I like watching people argue with a guy who has done CAS about CAS.
An unorthodox strategy but entertaining nonetheless.
It's hard to argue that Marine pilots don't benefit from TBS. That said, do you think a Navy pilot that went to VMFAT-101 would be handicapped in his ability to execute the CAS mission? An AF A-10 pilot knows more about CAS than a Marine EA-6B pilot. To accept your points without question suggests that we should also conclude that the Army is best prepared to provide their own CAS. Beyond that, what's the best way to improve AF CAS effectiveness, provide more CAS training or send AF pilots to TBS?This is why the Marine Corps has always emphasized CAS as mission #1 from day one. With the pilots spending 6 months learning to be grunts before even attending flight school. I'm sure the Navy and AF would see this as a waste of time and resources, but in the eyes of the Marines it is absolutely critical to operating the air war as one with the ground war. The corporate mentality that we are all riflemen, who sometimes fly or fix airplanes, is vital to the effectiveness of Marine Aviation.
This axiom proved true again last year when the CO of VFA-211 lead a counter attack against the insurgents who breached the wire at Camp Bastion.
It's hard to argue that Marine pilots don't benefit from TBS. That said, do you think a Navy pilot that went to VMFAT-101 would be handicapped in his ability to execute the CAS mission? An AF A-10 pilot knows more about CAS than a Marine EA-6B pilot. To accept your points without question suggests that we should also conclude that the Army is best prepared to provide their own CAS. Beyond that, what's the best way to improve AF CAS effectiveness, provide more CAS training or send AF pilots to TBS?
The USMC sees CAS as their core mission. Now, if we can just figure out what the USMC core mission should be.My point is not that AF or Navy pilots can not do CAS effectively (by all accounts, they do), but that the USMC sees CAS as their core mission while the AF sees it as one of many missions that they are tasked with.
I like watching people argue with a guy who has done CAS about CAS.
The problem with that line of thought is the belief that there is one single set of capabilities that defines the "perfect" CAS aircraft.
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. I think an aircraft specifically designed to do CAS work (and not Army rotory wing wing) is just what our deploying troops need given the current and likely world state.
And these aircraft, as well as the primary responsibility for CAS for those troops, should be accomplished by the Army, in my opinion.
I'm all for it- it'd clear up a mess of complication on the two-way rifle range. A doctrinal change allowing the Army to operate fixed wings that put rounds on target for grunts would be *awesome*. The rotary wing component does an excellent job, but response time and vulnerability to ground fire leave a gaping hole in the air support capability of the Army.
Doctrine or not, I don't see why the Army would want to "farm out" direct support of its ground troops to anyone else. The Marines don't. By giving the Army A-10s or whatever, this doesn't mean that the AF doesn't/won't ever provide CAS, it just won't be their primary mission. They still can, as needed, just as they would for Marines if AF jets are all that happens to be available; its just that the AF won't have to focus on that mission and/or put a ton of $$$ towards it; money that can go towards other core missions like air superiority, space, strategic/tactical airlift, nuclear missions, etc.
Same with the C-27:..
I agree wholeheartedly on all of the above. I think it's just a matter of the Air Force's initial separation from the Army and all the dogma that came of that. "YOU'RE ground, YOU'RE air," etc, ad nauseam... There's no reason why the Army couldn't maintain a few CAS Brigades. They'd have candidates around the block to staff it.
It's hard to find somebody that disagrees....until you get to Washington.Another reason the AF should gladly give the primary responsibility for CAS to the Army, with the understanding that we will be there to help out whenever we can, as needed.
As far as Camp Bastion, I'm not sure what point you were trying to make in your mention of the Navy CO. But since you brought it up, maybe they need to improve their perimeter security curriculum at TBS.
Why don't they retire the B1? It's never even seen action. And it's not exactly multi- purpose.
Oh, senior moment. There's a VFA-211, too.I think he just miss typed, it was VMA 211, Marine Harriers, Marine Lt. Col. as CO.
It's hard to find somebody that disagrees....until you get to Washington.
Follow the money.
My point is not that AF or Navy pilots can not do CAS effectively (by all accounts, they do), but that the USMC sees CAS as their core mission while the AF sees it as one of many missions that they are tasked with.
The problem is not having multi role aircraft as much as trying to create multi role pilots. The time and training dollars spent on teaching CAS on top of ACM, strategic bombing, AAA suppression, ect, is another drain on the budget. Since the AF (collectively) does not see CAS as a priority, that training time will be one of the first things to be cut. As Hacker said in a previous post, the CAS mission was not a part of his training in the lean budgets of the 90s and they had to learn it on the fly.
The Marine EA-6Bs need to be given to the Navy. Electronic warfare is about as far from the Marine's core mission as you can get.
Sooooo not true on both fronts.
Retiring the A-10 is a effing stupid move, the guys I work for love the Hog. It completes its mission better than any other aircraft in the inventory, aside from the citations that ferry the brass around.
The problem with designing an aircraft to do everything well is that it will do nothing great. Our guys on the ground deserve better than that.