13 November 2007
USAF is Attempting to Create a Crisis and Cannibalize Itself to Get More F-22s
There recently has been an F-15 crash following what appears to be a structural failure in an F-15. The USAF has responded with a service wide, and extensively publicised grounding of the aircraft across all deployments, including Afghanistan and Iraq.
While a grounding following this sort of crash is not uncommon, the breadth, and deliberate and massive press offensive associated with it is clearly part of the service's strategy to get the F-22 production line extended.
When juxtaposed with the Air Force's decision to cut 40,000 personnel, over 10% of active duty personnel, to free up money for continued F-22 production, it's clear that the the priorities of of an independent air force as a service are likely to run counter to the defense needs of the nation.
The USAF is creating artificial crises and sacrificing its human capital for some not particularly useful bling in the form of the Raptor. It does not benefit the national defense, the country, or, in the long run, the United States Air Force.
The Raison d'etre of the independent USAF was strategic bombing with nuclear weapons, which has been obsolete since the late 1960s, and folding the service back into the US army would be of benefit to everyone, particularly the taxpayer, which does not need another 20 F-22s at $220 million each, literally worth its (empty) weight in gold.
While a grounding following this sort of crash is not uncommon, the breadth, and deliberate and massive press offensive associated with it is clearly part of the service's strategy to get the F-22 production line extended.
When juxtaposed with the Air Force's decision to cut 40,000 personnel, over 10% of active duty personnel, to free up money for continued F-22 production, it's clear that the the priorities of of an independent air force as a service are likely to run counter to the defense needs of the nation.
The USAF is creating artificial crises and sacrificing its human capital for some not particularly useful bling in the form of the Raptor. It does not benefit the national defense, the country, or, in the long run, the United States Air Force.
The Raison d'etre of the independent USAF was strategic bombing with nuclear weapons, which has been obsolete since the late 1960s, and folding the service back into the US army would be of benefit to everyone, particularly the taxpayer, which does not need another 20 F-22s at $220 million each, literally worth its (empty) weight in gold.
Labels:
Aviation
,
Defense Procurement
,
Military
0 comments :
Post a Comment