entire national security policy will be as well. And that is too
important for us to ignore. We must serve the interests of Australian
sovereignty and security, not the selfish interests of those who have
tied their careers to this project, or the interests of a foreign
corporation.