I think they actually teach that tactic at the USAF Air University. It's colloquially known as "Let Mikey Do It!"You divest a platform and/or capability and in today's environment you won't get it back anytime soon.
I think they actually teach that tactic at the USAF Air University. It's colloquially known as "Let Mikey Do It!"You divest a platform and/or capability and in today's environment you won't get it back anytime soon.
Honestly, the only things that we have that they couldn't replicate in some manner is the AAV and the LAV. I would argue our amphibious/expeditionary capabilities are 90% doctrine and training and 10% equipment.I'm not sure I agree with that. The Marines amphibious and expeditionary capabilities are derived from more than just doctrine or training. There are a whole host of platforms, equipment, gear they have to do that mission that the Army doesn't. I'm sure one of the Marines can speak more intelligently to that, but I don't think it's an apt comparrison.
Having worked with both Navy and USAF ISR/ELINT, what, in your opinion, is the value in duplicating that function across multiple services vs cost savings of not doing so? I can tell you what it did to the VAQ realm was increased workload and optempo, but the mission still gets done and capabilities have continued to modernize.
That sounds like a training/doctrinal issue vice a capabilities deficit, and to be fair, I would guess that the RJ community would level a similar littany of grievances against VQ. Not that it's insignificant, but I would argue that it's cheaper to address the shortfall with training than it is to develop and field an otherwise redundant T/M/S. I suppose that in a perfect world, we'd all have our service specific/organic ISR platforms. Given the purple-oriented culture and constrained resources, that mindset is swimming against the stream.
Not having looked at the relevant budgetary data, I'll have to relegate this thought to the hypothetical, but if I were to invoke the principle of comparative advantage, allowing the USN to specialize in the VAQ mission while USAF specializes in the VQ/RJ mission might be a more efficient use of resources. We decry the "jack of all trades/master of none" mentality in our VFA community's platform. That might apply at the service level as well. Food for thought, at any rate.
Couple exceptions: B-1s: http://www.dyess.af.mil/news/story.asp?id=123272299, B-52s: http://www.barksdale.af.mil/news/story.asp?id=123118162USAF maritime support for blue-water ops? "Not in our DOC statement."
We used to has this debate out in the squadron long ago and I still debate it with a few folks at work now, a mix of VQ'ers and RJ types. It was also debated in the early to mid 90's in DoD at the same time they were looking at EA and came to the decision to keep both for a couple good reasons.
There are a couple of glaring differences between the RJ and EP-3 from capability to crews. The RJ is simply the more capable platform overallbecause the USAF and DoD pours an enormous amount of money into them. Not only is the mission equipment constantly upgraded but the airframe is as well, it has new engines and a glass cockpit too. The crew on the RJ is well-trained and capable but is run completely differently, the crew came three different squadrons and didn't have an MC and suffered as a result. In the past they were not as tactically focused or as savvy when it came to directly supporting current air ops, this was mainly as a result of their 'strategic' focus from the Cold War that never really went away.
All that aside the main reason DoD kept both platforms was simply numbers. There was and still is a pressing need for ISR all over the world and since both fleets were still viable and relatively healthy, with 'new' EP-3s coming out of the mod shop at the time it was an easy decision to keep both. With the 'parent' airframe being retired now and the airframes not getting any younger it is becoming less economical to keep such a small and unique fleet.
The problem with the RJ becoming the sole primary ES platform though is how the USAF deploys and how willing they will be to support the Navy. They have a pretty set number of aircraft they will deploy, a much lower percentage of their fleet than the Navy deploys, and it won't increase unless we buy new airframes which is unlikely. They are also very rigid when it comes to deployment sites and even flight schedules. To put it bluntly, while the Navy made it work with Prowlers when we were handed the USAF EA mission the USAF won't change much if anything when it comes filling the gap for Navy ISR support when the EP-3 is gone. The national missions will get done but the fleet support ones, not going to happen.
On a side note I will be interested to see how the RAF does with their new RJs, their Nimrod R1 crews were always really sharp and very operationally focused.
Good stuff. The only thing I'll point out (mostly for those who don't know the mechanics of such things), how and where the assets (I.E. RJ assets) are assigned and used is largely up to how they're divied up among the COCOMS, and the individual services have very little say in how "their" national assets are employed. So, this idea I've seen floated about how the USAF does or does not support the Navy is up to the COCOMs who have the RJs CHOP'd to them.
I'll buy the numbers issue in terms of total platforms we have available, but we're going to have to learn to do less with less - that's the breaks, folks.
I thought we did more with less, until we broke all of the less, and then did everything with nothing?
Okay...very shit hot. Thanks for the info.Couple exceptions: B-1s: http://www.dyess.af.mil/news/story.asp?id=123272299, B-52s: http://www.barksdale.af.mil/news/story.asp?id=123118162
as well as Mining Ops.
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Well, here are a few things I'd point out...
However, then we remember the first part of the VQ-1 name...Fleet...the Air Force, being perhaps more entrenched in dogma/habit/bureaucratic tape than the Navy, is unlikely to ever integrate well. Could you get away with it if we still operated ES-3's or even the Whale and used the Air Force to supplement or extend the umbrella? Sure. However, today, the EP-3 is the only show in town...disregarding BAMS anyway.
"This thing of ours...this is the life we have chosen." ~Every Mafia Movie Ever MadeThat's the Marine Corps. It's been doing more with less for so long, it's now expected to do everything with nothing...forever.
That guy totally knows what he is talking about.. Read this gem... He's totally on to us.
http://theaviationist.com/?s=E-6b&submit=Search