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I've just found it on NavyNewsStand:
"From Commander, Naval Air Forces Public Affairs SAN DIEGO (NNS) -- Commander, Naval Air Forces has identified an excess of student naval aviators (pilots) in the training pipeline, based on current and near-term fleet needs. Starting immediately, several steps will be taken to meet future fleet requirements. Commander, Naval Air Forces and Commander, Naval Education and Training Command are committed to identifying and training the number of aviators necessary to meet fleet requirements. The reduced requirements are due to several factors, including the accelerated transition to the F/A-18E/F Super Hornet from the F-14 Tomcat, the sundowning of the S-3 Viking community, and the disestablishment of two EA-6B Prowler squadrons. [...]" The most of these facts seem obvious, but what about these two deactivated Prowler squadrons? One of them is expeditionary (land-based) VAQ-128, but what about the other? Do you have any ideas? Best regards, Jacek |
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"MICHAEL OLEARY" wrote:
Actually, the other VAQ squadron was VAQ-143 which never moved beyond the precommissioning stage. So, the jets and the training throughput were used elsewhere in the community. However, the replacement is the EA-18G. IOC for this aircraft is supposed to be 2009. How many has Congress funded, appropriated the money for construction, and are underway at Boeing? Last I heard, USAF is still pushing the F-22 variant, or, worst case, insisting some of their gear be used on the EA-18G in addition to, or vice some of, the Navy gear. And remember [and this is neither pro- or anti-Bush, just recognizing a fact of Congressional life], while Iraq is going on, the military ain't gonna get the toys they thought they were going to get, pre-Iraq. Not without Congress cutting lots and lots of pork projects that they ain't gonna cut. "Supposed to be" were almost the right words. I'd add a "was" in front of that. Too long [gack!, twenty-mumble years] out of the USMC, all of it spent watching Ft Fumble and the workings of the "greatest deliberative body in the world"/"the greatest pork production body in the world" on Capitol Hill across the river for sport, I won't believe in the EA-18G, or its IOC, until the first production aircraft rolls out of the Boeing hangar doors. -- OJ III [Email to Yahoo address may be burned before reading. Lower and crunch the sig and you'll net me at comcast.] |
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Ogden Johnson III wrote:
"MICHAEL OLEARY" wrote: Actually, the other VAQ squadron was VAQ-143 which never moved beyond the precommissioning stage. So, the jets and the training throughput were used elsewhere in the community. However, the replacement is the EA-18G. IOC for this aircraft is supposed to be 2009. How many has Congress funded, appropriated the money for construction, and are underway at Boeing? Two prototypes building now, I believe, with additional test aircraft in the next couple of years. You and I both know that Congress doesn't fund procurement in advance and the program isn't at the stage where mass production is possible. But there was something like $400 million in the FY 05 Appropriations bill for EA-18G development, and it looks like the EA-18G is included in the current multiyear procurement authority for Super Hornets. So it's not a certainty, but it's far from vaporware. Last I heard, USAF is still pushing the F-22 variant, Unless they've hung an arresting hook on the plane, it's not a starter for the USN. In any case, what has been talked about for the USAF in the same timeframe is more likely B-52s with jammer gear. The JSF/F-35 is also being talked about. I've seen no one mention the F/A-22 as a jammer recently. -- Tom Schoene Replace "invalid" with "net" to e-mail "Our country, right or wrong. When right, to be kept right, when wrong to be put right." - Senator Carl Schurz, 1872 |
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In article . net, "Thomas Schoene" wrote: You and I both know that Congress doesn't fund procurement in advance and the program isn't at the stage where mass production is possible. But there was something like $400 million in the FY 05 Appropriations bill for EA-18G development, and it looks like the EA-18G is included in the current multiyear procurement authority for Super Hornets. So it's not a certainty, but it's far from vaporware. Last I heard, USAF is still pushing the F-22 variant, Unless they've hung an arresting hook on the plane, it's not a starter for the USN. In any case, what has been talked about for the USAF in the same timeframe is more likely B-52s with jammer gear. The JSF/F-35 is also being talked about. I've seen no one mention the F/A-22 as a jammer recently. USAF is struggling simply to preserve the F-22's it has. Looking for new missions for them, especially when it will cost additional development money, is not going to work. You're right that the USAF is considering B-52's with jammer pods. Another option being considered is supplementing these with UAV's for close in jammer work, but they don't have a lot of power to spare. The USMC is conducting a study of using the F-35 in this role as well, because they do not want to buy the Growler. I have no idea how they can claim that they lack the money to buy Growlers but will somehow find the money to develop a dedicated F-35 variant. But studies are relatively cheap. I expect that in the end, if the EA-18G can be made to work, the Marines will eventually buy some. D |
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