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Army cancells Comanche

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air to air learjets...awesome....

You know this reminds me of some "good old fashioned american knowhow." When we went to space, we couldn't write with standard pens. So we spent lots of money on developing a pen that could write in space, we even sold them as "the space pen" or whatever. The Russians had the same problem, they used pencils.... Maybe we could take some notes on cost cutting. The again, look at Russia now.
 
getonit said:
46driver,
let me start off by saying I am not a liberal tree hugging pacifist. I am a right leaning fiscal conservative, which is not what we have in the White House right now. I am in the highest tax bracket for single people, for reasons not related to being a pilot, obviously.

I still stand by my statement that the military spends too much money and when it is spent, it is spent on local projects/systems/policies that do nothing for our national security. Have you ever heard a local politician say how critical a military base is when they are trying to close it in his district? V22 are costing 80 mil apiece, F22's are 100 mil apiece, B2's were what $2 billion? We spend more money than the next 25 countries combined to fight what threat? No other country in the world can even think about competing with us, with our existing equipment, ie F-15, apaches, etc. 9/11 probably cost the towelheads a million dollars maybe? I have been to too many base ops, which are brand new and only supporting 2-3 missions a day.

And I agree that entitlements are too much but unfortunately the more goverment spends the more important they think they are. It is a vicious circle and most of those programs can't be cut anyway, and most politicians don't have the balls to really do anything.

It is not the military that makes the decision to close bases, that is Congress so you can blame them. The V-22's are over $80M per copy and we should kill that program as well. The F-22 is around $160M per copy and it is debatable.

We spend more money than the next 25 nations combined. First, we pay our people more than anybody else, not just regular pay but also retirement which is why Rumsfeld is keeping the active duty count so low. Second, we are the only nation that has worldwide requirements and force projection capabilities. That, especially the logistics part, requires large expenditures. Third, our weapons are much more high tech and effective than anybody elses - that cost money. One of the big reason we haven't had any major wars is because nobody dares to fight us. If you think a peacetime military is expensive, try funding one at war.....

A more accurate assessment of military spending is in comparison to GDP. Under Kennedy,it was close to 10%, under Reagan it was 6%, under Bush II it is around 3 to 4%.

As for the comment about battleships, they were all retired in the early '90's so we have none around. Ironically, they were retired because they were too manpower intensive, even though their heavy guns would have been much cheaper for surface bombardment than cruise missiles.
 
46Driver said:
Ironically, they were retired because they were too manpower intensive, even though their heavy guns would have been much cheaper for surface bombardment than cruise missiles.

Cheaper in what sense? If you examine $/lb. TNT expended, perhaps, that that would be a pretty poor metric of a weapon system's viability. If you were to look at $/actual tactical effect, the cruise missle might look quite a bit more cost effective. I've known guys who were forward observers in Vietnam and thier personal observation on the effectiveness of naval artilery support form the New Jersey was that it wasn't worth the bother. Yeah it threw really, really big shells an impressively long distance, but it just couldn't put the ordinance on target.

The days of the battleship were over a half a century ago, and the sinking of Bismark was one of the last Naval artillery duels the world will see (even that involved torpedo bombers) If you don't have air superiority over an Naval theater, your surface ships are extrordinarily vulnerable. Modern submarines are much more effective also. Recall how long the General Belgrano (former US cruiser) lasted in the Falklands war. For that matter, even if you do have air superiority, your surface ships are vulnerable to a much smaller, cheaper weapon system. Ref: HMS Sheffield or closer to home, the USS Stark.

The upshot is that surface ships are very vulnerable, so the wise thing to do is to deploy smaller, faster, more manuverable and cheaper platforms for cruise missiles. The fact that the Navy kept battleships active for a half a century after they were obsolete in almost all respects is an indication of how emotion often rules over reason in such issues.
 
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I read recently that the military will be shrinking soon to the hardcore elite ranks that make it a lifelong career. Why are we sending tanks full of nascar dads and soccer moms to Baghdad? We need more special ops in there. I hope common sense succeeds.
 
Historically,
Belgrano was a former US light cruiser of the Brooklyn class, the USS Phoenix.
After the sinking of the Bismarck was the entire Pacific war which included surface actions off Guadalcanal (Savo, Cape Esperance, 1st and 2nd Naval Battles of Guadalcanal and Tassafaronga) all under contested skies. Komandorskis (off the Aleutians), Kula Gulf, Kolombangara, Vella Gulf, Vella Lavella, Empress Augusta Bay all up and down the Solomons, and Samar and Surgao Strait off of Leyte to name some of the bigger battles.
Optimal ship size for a blue water navy (one that must cross oceans), must take into account sea keeping, sensor and weapon system height above the water line, mission, endurance and ultimately, capabilities desired. Crew size is a hot topic right now. While automation helps civilian crew sizes stay minimal, warships heavy in sensors, weapon systems and comm equipment require much larger manning numbers. Damage control is also an important aspect of manning. As for survivability. Steel ships solve the Shefield/Stark problem (aluminum). Engineering studies and after action reports all indicate that damage sustained by buttoned up warships can be contained. Also, the ability of current weapon systems to inflict "mission kill" or fatal damage upon current US warships requires perfect targeting, perfect system performance in a heavy ECM/ECCM, maneuvering environment.
WEV
 
walleyevision said:
After the sinking of the Bismarck was the entire Pacific war

Right, but the Pacific consisted primarily of carrier war, with battleships being relegated largely to the role AAA platforms for the defense of carriers, rather than a primary offensive weapon. Regardless, the days of battlewagons duking it out head to head with big guns was over with the second world war.
 
labbats said:
I read recently that the military will be shrinking soon to the hardcore elite ranks that make it a lifelong career. Why are we sending tanks full of nascar dads and soccer moms to Baghdad? We need more special ops in there. I hope common sense succeeds.

Flamebait...

That is the most rediculous post I have seen in a long time. Special ops? Do you know what special ops do? Do you know what the special ops need to get the job done and facilitate their missions?

They need Nascar Dads and Soccer Moms. They need regular soldiers without ranger tabs, special forces tabs, airborne/air assault wings on their chest, etc. You can't do this kind of job alone. It takes a combined effort of many men and women of many services, jobs, ranks, etc.

Before you make comments about those of us who are National Guard, Reserves, Soccer Moms and Nascar Dads, think twice. Those could be the very same people that keep us from having another 9/11 that could effect YOU! Show some respect and gratitude to these people. They are doing a fine job over there for the conditions they are in, and will continue to do so, without it being all "Special Ops" forces.

Off the soapbox now :)
 
This wasn't meant to be disrespectful to anyone. More a commentary on current warfare. Our biggest enemy isn't the immense battlefields of yore. They're urban warfare and all that entails. Sending tanks to Baghdad mystifies me.
 
A Squared said:
Cheaper in what sense? If you examine $/lb. TNT expended, perhaps, that that would be a pretty poor metric of a weapon system's viability. If you were to look at $/actual tactical effect, the cruise missle might look quite a bit more cost effective. I've known guys who were forward observers in Vietnam and thier personal observation on the effectiveness of naval artilery support form the New Jersey was that it wasn't worth the bother. Yeah it threw really, really big shells an impressively long distance, but it just couldn't put the ordinance on target.

The days of the battleship were over a half a century ago, and the sinking of Bismark was one of the last Naval artillery duels the world will see (even that involved torpedo bombers) If you don't have air superiority over an Naval theater, your surface ships are extrordinarily vulnerable. Modern submarines are much more effective also. Recall how long the General Belgrano (former US cruiser) lasted in the Falklands war. For that matter, even if you do have air superiority, your surface ships are vulnerable to a much smaller, cheaper weapon system. Ref: HMS Sheffield or closer to home, the USS Stark.

The upshot is that surface ships are very vulnerable, so the wise thing to do is to deploy smaller, faster, more manuverable and cheaper platforms for cruise missiles. The fact that the Navy kept battleships active for a half a century after they were obsolete in almost all respects is an indication of how emotion often rules over reason in such issues.

First and foremost, the battleships were the most survivable ships afloat. Granted, they could not go out withour air cover, but then again, neither could anything else. However, the Iowa class was much more survivable than an aluminum destroyer.

The battleships were retrofitted to carry huge amounts of cruise missiles. However, a cruise missile is expensive to use against small targets such as machine gun nests and small artillery emplacements. Air Power can only do such - and is limited by weather. Naval artillery is on call 24/7 regardless of weather. And I will dispute the accuracy of the guns, they were quite accurate. Ask the Iraqis who surrendered in Gulf War I when the UAV's started flying over - whenever the UAV's appeared, it meant the entire grid square was about to be annihilated....

Finally, the battleships were retired shortly after the Korean War. One (the USS New Jersey) was brought out of retirement for the Vietnam War and then returned to mothballs. In the '80's, Secretary of the Navy Lehman brought all 4 out of retirement, modernized them, and made them the centerpiece of "Surface Action Groups" to counter the threat of the Russian Kirov class battlecruisers.
 

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