Posted by
Bull 67 on Thursday, August 27, 2009 2:28:44 PM
The primary purpose of the U.S. Air Force and Navy is global power projection, more specifically, strategic power projection. These two services prevent direct conventional (or weapons of mass destruction) attacks on America soil or her vital interests. They take the fight to foreign soil and hold the sword of annihilation at our enemies throats. The centerpiece for Navy power projection is the carrier task force, a capability is now under fire from the Secretary of Defense. This is from this morning’s DoD Buzz at Military.com:
…Now, sources tell us that OSD may actually chop an additional carrier from the Navy’s battle fleet, a move that would take the force down to nine carriers from the current total of 11…Skipping a future carrier purchase doesn’t save money now. Cutting one flattop from the existing force would.
…For one, the Navy is required by law to maintain 11 carriers… when former CSBA naval analyst and now Navy under secretary, Bob Work, gave his shipbuilding brief earlier this year, he said that if forced by a constrained shipbuilding budget to trim the planned build, he would cut the carrier force to 9.
Work’s former boss at CSBA, the influential Andrew Krepinevich, wrote in the July issue of Foreign Affairs in an article…carriers risk “operational irrelevance” as nations develop improved submarines and increasingly accurate, long-range anti-ship missiles that put the big flattops at risk. (emphasis mine)
Krepinevich’s argument missile technology and submarine proliferation makes flattops irrelevant are the same arguments from the 1970s, when the left tried to kill America’s super carrier programs. How does this make any sense? Aren’t these conventional capabilities the very threats the modern carrier is designed to combat? A third world fleet with a few electric diesels and some shore-to-ship missiles are a pale reflection of the Soviet Fleet at its height (which dared not directly engage a super carrier task force).
The simliar arguments are now turned against the F-22, like in this article from this morning’s Time.com by Mark Thompson:
The Air Force spent years fighting to keep building the $350 million F-22 fighter, an airplane crammed with so much gee-whiz technology there's a law barring it from being sold to any other nation. But since no other nation is building such a plane to challenge it, the F-22 has become a costly investment with an uncertain payoff...now the service is seeking 100 slower, lower-flying and far cheaper airplanes — most likely prop-driven — that it can use to kill insurgents today and use to train local pilots — such as Afghans or Iraqis — tomorrow.
The list of requirements for what the Air Force is calling its Light Attack Armed Reconnaissance plane is fairly basic, and ... must be capable of flying 900-mile missions at up to 200 miles per hour (compared with up to 1500 mph for the F-22), including at night and poor weather. It will carry guns and rockets, along with a pair of 500-pound bombs, according to an Air Force solicitation issued last month. It will have to fly to and from dirt airfields where the only ground support is fuel...
Planes likely to vie for the contract — slated to begin flying in 2012 —include the Kansas-built Hawker Beechcraft T-6, currently the Air Force's basic trainer... This emphasis on down-and-dirty warfare is a real change for the Air Force, which for years has been hyper-focused on building the most sophisticated fighter planes in the world. The military blog Danger Room recently quoted from Air Force studies dating back to 2005 that spoke of the service's "pre-occupation with procurement of the F-22" at the expense of counter-insurgency missions, and its "nasty habit of forgetting the hard-learned lessons of irregular operations..."
The Air Force's new top officer has said this low-tech aircraft "is really consistent with Secretary Gates' thinking" in favor of simple weapons that can be bought quickly and perform more than one mission. A rugged and simple warplane that can be flown against insurgents by U.S. pilots who also train foreign pilots in their own language "is a very attractive way to approach this problem," General Norton Schwartz, the Air Force chief of staff, said in April.
His civilian boss concurs. Air Force Secretary Michael Donley recently said that such a plane "will help build up the security capabilities of partners facing counter-terrorist operations, counter-insurgency operations." Nations like Afghanistan and Iraq "are not going to be able to — and do not have a need to — operate at that higher end of the conflict spectrum," he added. Nor can they afford to — the $350 million used to buy each of the 187 F-22s will pay for a fleet of about 50 of these planned counter-insurgency warplanes.
First, Mr. Thompson’s assertion that “no other nation is building such a plane to challenge(the F-22)” is dead wrong. How can someone write for a major magazine and blatantly get such a basic fact wrong?About 2 minutes on Google turned up these facts on a challenger to the F-22:
“The PAK FA (or PAK-FA) is a Russian fifth-generation fighter jet ...intended to replace the MiG-29 and Su-27 in the Russian Air Force...”
“On 07 July 2008 Air Force commander Col. Gen. Alexander Zelin said "We will begin test flights [of the new fighter] in 2009, and hope to receive the aircraft in 2013".
The left made the same arguments in the 1970s when they tried to kill the F-15 as “too expensive and too complex.” Thirty years later the mighty F-15 is considered by most has the most successful fighter plane in history. Now the left wants the Air Force to get rid of its premiere fighter capability because there are no peer competitors and it wants the Navy to cut back on its premiere surface capability because there are peer competitors. This is laughable.
The Air Force must make every dollar it spends count. This means pursuing multi-role platforms, like the F-35 and F/A-22 (yes, it was once called the “F/A” for both fighter and attack). These can be used for both air defense and close air support. A little modified T-6 cannot perform ANY other mission than light counter insurgency ops. In this role it will be fodder for AAA (anti-aircraft artillery) and MANPAD (man portable air defense) missiles in any theater of war. The Air Force already has counter-insurgency capabilities it can expand on in the form of the venerable A-10 and the new Reaper UAV. Why not buy more of these?
These arguments are simply smoke screens for cutting weapon systems to fund domestic initiatives. We are repeating the Hollow Force concept under the Carter Administration in the wake of LBJ’s massive “Great Society” domestic programs. In the wake of these decisions we are stripping America of its ability to project strategic power and defend our nation from afar.