sferrin said:
lastdingo said:
Actually, if there's a real attack on NATO the risk to the few hundred or few thousand aviators would be negligible. It wouldn't be some bombing bombing of huts and pickups, but a European style inter-state war against powers that dared to attack the two of the three mightiest alliances mankind has ever created (NATO and EU).
Besides, classic air power isn't guaranteed to play much of a role in it at all.
Well that's good to know. We don't need to buy any fighters after all. :
Of course not. It's a silly idea that Canada
needs to buy fighters. This is a choice, an option, not a necessity.
To be in an alliance has two principal benefits:
(a) Ability to defend at all.
(b) Allied military power added means less national power needed, not the least because potential threats are turned allies.
In the case of Canada - it's a small enough share of the overall alliance that even disbanding two of three armed services and bolstering the third as compensation wouldn't affect teh deterrence or defence of the alliance noticeably.
It's a
choice of small and medium defensive alliance members to maintain a balanced military with three armed services, not a necessity.
Look at Iceland; they're a North Atlantic Treaty member, but they have no military or even only a paramilitary police at all, they serve merely as a base!
Regarding future high end peer air war; we haven't seen such a thing since the 50's, so nothing is for certain. Air power was out of proportion relative to concealment-deprived ground forces in '67, '73, '91 and '03 and proved hugely influential, but it was a sideshow when it had a rather ordinary numerical relation to ground forces in '08 (where at least some of the ground combat wasn't on concealment-deprived terrains).
Try to remember the 80's, and our expectations for conventional air power influence on a war. Ever since, air power had gained in profile because the beating up and bullying of smaller powers was mostly done with air power. The impressions it left were out of proportion relative to the actual balance between air and ground forces in NATO.
There's also the potential of small flying drones and RC aircraft; even ten thousand F-22's could not assure all-altitudes air superiority any more because they're irrelevant to the small drone air war; you cannot deny battlefield aerial reconnaissance or ground attack with fighters or battlefield air defences any more (that's why I wrote "classic" in the quote).
Canada pretended that the classic air war paradigm was self-evident when it once favoured the expensive F-35 program.
Triton said:
Maybe Canada will join South Korea and Indonesia in KF-X?
K-X appears to be in trouble and it's single engine. The J-31 might end up being the best match technically.