Darth Wong wrote:I understand why any military would always want to be decisively superior to any other military on the planet in every qualitative way. There's an obvious impetus. However, maintaining constant decisive superiority is incredibly expensive and drains resources from your overall economy that could have been used for other things. Every other country in the world tries to get by with mere military parity or competency; the US militarily outspends the rest of the world combined because they insist on much more, and they have real trouble drawing a line between what they need and what they want.
What we need is a plane which is superior
now so it will be equal in the future. This isn’t the 1950s any longer when the military can get two or even three new jet fighter designs per year, whatever is bought now must be good enough to last another thirty years. That’s a damn long time to project what our enemies might do, or who they might even be.
The F-15 was far better then any other fighter when it rolled out, so much so that people insisted we could get by with upgrades of existing planes. The military successful y defeated those critics, and the result is the US can still fly an F-15 with confidence today. It is however now no better then equal to a number of foreign designs, and certainly inferior to at least two.
Trying to cut corners on design for cost now will just ensure that we need a replacement much sooner, and for far more money in total. Cutting corners on production ensures that the fleet will age quickly, and have no fresh aircraft in warstocks to be rotated into service, so we can't make the force last a long time no matter what we want to do.
Again, I understand the reasons why the military thinks this way, but they have become accustomed to basically bullying the civilian government for what they want, which harms the original purpose of the military. Remember, the military exists for the good of the country, not the other way around.
Yeah but the military is really not asking for that much, its just that everyone else demands fuckloads of money for things we never had the federal government pay for before. In the 1960s, before even the Nam war broke out US military spending was over 60% of all US federal government spending and about 9% of the economy. If either of those figures was still true today, the military budget would be more then twice as big as it is today. Heck even 60% of the US federal spending which is not funded through deficit would still be hundreds of billions more for the military.
The last time spending was proportionally anything like as low as it has been the last 15 years it directly led to the near defeat of the US by North Korea, a nation that had existed for all of five years and had a relatively small pile of Russian hand me downs for armaments. Meanwhile we drive UP the cost of many pocurment programs because in ordered to save money one year, congress will cut R&D budgets. That means work goes slower then optimal, extra years get tacked on (which also leads to ever more changing requirements being factored in) and the end result is a much more expensive program. Then they decide to save more money by slashing production numbers, and then wonder why each weapon now costs so much more. This kind of retarded environment ensures that the military has no inactive at all to offer realistic cost projections in the first place.
"This cult of special forces is as sensible as to form a Royal Corps of Tree Climbers and say that no soldier who does not wear its green hat with a bunch of oak leaves stuck in it should be expected to climb a tree"
— Field Marshal William Slim 1956