Kingairrick
Rare user
- Joined
- Aug 22, 2002
- Posts
- 886
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enigma said:Apparently, the last couple of conflicts have proven to the military that helos are just to darn vulnerable.
enigma
Birdstrike said:I would before I'd ever set foot in a V-22.
getonit said:That is what is wrong with the military. I saw an article that said they started development in 1983 and was expected to be online in 2006. A mere 23 years to develop a new weapons system!!!Ridiculous. Anybody who says the military needs more money is full of scheise.
Hey ... if it weren't so, we grunts would have nothing to complain about, and as you know, Grunts, just like pilots, aren't happy unless we're bitching.Meanwhile grunts continue to have to put up with lousy pay, substandard housing and god knows what else.
urflyingme?! said:In theory couldnt you just launch cruise missiles from transport planes?
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.
46Driver said:As for the comment about battleships, they were all retired in the early '90's so we have none around.
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.
walleyevision said:After the sinking of the Bismarck was the entire Pacific 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.
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.