|
PREDATOR
Pahrump Valley Times
February 11, 2004
Predator spurs growth at Indian Springs airfield
WASHINGTON - The Air Force plans to break ground
in the next few weeks on a $26 million operations hangar at the
Indian Springs auxiliary field, the first sign of a major expansion
that reflects the growing importance of Predator spy planes based
at the once sleepy camp, military and congressional officials said
Friday.
When the expansion is completed in the next three or four years
the Indian Springs Air Force Auxiliary Field, roughly 40 miles southeast
of Pahrump, could rival parent Nellis Air Force Base in the number
of stationed aircraft, Nellis spokesman Mike Estrada said.
"This is huge," Estrada said. "We've
got at any given time 120 aircraft at Nellis and at the end of this
program that little base that few people think of at Indian Springs
will have almost the same number as the main base."
Propelling growth is the Predator, a fleet of 27-foot-long
drones that has garnered high marks from military leaders and has
captured the public's imagination.
As models of the unmanned air vehicle have advanced, the Predator
has played increasingly visible roles in military operations in
Bosnia, Afghanistan and Iraq. Predators hunted for Osama bin Laden
before and after the 2001 terrorist attacks. One served as a high
altitude lookout when U.S. commandos rescued Army supply clerk Jessica
Lynch from an Iraqi hospital last April.
Sen. John Ensign, R-Nev., on Friday disclosed that
Congress appropriated funding for an Indian Springs operations hangar
last fall, although lawmakers were not told until this week that
they could announce it because parts of the Predator program remain
secret. |

At the same time, Ensign said the Air Force has asked
for another $26.1 million in the upcoming fiscal 2005 budget to
construct four maintenance buildings for the Predator at the Nevada
site.
"I would expect this to go through because the Predator is
such a high priority at the Air Force," said Ensign, a member
of the Senate Armed Services Committee.
"Unmanned vehicles are becoming very popular in the military
because of their versatility, they cost less and there is less risk
with them," he said.
Ensign said the Indian Springs expansion is further evidence of
the value the Pentagon puts on the adjoining 4,562-square mile Nellis
Air Force desert range, where the Air Force conducts development
and training flights for the Predator and other aircraft.
He said it also signals Nellis AFB will be in good
shape when the Pentagon and an independent commission weighs base
closings and realignments next year.
"You don't have to worry about Nellis and Fallon (Naval Air
Station) closing," Ensign said. "The reason they are seeing
this activity is because of the ranges. I've never worried about
that."
The Predator fleet in Nevada is anticipated to grow
from 40 planes to as many as 88 by 2007 or thereafter, according
to Air Force officials and environmental assessment documents of
the Indian Springs expansion.
Estrada said "quite a few" Predators and
support personnel are in service in Iraq and Afghanistan, but could
not give a number.
The Air Force has stationed two operational Predator units at Indian
Springs, the 11th and 15th reconnaissance squadrons. Plans call
for a third squadron, the 17th, to handle medium altitude MQ-1 models
and advanced versions being designed to carry heat-seeking missiles
and satellite guided smart bombs.
The Air Force plans to spend between $130-$150 million
at the Nevada site in the next three to four years to accommodate
growth in the Predator program, Estrada said.
Base employment of 750 active duty military and 175
civilians is projected to increase to 881 active duty and 217 civilians
by 2007, according to the Air Force.
The Predator also has marked a new chapter for the Indian Springs
field, which opened in 1942 as an aerial gunnery training camp but
closed for a time after World War II. It has supported various missions
over the years; including nuclear weapons testing, Red Flag combat
exercises and training for the Air Force Thunderbirds.
The first Predator squadron was activated in 1995.
|