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On Jun 12, 3:14*am, eatfastnoodle wrote:
On Jun 12, 2:43*pm, "Roger Conroy" wrote: "Tiger" wrote in message ... g lof2 wrote: On Jun 10, 10:03 pm, Tiger wrote: g lof2 wrote: On Jun 10, 5:32 pm, Tiger wrote: William Black wrote: "Mike" wrote in message ... Inside the Air Force Next-gen bomber must be adequately funded YOUNG: GIVEN CURRENT WARS, F-35s ARE BETTER CHOICE THAN MORE F-22As --------------------------------- Given current wars they'd be better off buying a load of Douglas A-1 Skyraiders and a few WWII twin engined bombers. What they need is something very reliable that lugs a largish bombload around and can absorb ground fire while dropping it in smallish quantities with great precision. What they don't need right now is large complex jet fighter/bombers that are designed to fight a major European war. In other words."Why pay 2008 Corvette money to do a job your old 1988 F150 could do?" I'm sure there plenty of stuff in the boneyard that fits the bill. A-10's, A6's, A-4's, Phantoms, A-7's. Old stuff, but to drop bombs in zones with no Mig threats they work. I think the A-1 may be pushing the concept a bit, but I hear you..... Until the run into the a battery on the latest SAMs , ot a Nex-Gen Stealth fighter, which are design to handle the latest fighters. At which point they become so much flying scrap metal. And remember, the reason we have air conreol is because we have the best fighter to knock the other sides fighter out before the get to shoot at our troops. Frankly what I read in the story reminds me of the old warning about fighting the last war, and not planning for the next. The bad guys of late seem to prefer Ied's & rpg's to Radar guided SAm sites... Nor does most of the world *have the $$$ for next gen Stealth fighters. Even our Allies can bearly put a decent force together. The topic point was spending money on a F22 air superiorty fighter. A job it does well but there is no air threat. That makes it useless when the current need for the airforce is to supply CAS. The F35 which will do, said mission is years away. If your planning for the next war, Nethier plane is *really what you want.- Hide quoted text - The problem with your argument is your assumion that there cannot be future threat to US air superiority. The key to US military power over the last sixty years was your control of the air. It is important for us to maintain that superiority if we are to remain the top military power. Therefore we must build enough F-22 to assure we retain that power while the production lines are still open, else it will become far more expensive to re open the production lines later when it becomes necessary. - Show quoted text - Going back to the start of this " GIVEN CURRENT WARS, F-35s ARE BETTER CHOICE THAN MORE F-22As." We are not exactly facing any Battles of Britian from anybody or collection of somebodies. The F-22 is a high end Air superority fighter. Great! And we are going to buy about 180 of them. At something like $100 Million each. About the price of 4 F-15's. We never intended for a whole airforce of them. The volume plane is the F35. Most our allies or enemies don't even have 180 planes in there whole air force; let alone fighters. You might like to refuel those F22's? Where are going to get $$$ for tankers? You might like Transport troops and parts for your F-22's? Where's the money to upgrade your airlift that has racking up flight time running back & forth to Kabul & baghdad??? I like the F-22 as well. But we are not spending the whole DOD budget on it, Hoping to re-fight Eagle-Day..... Anyone who bases their armaments aquisition programme on CURRENT wars is an idiot and is doomed to be on the losing side in the NEXT war. Major equipment is intended to be used for about 20-30 years. Take the example of the "Teens" generation of US fighter aircraft. They came off the drawing boards in the 1970's and are now at the end of their useful life as first world front-line equipment. It really is not acceptable for a 1st world fighter pilot to be flying the same plane that his father did. "Shock and Awe" only works if you have a clear margin of superiority over the enemy. Any leader who sends his forces into battle equipped at parity to the enemy should be shot for gross incompetence. it's not unreasonable to expect a new fighter every 30 years or so. But F22 price tag is simply outrageous, it threatens everything else the air force needs, remember, fighter by its own doesn't count for much, you need a integrated force with a balanced procurement policy. What looks like right now is the air force officials, who all used to be fighter pilots, seem to be more than ready to scrap everything else in order for them to have a few more F22s. That's not right and that's not going to help the force and anybody else in the long run. Everybody wants to have the best toy in town, but there are only so much money around, especially with the budget deficit already so high, so the escalating cost overruns must stop, otherwise, you will end up with a military so advanced that any war they fight will prove to be a financial disaster, win or lose. Despite the patriotic rhetoric, war is and should be considered a investment, and return of investment should be considered before war, especially oversea military adventure, is launched. precisely the kind that US will most likely face in the future, whether it's against a ragtag group of guerrillas or a great power with high tech weaponry. Countless great powers, with their best equipped and best trained troops, lost to insurgency and seemly weak rebellions because the cost of fighting a high cost war against an enemy with vastly lower cost of waging wars. Take Iraq as an example, 3 trillions in five years is not sustainable, not even for the US. That's why I think US will lose the Iraq war no matter how unwilling the Republican is to accept it. Shiny weapon like F22 is just the kind of weapon that will further increase the cost, it's very much likely future adversary will exploit this weakness in a protracted war.- Hide quoted text - Yes, the project unit cost per unit is high, but the marginal cost of buying addition F-22 would be quit a bit less. The hugh start up cost imposed by congress and the civilian in the Pentagon that is responsible for that $100 MILLION dollar price tag. That why it so important to buy enough F-22 now, when the cost of additional fighters are low, instead of waiting unit we have to pay the bureaucates $20 billion dollar tab a second time. - Show quoted text - |
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