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USAF Brass Take A Stand For Sanity

July 19, 2009: U.S. Air Force leaders recently openly opposed the efforts of Congress to build seven more F-22 fighters (at $250 million each). The generals were accused of shilling for their bosses (the president and the Secretary of Defense). But the air force brass are being practical. The Congressional push to build more F-22s is more concerned with votes, than defense. Those seven F-22s mean jobs, and votes, for a number of legislators. Congress has long had an arrangement where members could depend on each other to get essential (in terms of votes and reelection) projects built. The air force (expensive aircraft) and navy (expensive ships, as well as aircraft) have long been the chief victims of this practice.

What the generals are really doing is sticking necks out for the good of the service. The air force knows it cannot get the money for everything it needs (or thinks it needs), and has to establish priorities. A new president and Congress is likely to cut the defense budget, and the air force is eager to get sufficient money to build thousands of F-35s, to replace the many F-16s and F-15s that will be retired, because of old age, in the next decade or so. Then there are the combat UAVs in development. These are the future of combat aircraft, and it's possible that these pilotless aircraft may become so effective that the air force will have to replace its F-35s early, just to remain competitive with other air forces.

The F-22 is an exceptional fighter, it has no peer on the planet. But it costs more than twice as much as an F-35, and is more expensive to maintain as well. The Congressional F-22 advocates are talking about building 57 more of these expensive aircraft. This would put a lock on a big chunk of the air force budget, creating a shortage of cash for F-35s, transports, UAVs and anything else seen as more essential to carrying out the air force mission.

 

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SOP919F3       7/19/2009 4:51:59 PM
With every other C5 down for MX at least one leg of it's mission, why not spend some resources on correcting this?  Yes, the C17s and contract acft are handling cargo xport and CRAF moving most of the pax, but the heavy obviously has the weight and cube hauling advantage unless, we don't care about quick deployments.
 
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comatus       7/19/2009 9:41:17 PM
There's an alternative solution, of course. That would be increasing the military budget to provide the services with the weapons systems that are needed to maintain superiority. "Can't be done" of course, unless it's your branch or your pet innovation at risk, and then it's treason to oppose it.
 
This kind of commentary is shallow anti-USAF Pentagonia. When budgets are being cut to fund domestic programs, there are always some generals willing to look into the future and hitch their wagons to later political appointments rather than private-sector jobs, especially when lobbyists are frowned on and the defense industry has fewer high-level civilian positions available. Generals carry water for administrations. These generals have merely chosen which administration they want to work for.
 
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jak267       7/20/2009 11:12:57 AM
So it's F-22s or Road Construction. How does road construction help the economy? A bunch of low-skilled low-paying jobs that disappear as soon as the money runs out.
 
 
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FJV    Grrrr   7/20/2009 12:02:39 PM
Without adequate infrastructure you cannot rapidly mobilize or move the US army. You know when you really need to, like when the shit really hits the fan?
 
Its is also beneficial for opening up areas to commerce and moving of goods. Or fuel for the jet fighters?

All about foreign adventures and nothing for defending the homeland eh?
 
That's just the basics really...
 
 
 
 
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cwDeici       7/20/2009 12:49:07 PM

Without adequate infrastructure you cannot rapidly mobilize or move the US army. You know when you really need to, like when the shit really hits the fan?


 

Its is also beneficial for opening up areas to commerce and moving of goods. Or fuel for the jet fighters?





All about foreign adventures and nothing for defending the homeland eh?

 

That's just the basics really...


 

 

 


Jak has a better point. While roads are useful, the US has got lots of both and military spending boosts the economy even more in the short to mid-term... I don't know about roads, but it is a key historical way of revitalizing flagging economies.
The F-22 could also easily sell well.
 
Point is, the US can afford both even in times like these. In fact it can't afford not to.
Defense spending is much better than you giving money to my home country (thank you very much).
 
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cwDeici       7/20/2009 12:50:04 PM
That last part wasn't about road making benefitting China of course, just normal US behavior over the last few decades (though that's flowing back again).
 
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sjdoc    Bye-bye to the Galaxy   7/23/2009 12:42:59 AM

With every other C5 down for MX at least one leg of it's mission, why not spend some resources on correcting this?  Yes, the C17s and contract acft are handling cargo xport and CRAF moving most of the pax, but the heavy obviously has the weight and cube hauling advantage unless, we don't care about quick deployments.

Isn't the C5 already heading out of the Air Force inventory?  I think that's why the Pentagon isn't spending any resources on the corrections of which you speak.
 
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