CycloWizard
Lifer
The B1 and B2 are useful now because the US doesn't really even use 'conventional' bombs. We use non-nuclear, if that's what you mean by conventional, but the bombs are much more sophisticated than simple fire-and-forget bombs used in the past. Using complex bombers like the B1 and B2, which were already built at the end of the cold war (may as well use em if we have em), allows precision strikes like those in Baghdad at the start of the invasion. As one US general put it, the cruise missiles, bombs and bombers that we have allow us not to choose which building we want to hit, but what window. This is how so much destruction was carried out with such little collateral damage. Yes, there was considerable collateral damage, but not relative to any other bombing campaign in history.Originally posted by: f95toli
Since this is a domestic issue I would normaly not get involved, but I noticed something in the orignal quote: The person who wrote it does not SEEM to know much about military hardware.
As far as I can tell most if the programs listed are failures in the sense that most of them are either too exive or was designed for the cold war.
The B1b and B2 are strategic bombers, they are extremely expensive (the price of a B2 is insane) and were never meant to be used in a "regular" war with conventional bombs.
The Apache is a very nice machine but was designed for service in wester Europe (west-Germany), sure you can use it in a desert but helicopters are much more efficient if they can find cover.
The F-14 is still a good aircraft but it is ancient.
And about the SDI: Is he serious? A program that AFAIK was only meant to scare the soviets, most of the techology has STILL not been developed (and some of the proposalt where Sci-fi at most)
Regarding the Apache and other helicopters, our problem is not usually with them being shot down, but with them crashing due to mechanical failure. This is primarily due to the newer fuels: the fuels we use are now more 'environmentally friendly' but therefore do not contain certain compouns (aromatics) that swell rubber seals. This results in hydraulic fluid contamination, which causes loss of control. The Apache is maneuverable enough that cover isn't really necessary, particularly when you can strike from 10 miles away.
The F-14, like the Apache, B1, and B2, is already available and in extremely good repair. Software and hardware upgrades for all of these units have kept them at the forefront of technology. For example, the Apache Longbow is simply a software upgrade for the targetting system from the original Apache. We already spent the billions to build these things ($2 billion a pop for the 20 B2 bombers), so we may as well use them. Each may only fill a niche application, but it's still more cost-effective than starting from scratch. 😛
That would still be misleading, but I guess a half-assed cover is better than no cover at all.Originally posted by: Darkhawk28
Yes, that ad was wrong as well. If he said that overall jobs are down due to the Bush Adminsitration, that would hold more water.