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Michael,
I agree completely. However, is there any possibility that such an argument (Canada needs a carrier!) is likely to gain any traction in the forseeable future? I don't think so either. I'm sure that's why the thread has gone directly to: "Gee, if we could have a carrier, what color should it be?".
Besides, weapons systems have a way of morphing away from original justifications. One example is the A-10 Warthog, discussed at length in other posts. Another is the Abrahms MBT. Designed for combat with Soviet forces on the plains of Germany, it has become a first-rate (though not perfect) street fighter -- a job for which it was never seriously considered nor justified for.
So the question, "Does Canada need an aircraft carrier?", can be answered in many ways. As you correctly point out, SOME kind of justification has to occur or no such vessel will ever be built. But is this justification likely to be a carefully laid out staff study? Or is it more likely to be a political event we can't predict?
Obviously, a foreign power rubbing Canada's lack of sea power in the electorate's collective face might be one. Another could be the sight of Canadian soldiers and airmen dying in some overseas hotspot because US carrier support is too far away to provide support.
The list is endless.
Me, I'm just tossing out ideas and information. >
BTW, for those of you a trifle familiar with my writing, I have a novel outlined in which a scratch Marine unit and a small Canadian outfit are committed to action in a small island nation just off the African coast. Their task is to put an end to mass murder and torture (such as was not done in other African situations!). Unfortunately, the combined force is committed without adequate support and they immediately run into far more opposition than anyone suspected. Yes! An intelligence failure compounded by stupidity. Imagine that.
Maybe, as part of the background, I'll have a partly completed assault carrier sitting in a Canadian harbor somewhere, delayed by bureaucratic bungling and a lack of committment. Heh.
Nah. That would never happen. :
So . . . will the book ever get written? I dunno. This damn job keeps me busy.
jim
I agree completely. However, is there any possibility that such an argument (Canada needs a carrier!) is likely to gain any traction in the forseeable future? I don't think so either. I'm sure that's why the thread has gone directly to: "Gee, if we could have a carrier, what color should it be?".
Besides, weapons systems have a way of morphing away from original justifications. One example is the A-10 Warthog, discussed at length in other posts. Another is the Abrahms MBT. Designed for combat with Soviet forces on the plains of Germany, it has become a first-rate (though not perfect) street fighter -- a job for which it was never seriously considered nor justified for.
So the question, "Does Canada need an aircraft carrier?", can be answered in many ways. As you correctly point out, SOME kind of justification has to occur or no such vessel will ever be built. But is this justification likely to be a carefully laid out staff study? Or is it more likely to be a political event we can't predict?
Obviously, a foreign power rubbing Canada's lack of sea power in the electorate's collective face might be one. Another could be the sight of Canadian soldiers and airmen dying in some overseas hotspot because US carrier support is too far away to provide support.
The list is endless.
Me, I'm just tossing out ideas and information. >
BTW, for those of you a trifle familiar with my writing, I have a novel outlined in which a scratch Marine unit and a small Canadian outfit are committed to action in a small island nation just off the African coast. Their task is to put an end to mass murder and torture (such as was not done in other African situations!). Unfortunately, the combined force is committed without adequate support and they immediately run into far more opposition than anyone suspected. Yes! An intelligence failure compounded by stupidity. Imagine that.
Maybe, as part of the background, I'll have a partly completed assault carrier sitting in a Canadian harbor somewhere, delayed by bureaucratic bungling and a lack of committment. Heh.
Nah. That would never happen. :
So . . . will the book ever get written? I dunno. This damn job keeps me busy.
jim