Hell why don't we just fly corsairs off of Essex class carriers? They worked well at the time
well.....
http://www.airwarriors.com/forum/showthread.php?t=137084&highlight=CAS

Hell why don't we just fly corsairs off of Essex class carriers? They worked well at the time
I guess I mean why did we spend all that money and time producing and building the Raptor/JSF, when we could have used existing assembly lines to pump out more F-15's and Rhinos?
I would like to see a no shit intelligence brief of our air superiority capabilities compared to anyone else in the world. Do we really need the F-22, or even the JSF for that matter?
Based on the current threats to the United States, there is no near peer competitor to the US Navy. China is a regional threat, but is not a blue water threat for the next 10 years or so, therefore cutting CSGs can save a lot of money but not imperil the United States national defense.
The current strategy of fixing failed states so AQAM can not get a foothold does not require continuous deployments by CSGs. It requires boots on the ground and airpower available.
Schedule the deployment so you have a carrier where you need it, when you need it, and not just 'routine deployments' of two carriers continuously.
The plan is to kill one, not an Air Wing. Right now there are 10 Airwings and 11 CSGs. Kill one and you can continue as we are doing until the Ford Class starts coming down the ways.
If anybody wants to learn a lesson about what happens to a Nation that can no longer flex its expeditionary capability to motivate policy, just look at England.
War on Two Fronts? No when could that possibly happen......
Because F-15's and Rhinos are old technology. The superbugs go for just a little less than the JSF and the JSF is newer technology...so why get the old? The JSF is also an international venture and that's helping to keep the cost down. We should take all we can get. Who knows what the future will hold?
The problem with assuming that will be situation for long is that reversing the decision to draw down the carrier fleet is a very long and hard one to turn around. As a matter of fact, we have proven that it is almost irreversible given our history since WWII. By the time we find that we need more CVN's it may be too late to do so, finding us in a bad place.
There is only one semi-failed state that we are 'fixing' right now and it is doubtful we would expand that effort beyond Afghanistan. Many of the resources are being built to fight that particular war, not a war 20 years from now. .
Good question, where are carriers 'needed'? Kind of hard to do that when often you really don't know when or where they would be needed. Part of the reason we have some just 'steaming around'. .
That is the Navy's idea right now, the QDR appears to be heading towards suggesting more cuts. Different animal .
The problem is, and always has been, letting ourselves fall behind the curve with complacency like we did ~70 years ago with the P-40 vs Jap Zero or vs the ME-262. No telling how many B-17 crews could have been saved if we had gotten on the horse (sorry for the pun) and realized we needed something like the P-51 Mustang earlier.
I think a "full out wartime economy" is a fairy tale in this day and age with the entitlement spending currently in the Federal budget. Maybe we could carry that kind of debt if you got the whole country to buy war bonds again, but who would we be going to war against that would justify that kind of spending? China? Oh, wait . . .Someone mentioned that we produce carriers at a rate of ~2/decade. If we went full-out wartime economy ala WWII, wouldn't this timeline be able to be significantly reduced?
I just think it's like selling your Blackberry to get an iPhone. Big picture, they both make phone calls (which is what they are used for 90% of the time), but one is a little fancier.
One thing I found interesting in reading the link is the "two front war" philosophy that has guided our defense budget since WWII.
The reason I find it intersting is the QDR notes that A) prior to WWII, we did not follow such a doctrine and managed to win that war and B) it's extremely unlikely that we find ourselves in that kind of situation anytime in the near future.
This is where the logic for the cuts is coming from.
I just think it's like selling your Blackberry to get an iPhone. Big picture, they both make phone calls (which is what they are used for 90% of the time), but one is a little fancier.
The article states that this cut in CSGs will be until CVN-78 comes on line in 2015, therefore the way the author describes the situation, it will be short-term vice a longer term decline.
To counter your other point, we are not 'building resources' to fight in either OEF or OIF with the exception of the MRAPs. All the equipment we are employing over there was on-line prior to the invasion of Iraq in 2003.
From a strategy standpoint, you do no NEED to have two carriers steaming around.
In a mature theater like Iraq, you do not NEED any carriers in the Gulf. The Air Force can handle the requirement for Air Power on their own. Now I'm aware Navy leadership will not like that answer but it's the truth.
The one thing carriers have over the Air Force is immediate response and flexibility in 'forced entry' type environments. Since a carrier can be pretty much anywhere in the world (from San Diego or Norfolk) in less than three weeks, there is that rapid response needed for the US.
This is in reference to cutting a carrier not an Airwing. The staff at SECDEF writes the QDR, therefore, the Navy sent folks to write the USN section of the QDR. They'll have some guidance from SECDEF based upon what he and the President have said, but if it's in the QDR, then it's the Navy position. So I don't know how you can say that the Navy's position is different from what the QDR says. Now individuals in Navy leadership may not agree with the direction that they have been given for scoping out the future force, but the civilian leadership makes the final call as to the shape of the future military force.
Someone mentioned that we produce carriers at a rate of ~2/decade. If we went full-out wartime economy ala WWII, wouldn't this timeline be able to be significantly reduced?
From a practical standpoint you do, or else you would always be behind the power curve when it comes to reacting to events. And you would have crews that have little concept of how to really operate. You have to train to how you fight, or else we will end up with a fleet of Kuznetsov's that can't do shit. .
A little more nuanced than you may realize. There can be significant problems with ramp space, host nation restrictions and resupply that land-based aircraft have to deal with constantly. The airpower that a carrier supplies is nowhere near as affected by these constraints and without that our resources over there would be even more strained than they are now. The opening stages of OEF would not have been run as effectively or quickly without flattops off the coast.
Three weeks is much too late for many types of operations nowadays, from combat to humanitarian relief.