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2026年4月17日
涉华 一般 防务新闻 2 分钟阅读

美空军A-10退役或影响亚太高强度战场搜救能力

防务新闻 美国军工采办媒体,装备和预算追踪稳定
美空军A-10退役或影响亚太高强度战场搜救能力
摘要
美国空军正推进A-10攻击机的全面退役计划,这引发了对其未来战斗搜救(CSAR)能力的担忧。长期以来,A-10在执行复杂环境下的搜救任务中扮演核心角色。在未来的亚太潜在冲突中,面对高度动态的海空环境,美军能否通过新一代旋翼机或无人平台填补这一能力真空,直接关系到其在所谓“第一岛链”内的战损保障效率。
中文译文

美国空军执行战斗搜索与救援(CSAR)任务的飞机和飞行员所使用的呼号“桑迪”(Sandy),可以追溯到 1965 年底。美国空军 A-1“天袭者”飞行员 J.W.“多克”·乔治(J.W. “Doc” George)上尉作为从南越边和基地出发的 CSAR 轮换替换人员,抵达了泰国乌隆皇家空军基地。当被问及他的编队将使用什么呼号时,他提议使用他在边和使用的呼号:“桑迪”。这个名字沿用了下来,传给了他的继任者,并很快成为所有执行 CSAR 任务、保护被击落飞行员的 A-1“天袭者”的标准呼号。随着最后一批“天袭者”撤出东南亚,1972 年,“桑迪”的角色被移交给了速度更快的 LTV A-7D“海盗 II”。然而,A-7 在该角色中表现吃力,因为其较高的机动速度使其在进行低速视觉搜索和近距离直升机护航时不如 A-1 有效。在 20 世纪 70 年代末,“海盗”将 CSAR 的接力棒交给了 A-10“雷电 II”疣猪,它提供了极佳的待机时间、生存能力和适合该任务的火力。A-10 机体及其飞行员至今仍沿用“桑迪”呼号。随着空军加速计划在 2029 财年前退役 A-10“雷电 II”,该军种面临着越来越多关于在战斗搜索与救援(军事领域最专业的任务之一)中由什么来取代它的未解之谜。这不仅仅是对替代机型及其能力的分析,这种转型还引发了对座舱内飞行员的担忧,近五十年来,他们接受了战斗搜索与救援任务的专门训练,并在 CSAR 领域建立了信任。随着国会的监督和立法强调了对 CSAR 作战准备能力的担忧,加之最近在伊朗上空执行的一次 CSAR 任务将两名 F-15E 飞行员带回了家,这些未解之谜的赌注已带上了新的紧迫感。高技能的“桑迪”飞行员在过去的几十年里,A-10 一直……

英文原文
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The callsign “Sandy,” used by U.S. Air Force aircraft and pilots conducting combat search-and-rescue operations, traces to late 1965. Capt. J.W. “Doc” George, a U.S. Air Force A-1 Skyraider pilot, arrived at Udorn Royal Thai Air Force Base, Thailand, as part of a CSAR replacement rotation from Bien Hoa, South Vietnam. When asked what callsign his flight would use, he suggested the one he used at Bien Hoa: “Sandy.” The name stuck, was passed to his replacement and soon became the standard callsign for all A-1 Skyraiders flying CSAR missions protecting downed aircrews.The Sandy role was later transferred to the faster LTV A-7D Corsair II in 1972 as the last Skyraiders were withdrawn from Southeast Asia. However, the A-7 struggled in the role due to its higher maneuvering speeds, which made it less effective for low-and-slow visual searches and close helicopter escort than the A-1.In the late 1970s, the Corsair passed the CSAR baton to the A-10 Thunderbolt II Warthog, which offered excellent loiter time, survivability and firepower suited to the mission. The A-10 airframe and its pilots still carry the “Sandy” callsign today.As the Air Force accelerates plans to retire the A-10 Thunderbolt II by fiscal year 2029, the service faces a growing set of unanswered questions about what replaces it in combat search and rescue, one of the military’s most specialized mission sets. More than an analysis of replacement aircraft and their capabilities, the transition raises concerns about the pilots in the cockpit, who for nearly five decades have received specialized training in the combat search-and -rescue mission and built trust within the CSAR community. With congressional oversight and legislation underscoring concerns about CSAR operational readiness, and on the heels of a CSAR mission over Iran that brought two F-15E airmen home, the stakes of those unanswered questions have taken on a new sense of urgency.Highly skilled Sandy pilotsIn the past several decades, A-10s have assumed the Sandy role in CSAR operations in the Gulf War, Iraq, Afghanistan, Kosovo and most recently in the April 3, 2026, operation that recovered two American F-15E Strike Eagle airmen from Iranian territory. One supporting A-10 sustained heavy battle damage during the mission; its pilot continued flying long enough to eject safely over Kuwait.During an April 6, 2026, press conference detailing that mission, Gen. Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, described the role of a Sandy: “A Sandy has one mission: to get to the survivor, bring the rescue force forward, and put themselves between that survivor on the ground and the enemy,” Caine said. “They are committed to this. This is what they live for. And this is what they’ve trained for, for many, many years.”RELATEDThe rescue mission that brought 2 F-15E Strike Eagle crew members homeOnly the most experienced A-10 pilots are selected for Sandy qualification, which requires specialized training in CSAR tactics and procedur

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原文链接:https://www.defensenews.com/news/your-military/2026/04/16/combat-search-and-rescues-uncertain-future-as-a-10s-phase-out-us-air-force-faces-questions-of-what-comes-next/