donnage99 said:
According to Gates (he's a liar, I know :
) and:
According to Gates? Nearly all of his arguments against the F-22 can be applied to the F-35 as well. He claimed it was an outdated "cold war relic" which is the same term politicians will use to justify killing anything too costly for their tastes.
donnage99 said:
As for other programs (beside the 50 programs that Gates also cut along with f-22) that needed sacrifice before f-22, care to elaborate them?
Where is that money we are supposedly saving from cutting missile defense, and countless smaller projects supposedly going to? Why should the F-22 have to be sacrificed too? Half of these black programs we are spending billions aren't likely to see the light of day. Hell, how much are we still spending in military aid for other countries?
Please, enough with the baseless conspiracy stuff. Based on what fact do you say that Gates or company (what company I have no idea) has a grudge?
Conspiracy, where did I say it was a conspiracy? It was clear as day that he hated and wanted to kill that program all along. Some say he got that idea from John Young, but honestly I don't know if he gets any personal benefit out of it.
Again, you comparing cat and dog. The f-15E production is completely different from f-22 in its foundation.
Both are high end machines with plenty of subcontractors and complicated machinery required. If it was possible to keep the F-15E production line intact with only a handful of airframes a year (back in the Clinton years no less), It should be possible with the F-22. Sure it is inefficient but it is the better solution.
But it DOES mean that we have to make that painful choice. We don't have unlimited amount of money. Please wake up to the painful reality of life.
Huh? We don't have unlimited money? I guess congress isn't aware of that fact. Perhaps somebody should inform them. :
Money isn't the issue here when it would probably only cost about $1 billion a year. There is certainly room in the defense budget for that.
The cancellation of f-22 isn't about its troubled history, it's about we need that money for something else that we need now:
http://www.strategypage.com/militaryforums/6-60318.aspx
And where is that $1 billion a year needed so badly we must cut production of an aircraft key to the USAF's future? Like I said, some money still has to go towards fancy things, which may not be all that useful for fighting Taliban, but are necessary for continued military superiority.
This statement just show a lack of understand in the nature of these programs and why the cut to begin with.
Oh yes they were all "cold war relics." You know it was "cold war relics" that won us the 1991 Gulf War, and that are provided useful support to our infantry however they can.
Abraham Gubler said:
The idea that the USA is somehow ‘post superpower’ and shutting down the F-22 production line means they are going to lose their air capability edge is laughable. Within the reasonably foreseeable future out to the year 2020 the USA will have the only production line running for a fifth generation fighter (the F-35 at over 100 units per annum) not to mention the only production lines for electronic attack platforms, high end UCAS and mass production of precision guided weapons. There is nothing in this world and the next that can challenge this level of capability.
A decade down the road we are going to be wondering, weren't we supposed to get 2000 F-35s and all of these nice things? Just look at the trend over the past 18 years and we can expect the same thing. Less aircraft overall, filling roles they weren't designed for. The F-35 is a jack of all trades, master of none, and is still years off. We shouldn't be relying on it so much and "putting all of our eggs in one basket."