Whew! Long thread. I suppose I'll belatedly chime in. My $.02 on a big-picture level is:
Taxes are paid by the American people, never forget. Most of whom have other demands on their budget. Thus, for instance, every dollar which the government takes away from the average soccer mom is a dollar she cannot use to buy and brand-new luxury SUV, forcing her to settle for a minivan, which greatly irks her, limiting the amount which she will let the government take (even if it goes to starving children in Iraq, remember she has her own children to buy Playstations for Christmas) before she votes someone else into office who takes less. (pardon the editorial on American materialism)
Thus, there is a finite pool of money for politicians to spend on governing the people, assuming they want to stay in office. This must be split between defense, healthcare reform, and a million and one other things. Add this to the fact that a politician has a sitting end and a thinking end, and since his livelihood depends on his seat, there's not always much reason to bother with the other end.
What does this have to do with the military? Well, as an institution it's reaping the benefits of getting jack **** from the Clinton Administration and still doing its job. Now most people in the public (most of whom, statistically, do not know a serviceperson personally or thus really have a clue about what they do) AND in congress (most of whom have never served in uniform) think that the Clintonian budgetary levels are more or less perfectly fine, that the Boys in Blue (and green) can go conquer various tinpot dictatorships at the whim of the President and the Congress, and they can still drive their Range Rovers to soccer practice. What a deal! We don't have to give up anything! The fact that we're now sending the Army and Navy on 9-month-to-year-long deployments hasn't really registered in the collective consciousness because, as I mentioned before, the average American does not even know a serviceman or woman. That's the job you sign up for, though, ours is not to question why, etc., but off that tangent before I get myself in trouble.
What does this mean for buying jets? Well, in order to push any new airframe through a (highly politicized) procurement process you have to strike a compromise between capability (which is expensive) and affordability, which lets you buy enough airframes to make said capability worth it. Plus you need to buy a plane with the right capabilities for the mission, how good does it do air-to-air versus air-to ground, etc. So when you don't have a definite air-to-air threat or impending nuclear war, like now, Tomcats and Intruders (both incredibly good specialists) are supplanted by Super Hornets (cheaper and reasonably good enough at everything). If today's geopolitical situation occurred in the 70s, would we have Eagles and Tomcats? Hell no. Why? Well, good enough is good enough, while perfect costs too much and too much of that gets politicians voted out of office when they have to raise taxes. It's what you have to sacrifice with civilian control of the military and no Soviet Union waving nukes around to scare everybody (what Korea will do to that mentality is anybody's guess). Don't forget too that all these programs (Hornet E/F, JSF) are holdovers from the pre-Sept-11th days when shark attacks were all the big news. Not as much of a military threat then, which is why Clinton got away with pandering to the soccer moms (and banging their daughters when they weren't looking
) like he did. In short, you never get what you want, you get what the people of this fine country issue you.
Anyhow, just two cents (more like a buck fifty actually) from an opinionated A-pool Ensign with way too much time on his hands. Corrections and ad hominiem attacks always welcome. And no, I don't have anything against minivan-driving soccer moms, after all I'm the son of one.
I do have to admit that the "hot-rodding" the Su-37 idea does sounds pretty damn cool though
. There was an article on the WWW about it somewhere awhile back, but I can't find it now.