It's potentially a real issue, if the F-35 consumes too much of the Marines budget they won't have money for the stuff they do need. Think NASA with the space shuttle.
So what. It's not as if the US government is fighting anyone with any real air capability. You could use Vietnam aircraft and still win against the threat.
Problem currently (Iraq and Syria) is the Air Force is being only able to run limited sorties against a large number of small targets like pickup trucks with 20mm cannons on the back.
The problems is that the F-35's ground attack capacity is better suited to destory large hardened targets such as latest MBTs fielded by Russia and China, rather than the small, numerous and arguably unsophisticated technicals or the proverbial dude running with an RPG. It will cost several times more and does not work as well.
For sure. The "flying bomb truck" has looped back around to being extremely powerful for current engagements against insurgents. The F35 is indeed one of those... it just costs 100x more than it should.
While you're doing that, everyone else (who aren't, incidentally, in line with you and the sun) should be firing full auto at a point in front of your aircraft so you fly through a cloud of bullets.
They'd be going slower than that for a ground attack. Also, "In the Korean War, our Air Force lost 259 jet aircraft and 285 other aircraft to combined small arms and air defense fire, which is nearly five times as many aircraft that were lost in air-to-air combat. In South Vietnam, we lost 410 fixed-wing aircraft and 2,100 helicopters. In the Mideast War, 36 coalition aircraft were shot down by ground fire." [1].
Sure, but the NK and NV armies did have good anti-aircraft setups, likely much more effective than relatively untrained fighters with a weapon designed to shoot at other people with.
Richthofen in WW1 was brought down by a single shot from a rifle, but that is widely considered to be a freak shot.
Nevertheless, you're right that it is never safe to get in range of small arms fire, hence the genesis of the A-10.
If the money was used instead in financial vehicles for the adversarial countries in question, the created economic codependence would very likely be more effective than this plane
> The Great Illusion is a book by Norman Angell, first published in the United Kingdom in 1909
> Angell argued that war between industrial countries was futile because conquest did not pay. J.D.B. Miller writes: "The 'Great Illusion' was that nations gained by armed confrontation, militarism, war, or conquest."[3] The economic interdependence between industrial countries meant that war would be economically harmful to all the countries involved. Moreover, if a conquering power confiscated property in the territory it seized, "the incentive to produce [of the local population] would be sapped and the conquered area be rendered worthless. Thus, the conquering power had to leave property in the hands of the local population while incurring the costs of conquest and occupation."[3]
...
He was partially right though
> Angell said that arms build-up, for example the naval race that was happening as he wrote the book in the early 1910s, was not going to secure peace. Instead, it would lead to increased insecurity and thus increase the likelihood of war.
That's a pretty old framework. The idea of peace through codependency is AFAIK a bit newer. The biggest problem is that it looks like it could lead to sovereign insolvency which can backfire if it leads to economic calamity and the rise of a political group with an eye on conquest (see Europe 1930s)
As an interesting aside, I'm no fan of wealth inequality. However, if it looks like it's the primary mechanism that is prolonging relative global peace (as in no biological or nuclear weapons being used), I may accept the tradeoff.
There's a balance, to be a bit vulgar, between "alright we need to pay this" and "fuck this debt, we're storming the castle"
Money didn't stop WWI. Britain could not afford the completely batshit insane 3.251.000.000 (thats more than 3 billion) Pound Sterling it paid for the war (in 1900s money)[0]! and there are still bondholders who haven't been paid back, 100 years later.
The F-22 is, even now, still projected to cost more per aircraft than the F-35. Plus the F-22 cannot be sold internationally for reasons that aren't entirely clear (something about secret technology), whereas the F-35 can.
Isn't it entirely based around the stealth functions of the F-22, and more specifically, their unique application of such? I am pretty sure they fear reverse engineering of the metallic skin; hence why the Senate has pushed for an exportable version.
The Danish government have the same issue. The plan is to buy 27 F-35s, but that's not really enough for anything. They are suppose to replace 60 F-16s. Even if the F-35 is as good as it's claimed, and the Russians are coming, I think you'd be better of with twice the number of some less advanced planes.
The F-22 is the best high altitude air superiority fighter in existence. It's ludicrously expensive and it is ludicrously over capable for the actual missions it flies but it did completely achieve it's role specification.
South America isn't invading you any time soon and every other mob has a whopping great pile of water to cross and not much in the way of an active carrier fleet to support it, or they're already your allies.
The only one that falls into your threat category is Russia. Is Russia really about to invade the US at the first sign of air supremacy weakness? You still have enough nukes to cause literal worldwide armageddon 20 times over.
It's not about invading the US. It is about challenging their regional dominance. If the US isn't willing or able to commit to defending Japan, Taiwan or Philippines, then Mainland China will be happy to recreate a Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere under CCP leadership and to claim the Pacific and Indian Ocean for itself.
While that wouldn't hurt the average American in the short run, the long-term consequences of it in geopolitical terms would be extreme.
considering how much evil was done by US in last 15 years worldwide and how many millions of innocents died/suffer daily just because of lust for money and power, i am perfectly happy with Chinese taking banner of world supreme power for next few decades. side-by-side comparison of last 20-30 years leaves US in shame. I have more trust in Chinese party leaders rather than joke US presidency had become, with all those shady machinations behind the scenes. No, it ain't great either, but definitely lesser of an evil and US is spiraling down faster than ever.
and it was once a beacon of democracy and free world...
also, US has no greater claim to be the ruler of pacific region compared to China. in fact, if you look at the map, opposite is true.
Chinese are much worse than the Americans, though born of the same cloth of Capitalism. Americans ideally rally under freedom, which means they will come fuck you up and then supply enough aid to keep you going and help you rebuild, I mean it's in their corporate interest to do so. Chinese rally under domination, that's their underlying ideology. If they ever start fucking people up, they will probably replace them with more Han Chinese. They are not just in it for the money, they are in it to take over the entire area. See Western Xinjiang province or Tibet.
Be careful what you wish for, you might just get it.
No country's ever been a beacon of democracy and freedom, that's just propaganda. You will not get a world where unconstrained powerful nations do not act amorally. A better hope is that multilateral organizations like the UN and World Court gain more strength and legitimacy.
I agree with you completely, but the US gets a lot of economic muscle from it's force projection. That's one of the hilarious things about Trump's isolationism - if the US pulls back it's military envelope, it'll stop getting all those sweetheart trade deals from other countries. The US itself is safe, but it needs effective force projection.
The US might be tired of playing 'world cop', but it's a role it chose itself, and it's been getting plenty of tasty kickbacks for doing so. I don't have a problem with that - nations have a right to think of themselves first in any deal - but it's still funny that so many people ignore that US military projection heavily protects it's economic muscle.
The problem is, starting military development when a credible threat emerges is far too late. This stuff takes years in the pipeline. If you want it to be ready when you need it, you need to be working on it when you don't need it. (And run the risk of never needing it, and discovered that you wasted years and years of development.)
The sheer number of people Russia lost in WWII is staggering. If I recall correctly the number was around 25 Million. Russia deserves so much credit for the defeat of hitler, but you won't hear it in America very often.
> It's not as if the US government is fighting anyone with any real air capability.
The problem isn't air superiority (yet). Building a stealth aircaft isn't only about beating some enemy equivalent. The problem mainly, very simplified, is that advanced AA is getting better and more widespread at a faster rate than aircrafts are improving. In order to conduct operations in "denied airspace" you need a combination of stealth aircraft, drones, advanced standoff weapons etc that is becoming increasingly complex and expensive.
Advanced long-range anti air like S-300/400 and similar are becoming so accurate and so long range, that anyone who can field them can effectively deny enormous (country-sized) bits of airspace.
If not even 5th gen stealth aircraft are safe to fly in an airspace then the air superiority will require control of the ground. This changes the way the US can (or can't) project power abroad pretty significantly.
Totally, we could call it skynet! I know it will happen eventually, let's just hope we can survive it, or maybe have world peace by then as even conventional warfare becomes MAD.
Drone swarms are the future. And a lot of the existing thinking about solving communications blockage is backwards, swarms in the future will be self reliant, only receiving "big picture" orders from command and allowed to carry those out.
The F-35 may be the last major manned aircraft to take to the skies. With drone swarms, it will be outnumbered, and won't have enough munitions aboard to take out a dozen or more drones.
This is tech already in active development at the normal research institutions and other major nations seem to have similar development programs.
The US might get a full life out of the F-35, but I doubt they'll build its successor.
I think the biggest issue is the size and power requirements of modern radars. You can't make tiny drones if none of them has a radar, so you need at least some of them to be big. If it's big and has a power hungry radar, then it also needs a big powerplant. The big powerplant drinks a lot of fuel to get any range etc. etc. If a small craft could be self reliant, then we would already be building homing missiles that provide their own radar. We don't because it makes them too big, slow, heavy and expensive! A BVR missile like the AIM-120 relies on the Radar of the firing aircraft for finding the target.
So the drones will have to be launched from carrying aircraft. We'll definitely see groups of planes very soon where some are manned, and they may be simpler and cheaper than the manned equivalent, and another category of drone that is actually launched from the carrying aircraft to rely on its range. This will limit the number of big expensive planes needed, but in reality what they did then was replace cruise missiles and standoff bombs with drones, not the launching planes.
> The US might get a full life out of the F-35, but I doubt they'll build its successor.
I also doubt they will ever make a "joint" effort again. We'll continue to see large and expensive planes though, so long as radars are massively powerful and we haven't invented backpack size Megawatt-hour batteries or tiny fusion reactors.
> If a small craft could be self reliant, then we would already be building homing missiles that provide their own radar. We don't because it makes them too big, slow, heavy and expensive!
I don't see this comparison is valid. Drones with radar already exist (http://www.intelligent-aerospace.com/articles/2015/06/ias-re...). They are worth it because they're cheaper than manned aircraft, with better loiter times, and potentially better maneuverability in unmanned fighter drones. That they're substantially more expensive or slower than a use-once missile doesn't matter, because the comparison is to a manned aircraft.
And with small-drone radar, if they're in a swarm, what's ruling out aperture synthesis approaches? They don't need a single big radar if they can collectively act as one...
The MQ-9 is 11x20m and has a flyaway cost comparable to some previous gen fighters, so while it's certainly a "drone" (I hate that term), it goes all the way there and all the way home, and is much too expensive to be an expendable target or part of a "swarm". You can't make a drone that you can field dozens of to provide "security in numbers", and afford to lose a couple of. If "swarm radar" (see my last paragraph) is a possibility that lets small aircraft with small radars cooperate like a large aircraft with a large radar, then it's certainly a possibility that we can se "swarms" of <$2m aircraft used without help from the launching crafts radar. They still need to be carried to the area of operation though because of small range.
> That they're substantially more expensive or slower than a use-once cruise missile doesn't matter, because the comparison is to a manned aircraft.
Whether their speed matters depends on what you want to do with them. It wouldn't be money well spent to use loiter-type surveillance craft as fighters. You could build unmanned craft that are fast enough to attack fighters, but it's a numbers game - once they get big enough to have speed and range, they are already very expensive and then you may need them to have high survivability which adds even more cost etc. If you make a "fighter drone" it will likely end up looking like an unmanned fighter plane (Unless: advances in radar tech or power generation). You might save some money because it's unmanned so it doesn't need cockpit, oxygen system, and is slightly more expendable, but you still can't afford to lose a lot of them.
I obviously have no idea apart from what I read on gossip sites, but I believe there will also be be common with a "companion" type unmanned aircraft that are built for forward reconnaissance and attack together with "big" fighters and bombers. They must be fast and stealthy and able to operate within heavily contested airspace. They will simply take over where the expensive large plane (manned or not) can't go any longer. When you think about it, the MBDA meteor and other air-breathing long range missiles are already a kind of fast autonomous planes that are launched from other planes. The line between "missile" and "plane" will blur even more.
Quoting the US Air Forces chief scientist Mica Endsley:
"We see unmanned vehicles being used for a much wider variety of missions. Today they are primarily used for ISR, long duration missions where we want to collect information. In the future, they will be moving cargo and more manned-unmanned teaming where they are acting as extensions of a manned aircraft."
> what's ruling out aperture synthesis approaches? They don't need a single big radar if they can collectively act as one...
That's a good point, I don't know what the state of the art is in "swarm radar". How much better does a pair of current fighters compare to one current fighter?
63 comments
[ 0.26 ms ] story [ 125 ms ] thread[1] http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/library/policy/army/f...
Richthofen in WW1 was brought down by a single shot from a rifle, but that is widely considered to be a freak shot.
Nevertheless, you're right that it is never safe to get in range of small arms fire, hence the genesis of the A-10.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Great_Illusion
> The Great Illusion is a book by Norman Angell, first published in the United Kingdom in 1909
> Angell argued that war between industrial countries was futile because conquest did not pay. J.D.B. Miller writes: "The 'Great Illusion' was that nations gained by armed confrontation, militarism, war, or conquest."[3] The economic interdependence between industrial countries meant that war would be economically harmful to all the countries involved. Moreover, if a conquering power confiscated property in the territory it seized, "the incentive to produce [of the local population] would be sapped and the conquered area be rendered worthless. Thus, the conquering power had to leave property in the hands of the local population while incurring the costs of conquest and occupation."[3]
...
He was partially right though
> Angell said that arms build-up, for example the naval race that was happening as he wrote the book in the early 1910s, was not going to secure peace. Instead, it would lead to increased insecurity and thus increase the likelihood of war.
As an interesting aside, I'm no fan of wealth inequality. However, if it looks like it's the primary mechanism that is prolonging relative global peace (as in no biological or nuclear weapons being used), I may accept the tradeoff.
There's a balance, to be a bit vulgar, between "alright we need to pay this" and "fuck this debt, we're storming the castle"
[0]:http://www.bbc.co.uk/guides/zqhxvcw#zy4gjxs
A cheap plane would not nearly be as effective.
If we are going to settle for less than the F-22, then we should just buy the stealth-upgraded F-15. It's cheaper than the F-35.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing_F-15SE_Silent_Eagle
Then the F35 got Christmas treed to death.
Airfields are the F-35A's biggest weakness.
To quote Stalin, “Quantity has a Quality All Its Own"
If the US military falls behind technologically, other nations might start thinking defeat isn't so obvious any more.
The only one that falls into your threat category is Russia. Is Russia really about to invade the US at the first sign of air supremacy weakness? You still have enough nukes to cause literal worldwide armageddon 20 times over.
Why even leave a shadow of a doubt that the enemy could win in a dogfight?
I think that's the rationale presented here
While that wouldn't hurt the average American in the short run, the long-term consequences of it in geopolitical terms would be extreme.
and it was once a beacon of democracy and free world...
also, US has no greater claim to be the ruler of pacific region compared to China. in fact, if you look at the map, opposite is true.
No country's ever been a beacon of democracy and freedom, that's just propaganda. You will not get a world where unconstrained powerful nations do not act amorally. A better hope is that multilateral organizations like the UN and World Court gain more strength and legitimacy.
The US might be tired of playing 'world cop', but it's a role it chose itself, and it's been getting plenty of tasty kickbacks for doing so. I don't have a problem with that - nations have a right to think of themselves first in any deal - but it's still funny that so many people ignore that US military projection heavily protects it's economic muscle.
The problem isn't air superiority (yet). Building a stealth aircaft isn't only about beating some enemy equivalent. The problem mainly, very simplified, is that advanced AA is getting better and more widespread at a faster rate than aircrafts are improving. In order to conduct operations in "denied airspace" you need a combination of stealth aircraft, drones, advanced standoff weapons etc that is becoming increasingly complex and expensive.
Advanced long-range anti air like S-300/400 and similar are becoming so accurate and so long range, that anyone who can field them can effectively deny enormous (country-sized) bits of airspace.
If not even 5th gen stealth aircraft are safe to fly in an airspace then the air superiority will require control of the ground. This changes the way the US can (or can't) project power abroad pretty significantly.
Drone swarms are the future. And a lot of the existing thinking about solving communications blockage is backwards, swarms in the future will be self reliant, only receiving "big picture" orders from command and allowed to carry those out.
The F-35 may be the last major manned aircraft to take to the skies. With drone swarms, it will be outnumbered, and won't have enough munitions aboard to take out a dozen or more drones.
This is tech already in active development at the normal research institutions and other major nations seem to have similar development programs.
The US might get a full life out of the F-35, but I doubt they'll build its successor.
I think the biggest issue is the size and power requirements of modern radars. You can't make tiny drones if none of them has a radar, so you need at least some of them to be big. If it's big and has a power hungry radar, then it also needs a big powerplant. The big powerplant drinks a lot of fuel to get any range etc. etc. If a small craft could be self reliant, then we would already be building homing missiles that provide their own radar. We don't because it makes them too big, slow, heavy and expensive! A BVR missile like the AIM-120 relies on the Radar of the firing aircraft for finding the target.
So the drones will have to be launched from carrying aircraft. We'll definitely see groups of planes very soon where some are manned, and they may be simpler and cheaper than the manned equivalent, and another category of drone that is actually launched from the carrying aircraft to rely on its range. This will limit the number of big expensive planes needed, but in reality what they did then was replace cruise missiles and standoff bombs with drones, not the launching planes.
> The US might get a full life out of the F-35, but I doubt they'll build its successor.
I also doubt they will ever make a "joint" effort again. We'll continue to see large and expensive planes though, so long as radars are massively powerful and we haven't invented backpack size Megawatt-hour batteries or tiny fusion reactors.
I don't see this comparison is valid. Drones with radar already exist (http://www.intelligent-aerospace.com/articles/2015/06/ias-re...). They are worth it because they're cheaper than manned aircraft, with better loiter times, and potentially better maneuverability in unmanned fighter drones. That they're substantially more expensive or slower than a use-once missile doesn't matter, because the comparison is to a manned aircraft.
And with small-drone radar, if they're in a swarm, what's ruling out aperture synthesis approaches? They don't need a single big radar if they can collectively act as one...
The MQ-9 is 11x20m and has a flyaway cost comparable to some previous gen fighters, so while it's certainly a "drone" (I hate that term), it goes all the way there and all the way home, and is much too expensive to be an expendable target or part of a "swarm". You can't make a drone that you can field dozens of to provide "security in numbers", and afford to lose a couple of. If "swarm radar" (see my last paragraph) is a possibility that lets small aircraft with small radars cooperate like a large aircraft with a large radar, then it's certainly a possibility that we can se "swarms" of <$2m aircraft used without help from the launching crafts radar. They still need to be carried to the area of operation though because of small range.
> That they're substantially more expensive or slower than a use-once cruise missile doesn't matter, because the comparison is to a manned aircraft.
Whether their speed matters depends on what you want to do with them. It wouldn't be money well spent to use loiter-type surveillance craft as fighters. You could build unmanned craft that are fast enough to attack fighters, but it's a numbers game - once they get big enough to have speed and range, they are already very expensive and then you may need them to have high survivability which adds even more cost etc. If you make a "fighter drone" it will likely end up looking like an unmanned fighter plane (Unless: advances in radar tech or power generation). You might save some money because it's unmanned so it doesn't need cockpit, oxygen system, and is slightly more expendable, but you still can't afford to lose a lot of them.
I obviously have no idea apart from what I read on gossip sites, but I believe there will also be be common with a "companion" type unmanned aircraft that are built for forward reconnaissance and attack together with "big" fighters and bombers. They must be fast and stealthy and able to operate within heavily contested airspace. They will simply take over where the expensive large plane (manned or not) can't go any longer. When you think about it, the MBDA meteor and other air-breathing long range missiles are already a kind of fast autonomous planes that are launched from other planes. The line between "missile" and "plane" will blur even more.
Quoting the US Air Forces chief scientist Mica Endsley:
"We see unmanned vehicles being used for a much wider variety of missions. Today they are primarily used for ISR, long duration missions where we want to collect information. In the future, they will be moving cargo and more manned-unmanned teaming where they are acting as extensions of a manned aircraft."
> what's ruling out aperture synthesis approaches? They don't need a single big radar if they can collectively act as one...
That's a good point, I don't know what the state of the art is in "swarm radar". How much better does a pair of current fighters compare to one current fighter?
Well, there is such an amount of money. F-35 is not the first jack-of-all-trades fighter. Remember to F-104.