QAM HOPES TO RECEIVE AN F-111.
UPDATE
- 23 DECEMBER 2011
On
23 November 2011 the Commonwealth issued a Request for Offers
on up to seven F-111C aircraft to be issued on loan to eligible
Australian historical organisations. The deadline for offers
is 28 March 2012 and QAM is preparing, and will submit request
documents before that deadline.
The placement of these aircraft is subject to many stringent
requirements to ensure the preservation of the aircraft
and QAM fully supports these requirements. However, for
QAM's offer to be successful, we will need to expedite the
construction of the proposed Hangar 3. To this end QAM is
actively seeking grants and sponsorships to fund the new
building.
|
UPDATE
- 30 SEPTEMBER 2011
Minister
for Defence Materiel – F-111s to be made available to aircraft
museums.
Minister for Defence Materiel Jason Clare today announced
that up to seven retired F-111 fighter jets will be made
available to Australian aircraft museums and other historical
organisations.
The iconic F-111s were the front line of the Australian
Defence Force for almost four decades.
Following their retirement in December last year, aircraft
museums and historical organisations around the country
expressed strong interest in displaying the F-111.
“I’ve met with museum operators around the country and I
understand how important it is that as many Australians
as possible have access to this piece of Australia’s aviation
history,” Mr Clare said. “I have therefore decided that
up to seven F-111s will be made available to Australian
aircraft museums and other historical organisations.”
The aircraft will be loaned to museums so that Defence can
continue to manage the risk of hazardous material in the
aircraft like asbestos and will be subject to a number of
conditions to ensure the safe preservation of the aircraft.
These include:
Housing the aircraft in a completely enclosed facility;
Ensuring members of the public are prevented from climbing
into engine intakes and exhaust ducts;
Limiting, controlling and supervising public access to the
cockpit;
Preventing the public from opening aircraft panels;
Supervising public access to the wheel well and weapons
bays;
Completing specified preservation maintenance; and
Meeting Commonwealth auditing and reporting requirements.
As the aircraft were produced in the United States, organisations
selected to display the aircraft will be subject to the
approval of the US Government under the International
Traffic in Arms Regulations.
Interested organisations will be asked to respond to a Request
for Offer which will be released by Defence later this year.
Queensland
Air Museum applauds the Minister's proactive role in
preserving Australia's aviation heritage.
|
UPDATE
- 15 JULY 2011
Following
up on an earlier promise, the Queensland Air Museum was
visited on 13 July by the Hon Jason Clare MP, Minister for
Defence Materiel. The Minister was taken on a tour of the
museum by QAM President Cliff Robinson. A representative
from Senator Claire Moore’s office and Federal Member for
Fisher, the Hon Peter Slipper MP also visited the museum
to lend support to QAM’s claim for the gifting of an F-111.
At a subsequent meeting with the QAM executive, the Minister
advised that he was still working through several impediments
to placing F-111s with non-government museums. The F-111s
were produced in the US and are subject to International
Trade in Arms Regulations. The other impediment is the existence
of asbestos in the F-111 airframe. The Minister has sought
advice from Defence on what needs to be done to render the
aircraft safe for display to the public and he expects to
have their response shortly.
During the meeting, the Minister was presented with a petition
to have an F-111 gifted to QAM. At the time of the handover,
the petition comprised 1895 signatures with a further 222
signatures on an online petition. Pending resolution of
QAM’s claim for an F-111, both petitions will be kept open
for further signatures.
Minister Clare was thanked for taking the time to visit
QAM. This was a first for QAM as no serving Federal Minister
has previously visited the museum in nearly 40 years of
operation.
|
THE
HISTORY OF QAM's F-111 CAMPAIGN
Ever since the announcement
that the RAAF's F-111s were to be retired at the end of 2010, many
museum visitors have asked if we will be "getting an F-111".
Unfortunately it's a question that we cannot answer. Certainly QAM
would like to include an F-111 in the collection but it's not simply
a decision to go and get one. Whether or not QAM will receive an
F-111 will be decided at a political level.
Given that QAM is a not-for-profit community group which has been
serving the educational needs of the community for more than 35
years, one might imagine that gifting an F-111 to QAM would be an
appropriate means of returning taxpayers' property to the taxpayer
while recognising QAM's place in the community.
QAM currently attracts approximately 15,000 visitors each year and
it surprises many of them that despite the fact that the British
Government gifted an aircraft to QAM in just its second year of
operation, and despite the fact that the United States Government
has also offered an aircraft, the Australian Government has yet
to contribute anything to the museum. Clearly there is a community
expectation that this will change with the disposal of the F-111s.
So, in answer to the question, we can only respond that QAM has
asked for an F-111 on no fewer than five occasions since 2005. During
this time, we have put the question to three different Ministers
for Defence whose only assurance is that QAM will be considered
along with all other interested parties.
On 20 September this year, we wrote to the Minister for Defence,
the Hon Stephen Smith MP welcoming him to his new portfolio and
restating our case for an F-111 to be gifted to QAM. As of 3 December,
when the F-111s were finally retired, this letter had gone unanswered.
In the absence of any official advice from the Minister, we have
to rely on the following report from Air Force News:
Many people
will be pleased to learn that not all the F-111Cs will go into
storage sheds and scrap yards after their retirement. Four of
the aircraft are destined to become permanent displays at locations
around Australia. One aircraft will be placed on display at
RAAF Base Edinburgh, two at RAAF Base Amberley and one at the
RAAF Museum at RAAF Base Point Cook. The ADF is planning to
have the four aircraft on display during 2011.
Of the remainder of the fleet, another three will be retained
within Defence to preserve military heritage, in particular
for Air Force units that have flown or supported the F-111C.
Another four will be disposed through destruction as investigations
have determined that they are unsuitable for demilitarisation
or for display purposes.
The remaining aircraft are then to be offered for general sale
by tender for other groups or organisations to use as static
displays. Any such group will be required to agree to pay the
costs to make the aircraft inoperable (estimated to be in excess
of $1 million) so as to meet US Government approvals to transfer
them from Defence, as well as the costs to remove asbestos from
the aircraft and to restore them to displayable condition (estimated
at up to $1.5 million) before approval is given.
All G models will be destroyed. |
Accordingly,
we have written again to the Minister as follows:
|
8 December
2010
The Hon Stephen Smith MP
Minister for Defence
PO Box 6022
House of Representatives
Parliament House
CANBERRA ACT 2600
Dear Minister
I refer to my letter of 21 September regarding the disposal
of F-111 aircraft. As we have not yet received a response
from your office, I would appreciate your urgent advice on
this matter.
In the absence of any official advice from your office, we
have to accept the following report from Air Force News to
be the official policy:
The remaining aircraft are then to be offered
for general sale by tender for other groups or organisations
to use as static displays. Any such group will be required
to agree to pay the costs to make the aircraft inoperable
(estimated to be in excess of $1 million) so as to meet US
Government approvals to transfer them from Defence, as well
as the costs to remove asbestos from the aircraft and to restore
them to displayable condition (estimated at up to $1.5 million)
before approval is given.
Presumably this offer to make aircraft available to "other
groups or organisations" is intended to satisfy the Government's
sole commitment to QAM that our request will be considered
along with other interested parties. So once again we find
ourselves at the mercy of the tender system which has consistently
failed to provide for community groups like QAM. Not only
do we have to come up with a competitive tender, but now we
have to contend with an additional "flagfall" impost estimated
to be in excess of $2.5M. I would put it to you Minister that
there is no community group in the nation that could afford
that amount. In QAM's case, that is more than we have ever
spent on capital works in our thirty-five year history and
more than we dare aspire to in the foreseeable future.
While we accept that an aircraft must be made safe for display,
the quoted cost would appear to be nothing more than a contrived
deterrent to prevent non-Government museums from displaying
an F-111. The clear implication of this policy is that community
group museums are not good enough to display an F-111 despite
the fact that these groups are comprised of tax-paying volunteers
who effectively paid for these aeroplanes in the first place.
It is all very well to claim that the Government is fulfilling
its heritage obligations by displaying F-111s at military
establishments but are these aeroplanes accessible to the
public? Clearly military establishments are obliged to have
a high level of security and the level of that security is
only going to increase in coming years.
It is also clearly understood that the Government has a need
to prevent operational military equipment falling into the
wrong hands and yet the Government has demonstrated on many
occasions that where there is a will to do so, these problems
can be overcome. I refer specifically to the recent gifting
of Leopard tanks to various RSL Clubs around the country.
While we applaud the Government's action in this case, we
have great difficulty reconciling the Government's policy
with the disposal of tanks with its policy on the disposal
of F-111s. It is our understanding that not only have the
Leopard tanks been gifted but they have also been demilitarised
and delivered at Government expense. What is so different
about QAM and the F-111 given that many of our volunteers
are RSL members?
Another example of the prevailing double standard concerns
the gifting of former RAN vessels as dive wrecks. Is it not
true that these dive wrecks are gifted, demilitarised and
delivered at Government expense? Surely the cost of demilitarising
a guided missile destroyer would be significantly more expensive
than the cost of demilitarising an aeroplane?
In the event that no appropriately constituted organisations
are able to tender for an F-111, would it be a reasonable
assumption that the aircraft set aside for public tender will
be scrapped? If they are to be scrapped, will the successful
tenderer be required to pay the estimated $1M cost of decommissioning
each aircraft? We estimate that there may be as many as eight
aircraft available for public tender. If these aircraft are
unsold and have to be scrapped, does that mean that the successful
tenderer will be required to pay $8M in "flagfall" just to
destroy the airframes? Obviously, this amount exceeds the
scrap value of the airframes by a huge margin so clearly scrapping
the aircraft cannot be a commercial proposition unless the
Government is absorbing the demilitarising cost. If the Government
can absorb the cost of destroying taxpayers' property, why
can it not absorb the cost of placing the aircraft on display
to the people who paid for them?
As alluded to in my previous unanswered letter, there is more
to this than the gifting of a single aeroplane to a museum.
It's all about recognition. Does the Government accept that
QAM's volunteers have provided a useful service to the community
during the past 35 years or is it the Government view that
we should give up what we are trying to do and leave it all
to the Government owned museums? Clearly, if the policy pertaining
to the F-111s is projected into the future, QAM can forget
about acquiring any ex ADF aircraft forever.
Please do not underestimate the extent of feeling within this
organisation and within our wider community regarding the
Government's dismissive attitude to a group of citizens who
are dedicated to nothing more than trying to put something
back into their community.
We would greatly appreciate your urgent assurances that QAM
is performing a valuable service to the community and that
you will review your attitude to our request for an F-111
to be displayed on the Sunshine Coast. Please be advised that
this matter is being followed with great interest by the local
media and there is much public interest in taking up a petition.
Yours sincerely,
Cliff F. Robinson
President
Download
this letter as a PDF
|
On 23
December 2010, advice was received from the office of the Hon Jason
Clare MP, Minister for Defence Materiel, that QAM's letter of 8
December had been referred to his office for action and that further
correspondence would be forthcoming "early in the new year".
In the
meantime, the Defence Materiel Organisation has reissued the Request
for Tender documents for the destruction of the 13 F-111Gs. These
documents now identify the F-111Gs as the "Core Scope"
while adding an "Optional Scope" for 1 F-111A and "up
to 14 F-111Cs". This would seem to indicate that the previous
provision for the remaining aircraft to be " offered for
general sale by tender for other groups or organisations to use
as static displays." has been withdrawn. The scandal that
is the F-111 disposal project was brought to the attention of the
news media with this QAM press release which was issued on 8 March
2011.
UNFOLDING
SCANDAL IN DEFENCE DISPOSALS
In December
last year, the Royal Australian Air Force finally retired
its F-111 strike aircraft after 37 years service to the nation.
The event was surrounded by a blaze of publicity and rightly
so. The select group of aircrew who flew the F-111 were fiercely
proud of their aircraft right to the end. Similarly, specialists
from many disciplines who had kept the aeroplane in service
for all of these 37 years with many challenges along the way
maintained their pride in the aircraft right to the end.
It wasn’t just the RAAF that had a genuine affection for the
F-111. The aeroplane was well known to the average citizen
who otherwise had no interest in aviation. This was largely
due to a quirk of the F‑111s design. When it was discovered
that dumping fuel while using afterburner produced a spectacular
torching effect, a star was born in the eyes of the public.
It was because of this “dump and burn” capability that the
Australian public took the F‑111 to their hearts as
it became a showpiece at many public ceremonies and sporting
events. An aeroplane which was designed as a killing machine
and which was born amidst political controversy was now the
darling of the people. The F-111 was recognised and adored
by everyone. Probably no military aircraft in history has
attracted such affection while it was still in service. Most
aeroplanes had to wait for years after their retirement for
such adoration, if it came at all. By the time the adoration
finally came it was usually too late as most of them had gone.
But this time it’s going to be different isn’t it? We have
35 surviving F-111s and a public ready and willing to provide
them with an honourable retirement.
Australia has
a number of museums which might be expected to be obvious
homes for an F‑111. Foremost is the RAAF Museum at the
historic Point Cook RAAF Base in Melbourne. There is also
the famous Australian War Memorial in Canberra. In addition
to these government owned museums, there are also a number
of not-for-profit aviation museums run by community groups.
The Queensland
Air Museum (QAM) at Caloundra on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast
is one such group. QAM was inaugurated in 1974 with the unveiling
of a Canberra bomber (predecessor of the F-111) which it had
purchased from the Australian government with funds donated
by its members. QAM’s second aeroplane was a Meteor jet fighter
which arrived the following year as an outright gift from
the British government. Nearly 40 years later, QAM is still
waiting to receive an aeroplane from its own government!
As early as
2005, QAM began planning for the retirement of the F-111 by
approaching the Australian government with a request that
an F-111 be gifted to the museum, not only as a means of preserving
an F-111 but also as a means of recognising QAM’s thirty-five
years service to the educational needs of the community. During
the ensuing years, three different Ministers for Defence assured
QAM that it’s interests would be taken into account at the
appropriate time.
As the F-111’s
December 2010 retirement approached, it was announced that
four F‑111Cs would be preserved on RAAF Bases at Point
Cook, Amberley (2 aircraft) and Edinburgh (SA). Earlier it
had been announced that one of the remaining F-111G models
would be preserved at the RAAF Museum at Point Cook. However,
the rest of the G models would be scrapped in accordance with
international treaties as they were technically deemed nuclear
capable. Although preservationists generally don’t like to
see aeroplanes scrapped, this was accepted as inevitable,
despite the apparent anomaly of allowing one F‑111G
to escape destruction.
Subsequently
it was announced that three F-111Cs would be retained for
“RAAF Heritage use” but four aircraft would be scrapped as
they were determined to be unsuitable for display. The clear
implication of this is that the estimated eleven remaining
F-111Cs are suitable for display. Indeed it was announced
in Air Force News that:
The remaining
aircraft are then to be offered for general sale by tender
for other groups or organisations to use as static displays.
Any such group will be required to agree to pay the costs
to make the aircraft inoperable (estimated to be in excess
of $1 million) so as to meet US Government approvals to transfer
them from Defence, as well as the costs to remove asbestos
from the aircraft and to restore them to displayable condition
(estimated at up to $1.5 million) before approval is given.
What this means
is that any group wishing to display an F-111 would be required
to find an estimated $2.5M just to buy the right to submit
a tender! The only way a museum such as QAM could find such
a fortune would be to approach a sponsor and what sponsor
in his right mind is going to hand over $2.5M knowing that
it will go to the government for nothing in return? Indeed,
no museum would insult a potential sponsor with such a request.
When QAM advised the Minister that no community group in Australia
could afford that sort of money it was probably seen as confirmation
that the government’s inflated estimates had served their
intended purpose.
The latest development
is that the original tender for the destruction of the 13
remaining F‑111Gs has been expanded in its scope. The
13 G models are now identified as the "Core Scope".
To this has been added an "Optional Scope" which
provides for the destruction of up to another 15 F-111s. What
this means is that if the so-called "Optional Scope"
is fully invoked, all remaining F-111s can be summarily destroyed
without further reference or tenders being called. It would
appear that this “Optional Scope” may include aircraft previously
set aside for RAAF heritage purposes.
As previously
announced, any organisation wishing to display an F-111 would
be required to pay $1M to have the aircraft demilitarised.
Apart from confirming that the aircraft can be demilitarised
to the satisfaction of the U.S. government to permit transfer
to a non-government recipient, one has to wonder who will
be paying to demilitarise the aircraft that are to be destroyed?
If the scrap merchant has to pay the demilitarisation cost
then obviously the scrap value of the aircraft would be negated,
so it is no surprise that Request For Tender documents make
no provision for these costs to be passed on to the successful
tenderer. What this means is that the taxpayer will have to
absorb the cost of preparing the aircraft for destruction
while a private individual or company will make a significant
profit from destroying taxpayers’ property! Clearly it would
make more sense to gift the aircraft to established museums
which have indicated interest in displaying an F-111. At least
then the taxpayer would have something to show for the huge
investment that has gone into acquiring and maintaining these
aeroplanes to say nothing of the potentially huge cost of
destroying them. The people who have flown and maintained
these aeroplanes with pride for 37 years should be appalled
that their years of effort are held in such low esteem by
their own government.
Work that needs
to be done to demilitarise the aircraft is defined in a “U.S.
Government Demilitarisation Manual” which is freely available
online. Currently the Defence Materiel Organisation is actively
discouraging potential tenderers from referring to this manual
because “reference to the Demilitarisation Manual on its own
can be confusing and misleading.” The only thing confusing
about the Demilitarisation Manual is that its requirements
are significantly less stringent than those imposed by the
Australian government!
Because of the
deterrent factor of the F-111, it was never used in anger
by the RAAF. This deterrent factor is now working against
the aircraft in that it is deemed to be an ongoing threat.
The well-equipped RAAF stopped using the F-111 because the
aeroplane was proving difficult to keep in the air. How could
a non-nuclear configured, demilitarised airframe, out
of the maintenance schedule, and minus engines, pose the slightest
threat to anyone, particularly when no other nation on earth
operates F-111s?
The US government
has already allocated F-111s to community museums in the United
States. How would Australian museums differ? Perhaps the Australian
government could show some initiative in preservation by working
with the US government to identify equally acceptable organisations
in Australia that would meet the standards of the National
Museum of the United States Air Force (NMUSAF) for the placement
of such equipment?
The project
to destroy the remaining F-111s would appear to be moving
with indecent haste. Why this is so is difficult to understand
when even the U.S. government itself provides for the demilitarisation
of defence assets to facilitate their placement in museums.
The only conclusion that can be drawn is that the Australian
government believes that only their own museums are worthy
enough to receive F-111s and that community group museums
should remain unrecognised as they have been for decades.
In allocating
four aircraft to RAAF Bases, the government doubtless feels
that they have fulfilled their heritage obligations and that
four is enough. Of these four aircraft, only one (Point Cook)
will be accessible to the public in a currently operational
aviation museum. The other three will be subject to the stringent
security restrictions which are now unavoidable at military
establishments. Indeed there have been recorded instances
where people attempting to photograph aircraft on display
at the front gates of an RAAF Base have been unceremoniously
chased away by security staff on the premise that any photos
taken will show defence establishments in the background.
Only in Melbourne will Australian families be able to turn
up unannounced with their cameras to view an F-111 (which
they effectively paid for). An F-111 positioned at the front
gate of a military establishment is not publicly accessible
and does not meet the heritage expectations of the community.
They want to see an F-111 displayed as part of a collection
of aircraft and above all they want to be able to touch it.
No, four aeroplanes is nowhere near enough.
To be using
taxpayers’ money to destroy taxpayers’ property is a scandal.
Download
this release as a PDF
|
Read
the Brisbane Courier-Mail article on the F-111 destruction
and post your comments here
THE
PETITION
|
Pending a response
from the Minister, we will be taking up a petition to have
an F-111 saved from destruction for gifting to QAM. This petition
is available for signature at the following locations:
Queensland Air Museum, Caloundra Airport (you do not have
to pay admission just to sign the petition)
Office of Mark McArdle, State Member for Caloundra, 118 Bulcock
Street, Caloundra
Additionally, we have an online petition. Please note that
online petitions are technically unacceptable to the Government
so your signature will carry more authority if it is on our
traditional hard copy petition. Nevertheless, the number of
signatures on the online petition will accompany the hard
copy petition when it is submitted to the House. If you are
unable to access the petition in person you can sign the online
version at this address:
Please note that
you should not sign both the hard copy and the online petitions.
Thank you for your support.
|
|