![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Recent media reports have characterized the USAF's X37 spaceplane as
an attempt to move warfare to space. The USAF denies the X37 is a weapon, and USAF supporters have gone further stating its not even a potential weapon. Meanwhile, the USAF's view of its true purpose has not been plausibly explained. While the average American may be reassured that his Air Force isn't escallating war to space, the first thing he really ought to be asking himself is does he want his military spending his money on things that aren't weapons. If the X37 isn't a weapon or potential weapon, then everyone involved ought to be run out of the USAF for not doing their job. Of course, it is a weapon. No one in the USAF is stupid enough to spend money on non-weapons. Which brings up the question of why to spend any money on a new frontier of warfare. At present, the USAF can beat the top three or four air forces in the world in an air war all by itself. With just a little help from the USN and USMC, it can beat all the world's air forces combined. Is there any need for capability expansion? But for the most part, the USAF is a lost service, still wandering around after over 60 years of existence trying to define a separate mission for itself. And going to space is just another attempt to do that. But is control of space relevant? Its clearly based on an expansion of the idea that control of enemy airspace wins wars. But control of enemy airspace has not brought victory to the US in Iraq and Afghanistan, where its completely unchallenged, and did not bring victory in Viet Nam or Korea. Nothing has really changed since the day Winston Churchill wrote that even if all German cities were rendered largely unhabitable, it did not follow that Hitler's control of them would be lessened. Even in the nuclear age, simulations at the war college showed that distructive nuclear exchanges between the US and USSR did not cause either side to quit. Yet the USAF has squandered our money for over six decades trying to disprove this, and is now doing it again over the control of space, with the additional devious twist that they're not working on a potential weapons system. Large manned bombers have been obsolete since the development of ICBMs, yet the USAF still has hundreds. In conjuction with the USN and USMC, there is enough air power to beat all of our enimies and friends combined. While George Bush turned many from the friends to foes column, not everyone hates us. Not yet, anyway. The USAF has ample advanced aircraft to fulfill any actual mission within the capability of air power. Those missions are air cover and ground support for the people doing the real work, the US Army and USMC , and defense of what is actually the US. And, considering the poor job the USAF has done on a mission it can actually accomplish, ground support, those aircraft should be placed under US Army control. Its time to hand most of the boys in blue their pink slips. If they want to do something militarily useful, they can learn how to dig foxholes. And while we're at it, let's scrap about half of the USNs carriers. Because if the locals won't provide us with airfields on the ground, they don't like us well enough we ought to be fighting there in the first place. We don't need miltiary control of space. Control of enemy air space is proven not to win wars. And we don't need enough aircraft for a situation where every country in the world hates us. Unless we're going to elect Sarah Palin as President. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
University of Tokyo spaceplane to launch from space station | [email protected] | Piloting | 0 | January 24th 08 09:55 PM |
University of Tokyo spaceplane to launch from space station | Gig 601XL Builder[_2_] | Piloting | 0 | January 24th 08 08:45 PM |
FAA EEO SCAM | FAA EEO | General Aviation | 0 | October 6th 07 04:43 PM |
SCAM | [email protected] | Soaring | 0 | August 26th 05 12:26 AM |
Scam Y/N ? | Stuart King | Instrument Flight Rules | 6 | November 13th 03 10:52 PM |