Common Support Aircraft
The Common Support Aircraft (CSA) was a proposed concept, which has been considered by the United States Navy since at least the early 1990s, to replace a number of different fixed-wing aircraft capable of operating from an aircraft carrier and which serve a "support" function, with a single type of aircraft or aircraft platform able to perform all support tasks.
Current roles deemed "support" by the Navy include: carrier on-board delivery (COD), electronic surveillance (ES), electronic warfare (EW), and airborne early warning (AEW). Another possible support role for a carrier-based aircraft is that of aerial refueling.
Among combat roles, while anti-submarine warfare (ASW) and anti-surface warfare (ASUW) are sometimes also considered "support"; fighter, bomber, and ground attack roles are not.
Current carrier-based fixed-wing support aircraft used by the US Navy, and which would presumably be replaced by the CSA, include:
- the C-2 Greyhound, for COD;
- and the E-2 Hawkeye, for AEW.
Other support aircraft used by the US Navy in the recent past include:
- the S-3 Viking, for ASW, ASUW, and aerial refueling;
- the ES-3 Shadow, for ES.
- the EA-6B Prowler, for EW.
External links
- Common Support Aircraft (CSA) on GlobalSecurity.org
- "Common Support Aircraft(CSA)" on The Federation of American Scientists(FAS)web-site
- Chimera, Wombat/Joey, Crossbow, and Penguin CSA study designs