While I've never flown in Whiting (for the record, I've heard it's TERRIBLE especially with split field ops/WAY more planes there etc), I can tell you that ATC (being students here as well) sometimes just plain SUCK. I've gotten countless relatively small errors (turn RIGHT to a heading 20 degrees off my left when they DID NOT intend for me to do a 360, fvcking up clearances, clearing me for something, then yelling at me because they "didn't clear me" for that), but I've also had, once or twice, SERIOUS errors on their part. On an RI hop one day, I was putting the bag on after the gear came up and saw a C-12 flying off our nose. He was JUST cleared to turn left on climbout from the right (parallel) runway. IP maneuvered to avoid the collision and informed tower that they cleared a freaking plane in front of us.
What you describe sounds like Navy ATC trainee SOP. Same stuff happens at Whiting. Often times IPs sort out the traffic quicker than the controllers. I don't think Whiting is terrible as far as ops go, but often times the controlling is less than desirable w/ a full recovery in effect.
When I was referring to ATC earlier, I meant in your working areas. Again, it's just what I've heard, but you guys get sectors which you own. I have done Las Cruces which I was told was pretty much the same idea, sans ATC. Whiting isn't as sterile an environment as Corpus (as has been described to me) in the working areas. FOR THE RECORD, I'm NOT saying you guys don't need NACWS, I just have a feeling it's perceived to not be as necessary there buy certain bean-counters there.
Whiting may suck, but Corpus isn't exactly "safe" to the point where we don't need a useful NACWS. But again...this is just my silly ENS opinion and the guys with the birds and stars on their collars are the ones that make things happen...
Again, I don't think Whiting "sucks." I like the way we do business most of the time. I also don't think one is "worse" than the other, just different. W/ the Weiner lasting another 7 years, it just seems to make sense to add a relatively small addition to the plane, especially w/ the increased mishaps this FY, fleet-wide.
BS, just giving perspective/elaborating, not disagreeing w/ what you're saying, on the whole.