Appologies for the late reply, weather was good and did not have a laptop to write on. Replies on iPad became frustrating, especially when quoting people...
For the record, I am not offended. It takes a lot more to get me going. This is the interweb after all.
Journeyman said:
I cannot speak for GW; but for myself, as mentioned, the USAF was more than helpful.
Those assets were "owned" by the ACC (OPCON) and TACON to the JTAC/FAC. I am not advocating making CAS a complete Air Force thing, but for multi-role platforms, in a theater where they are expected to do more than CAS or BAI (ie: they will do "strategic" bombing, or even Air-to-Air), they should be given to the ACC and delegated to the JTAC/FACs when needed. The FAC/JTAC piece should always be owned by the LCC. ALOs with the Ground Commanders and GLOs with the Air Commanders (like we are doing now).
Journeyman said:
Were you not just arguing with Loachman that you're more expensive to deploy, by at least a factor of 10?
I was trying to compare deploying a 6 or 12-pack vs deploying a Bataillion.
Journeyman said:
Sure did in 2011. Got the Warn O late Thurs PM and were fling the first combat mission Mon AM.
Journeyman said:
My point exactly! The best poker hand in the world is meaningless if the cards don't get laid down. We are spending an inordinate amount of money on "potential energy" when what we've needed is "kinetic energy."
We do use the Fighter Force, just not in the role you envisionned it should be used. We deployed a multitude of times. There are the 3 "kinetic" deployments (Gulf War, Kosovo and Libya) as well as many Air Patrolling missions (Bosnia, Iceland (many times), Eastern Europe). The reality is that we do way more than support the Army. Yup, we do NORAD. But that's a very little fraction of what we actually do. Our "Bread and Butter" are CAS and Self-Escort Strike. We train a lot more to Self Escort Strike because it's the most challenging mission set we do. If you can do this properly, you can probably do every other mission set we have.
The reality is that even if we decide to ONLY do NORAD, we will need to buy some sort of modern fighter. That fighter will be multi-role. The NORAD mission while critical is a fairly simple mission set. In order to maintain flying proficiency (just as a pilot), you need to fly some hours. I think it's accepted that for low to medium expericence pilots, 100 hours a year is the bare minimum to be safe and effective in the aircraft and that 140 hours a year, you can actually be proficient tactically. We do not need to spend 100 hours a year doing NORAD to be effective in that particular mission set. If we have the aircraft capabilities, why not use the rest of those hours doing Air-to-Ground as well? It will not cost more (after all, we need to fly those 100-140 hours a year minimum) and we increase the capabilities of our forces.
As far as supporting the Army, while we did not go to Afghanistan (and trust me, we wanted to go), we did support the Army at home by providing countless FAC Courses and FAC Training Deployments both in Canada and the US to support the FAC training requirements that the Afghan war created.
Journeyman said:
I notice that you've chosen not to answer this question; I assume that the answer is "no," notwithstanding your stretching for LCF points by mentioning SF.From the same real-world experience (and credibility) then, I'd like to state that I've had sex with Jenna Jameson hundreds of times.... while watching porn.
I deployed and dropped bombs on target, just not in a CAS role. We did a lot of SCAR, some Air-to-Air and a good amount of pre-planned strikes.
If we were to use your analogy to compare training to combat (in a fighter), I would say that Groundschool is like watching Jenna Jameson on youporn. Flying a CAS training mission would be like having sex with her, with a condom. Having sex without a condom would be doing CAS in a war zone... With all the risks it involves..
Talking about risk... I do not believe that the risk level was the reason we did not send Hornets in Afghanistan. In relative terms, Afghanistan was (for a fighter aircraft, not ground troops or helicopters) safer than say, Libya. Nothing too crazy Manpads wise and mostly Small Arms fire.
T6: Close (in CAS) means the level of integration. Between FLOT and the FSCL, you'd need some form of coordination between the Air Commanders and the Ground Commanders. This integration is done with the JTAC/FAC and through some other measures (ie: LCC owns 20K and below between the FLOT and the FSCL or lateral restrictions). That way, aircraft don't hit each other and rounds don't hit Aircraft transitting: fires (including CAS) are limited to 20K in this example.
Unless the platform that is used is purely a CAS platform (and there are not too many single-role platforms nowadays, even the A-10 is multi-role), they should be given to the ACC so that the joint "strategic/operational/tactical" (I don't like using those terms...) objectives can be met, with the assurance to the LCC that if he
needs CAS, he'll be given CAS.
I guess in the end it's a matter of how we view the Air Force: a pure support to the Army or its own entity, able to effect the enemy the same way the Army does. Since the Air Force became its own service, I think it our doctrine (and I believe rightly so) supports the latter.