Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Michael Moseley will visit with representatives of Saudi Arabia’s defense forces tomorrow to discuss what USAF has learned about structural problems with the F-15A-D fleet. The Saudi air force flies about 170 F-15s, of which some 98 are of the same vintage as the Air Force Eagles suffering from stress fatigue and longeron problems (in fact, some were provided right out of the USAF inventory to bolster Saudi defenses before the first Gulf War). Moseley is not expected to offer much more than a status report, however. USAF has grounded 162 F-15s due to the problems, which caused an F-15C to break apart in midair in November. Nine of those have been found to have cracks. A “get well plan” has not yet been made definite, but USAF officials say at least some of the aircraft will be retired rather than fixed.
Clearing jungle and laying asphalt in tropical heat may not sound like fun to most people, but it’s a way of life for Rapid Engineer Deployable Heavy Operational Repair Squadron Engineers (RED HORSE) Airmen, who have spent the past year or so restoring World War II-era airfields on the Pacific…