The heavy bomber entered service with the U.S.
Air Force on June 29, 1985, and has been in nearly
continuous combat for the past 10 years. The milestone
mission took off from a base in Southwest Asia
recently and was flown in support of operations
over Afghanistan before returning to base.
"The B-1 brings tremendous flexibility to
our nation's defense," said Lt. Col. Alejandro
Gomez, mission team lead. "In any mission,
the B-1 has the ability to loiter, dash, positively
identify targets, show force, and strike targets
precisely. Whatever our aircrews are asked to
do, they can perform with this aircraft."
B-1 crews in Southwest Asia fly a variety of
missions, including close air support for troops
on the ground, giving them cover and alerting
them to threats they cannot see. On-site maintainers
keep the fleet ready to fly.
"10,000 conventional combat missions for
a relatively small fleet of 66 B-1s is a major
milestone and a testament to the men and women
who built, sustain and modernize the fleet, including
the U.S. Air Force, Boeing and our subcontractors,"
said Rick Greenwell, Boeing B-1 program director.
"We continue to draw on expertise and experience
from across Boeing to enhance our support of this
amazing aircraft."
The B-1 bomber has advanced over the years as
it is modified for current needs. The aircraft
began as a nuclear bomber and moved into a solely
conventional role in the 1990s. It carries the
largest payload in the Air Force's long-range
bomber fleet -- during Operation Iraqi Freedom,
it dropped 40 percent of all weapons while flying
only 5 percent of the sorties.
Today's B-1 can carry a mixed load of weapons
in each of its three bays. Its long range allows
it to base far from the conflict and loiter unrefueled
for long periods. Its swept wings allow it to
fly fast, slow, low or high as the situation demands.
With only four crewmembers required, missions
can rapidly be adjusted in flight to keep up with
adversaries. The radar and targeting pod can be
used for positive target identification and the
aircraft can employ a variety of other weapons,
including Joint Direct Attack Munitions (JDAMs),
Laser JDAMs, Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff Missiles-Extended
Range, and BLU-129 warheads.
"The B-1 fleet and crews have readily adapted
to an ever-changing environment to accomplish
this 10,000th combat sortie milestone," said
Greenwell. "This aircraft has proven its
ability to continue to evolve and be effective
well into the future."
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