- Reaction score
- 492
- Points
- 780
If any of our communities are unable to adapt to the most effective way of meeting the threat with the minimum resources, then our Force Generation model is very broken...
Oh wait, I think there might be some other reasons that's the case...
Certainly what we did in Libya might not of been the best way to deal with it, and there were some voices way out in the wilderness saying so (like a JTAC I know that said he was wondering why we picked the same side that he fought in Afghanistan when it was supposed to be a no-fly and embargo against anyone who threatened civilians); but hey, we knew how to bomb them into a failed state, so we did... and everyone knows that only Fighter communities know how to run Air Forces, because the rest of us just don't UNDERSTAND. How is this relevant to the discussion: because thinking of what set of capabilities we can afford to meet the most likely threats is what the next fighter choice should be about... but its not, its "we need the F-35," and the cost might mean we give up some other things, or "the F-35 is too expensive so let's get a cheaper fighter to do the same things."
I could make a good argument to extend to F-18 for the NORAD role only (and restrict its maneuvering to extend it, and limit its available armament to what it needs for that), and with the saved money buy:
- something like Reapers
- something like Global Hawks
- attack helicipters
- Tomahawks for the ships, and upgrade the Harpoons to Slammers
There's a lot flexibility there, but I'm not sure if its affordable, and there are certainly threats it doesn't meet. But the core question is whether there is less risk than getting a 5th Gen fighter with the money we have???
But what do I know, I'm just an ACSO who doesn't understand modern warfare.
So I'll go back to my box: ping, ping, ping... a box which according to the RCAF isn't very important anyway.
Oh wait, I think there might be some other reasons that's the case...
Certainly what we did in Libya might not of been the best way to deal with it, and there were some voices way out in the wilderness saying so (like a JTAC I know that said he was wondering why we picked the same side that he fought in Afghanistan when it was supposed to be a no-fly and embargo against anyone who threatened civilians); but hey, we knew how to bomb them into a failed state, so we did... and everyone knows that only Fighter communities know how to run Air Forces, because the rest of us just don't UNDERSTAND. How is this relevant to the discussion: because thinking of what set of capabilities we can afford to meet the most likely threats is what the next fighter choice should be about... but its not, its "we need the F-35," and the cost might mean we give up some other things, or "the F-35 is too expensive so let's get a cheaper fighter to do the same things."
I could make a good argument to extend to F-18 for the NORAD role only (and restrict its maneuvering to extend it, and limit its available armament to what it needs for that), and with the saved money buy:
- something like Reapers
- something like Global Hawks
- attack helicipters
- Tomahawks for the ships, and upgrade the Harpoons to Slammers
There's a lot flexibility there, but I'm not sure if its affordable, and there are certainly threats it doesn't meet. But the core question is whether there is less risk than getting a 5th Gen fighter with the money we have???
But what do I know, I'm just an ACSO who doesn't understand modern warfare.
So I'll go back to my box: ping, ping, ping... a box which according to the RCAF isn't very important anyway.