
By 2008 the USAF plans to equip the B-1B with
up to 24 JASSM-Extended Range
stealth cruise missiles, further extending its standoff
strike range beyond 500mn. When tasked with time-sensitive
target engagement missions, individual bombers can be "stacked"
over a specific area, for rapid response to emerging opportunities.
The Lancer can carry a total load of 24 GPS-guided
Joint Direct Attack Munitions (JDAM) or JASSM missiles.
The bomber's new avionics upgrade suit provides tight integration
between the GPS and the SAR radar and Ground Moving Target
Indicator radar to improve the situation awareness inside
the airplane.
The development and procurement of JASSM-ER
is a key element of the B-1B reinvestment strategy. The additional
range provided by the JASSM-ER missile benefits the B-1B with
responsive, precision-engagement capability while remaining
clear of highly defended airspace and beyond the range of
long-range, surface-to-air missiles. A primary JASSM-ER program
objective is to provide the warfighter with a significant
operational capability benefit of greater than 2.5 times the
increase in missile range, while maintaining the same outer
mold line, reliability, survivability and lethality of the
baseline JASSM missile.
As part of the Conventional Mission Upgrade Program (CMUP),
the B-1B is undergoing avionics upgrades in several phases.
The most recent phase, concluded in September
2006, was Block E modifications, which comprised the replacement
of six computers with four, providing a 25-fold increase in
throughput, memory and input/output margins required to add
flexible targeting for the use of multiple conventional weapons
in a single sortie. The new package supports the Wind-Corrected
Munitions Dispenser (10 per bay or 30 per aircraft), the Joint
Standoff Weapon (four per bay, 12 per aircraft) and the Joint
Air-to-Surface Standoff Missiles (24 per aircraft). Other
improvements included integration of advanced communications
"Connecting the airplane into the Global Information
Grid will provide combat commanders with a potent long-range
strike capability for decades to come." said Greg Burton,
Boeing director for B-1 and B-2 programs.
The installation concluded the third phase of the Conventional
Mission Upgrade Program (CMUP) undertaken in 1993 to convert
the B-1 from a nuclear to a conventional role. A small number
of CMUP-equipped Lancers delivered more tonnage of ordnance
while flying fewer sorties than any other aircraft during
Operation Iraqi Freedom. CMUP also added 1760 smart weapons
bus to the B-1B arsenal, improving the flexibility of loading
and launching multiple types of weapons against a wider target
set. In 2007 Boeing was awarded $45 million to continue avionics
upgrades on the B-1B bomber fleet.
Following is a brief introduction of recent and future upgrades
planned for introduction in current B-1Bs, as part of the
USAF
plan to maintain its 'Shooters' effective for years to come.
Other upgrades are sometime based on 'non-traditional' approaches.
For example, air force units engaged in combat which are requested
to wait for video datalinks for their targeting pods, opt
for makeshift upgrades, strapping a datalink from a Raven
mini UAV to the pod. The result may be less than optimal but
nevertheless do the job. A similar, yet more ordinary approach
was implemented with the B-1B Bomber, which also received
a Sniper targeting pod. To accelerate the pod introduction,
the pod bypassed the central avionics, and is controlled directly
from a laptop. Other improvements to this bomber include avionics
systems considered baseline in today's fighters, such as a
data transfer system (DTS), Fully Integrated Datalink (FDL).
Since the early 2002s a growing
share of the B-1B missions are conventional attack missions,
following the CMUP undertaken by Boeing in 2002. As an active
participant in all major US military operations since the
Gulf War, B-1B bombers have delivered more tonnage of ordnance
while flying fewer sorties than any other aircraft during
Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Other parts of this report include: