You know, I'm not sure they would know we were there. The SPYs are normally turned off and even the -49 radar is switched off at night unless we're in an exercise(which I recall we were, we had spent the day shelling some atoll).SilverHawk wrote:
Active avoidance of high powered radar locations would be a good start. Flying over a pair of Ticonderoga-class cruisers seems like a good way to get spotted. But that's just me.
And only my ship was a CG, the other was a DDG.
Fine. Let's turn on the Way Back Machine(tm) and see what the USAF and politicos were sayingin the early 90s about it:Glad we established this is all hearsay and speculation then. You know, since the point of debate is to use verifiable sources and not what you heard circulating around a ship.
Key Senate Backer of Stealth Bomber Sees It in Jeopardy
By ERIC SCHMITT,
Published: September 14, 1991
WASHINGTON, Sept. 13— The Stealth bomber, already imperiled by shrinking military budgets and a diminishing Soviet threat, was dealt another setback today when a key Democrat who had supported the program in the Senate warned the Air Force that the B-2 was in jeopardy.
The action by Senator Jim Exon of Nebraska was the most significant erosion of support for the plane since the Air Force told Congressional leaders this week that the B-2 had failed a test of its ability to evade enemy radar.
"I am not closing the door on the B-2," Mr. Exon said, "but I wish to send a very loud and very clear signal that they had better get their act straightened out or the program will die a fast, rather than a slow, natural death."
Senate aides said that Mr. Exon, who heads the Senate Armed Services subcommittee on strategic arms, consulted with Senator Sam Nunn, a Georgia Democrat who heads the Armed Services Committee, before he made his statements today.
Mr. Nunn, the Senate's leading supporter of the B-2, was briefed on Tuesday about the technical deficiencies by the Air Force Secretary, Donald B. Rice. On Thursday, Mr. Nunn said in a statement that he did not consider the problem a "permanent setback.'
Opponents of the bat-winged aircraft, which is built by the Northrop Corporation, have long criticized the plane's cost of $865 million a plane, and have challenged the need for a long-range bomber to penetrate Soviet air defenses since the thawing of cold war tensions.
But the plane's technical abilities had been largely above reproach. The concession now that the plane may not be as stealthy as promised could seriously weaken the program's support in Congress.
At a news conference today, Mr. Exon said, "The Air Force's credibility is now at a new, all-time low in the halls of Congress." He expressed frustration at conflicting accounts of the B-2's problems that he said were coming from different Pentagon officials.
"The powers that be in the Pentagon are going to have to sell me on the program all over again," he said. Drop in Company's Stock
Northrop's stock closed today at $22.875, down $1.50 in trading on the New York Stock Exchange. Northrop's stock has dropped $4 in the last two days.
In an attempt to defuse the brewing crisis, Mr. Rice met with reporters at the Pentagon today, saying, "I would not characterize this as a major problem." He refused to give details, citing the program's highly classified nature.
But the Pentagon's spokesman, Pete Williams, said on Thursday that if the B-2 "continues to have this problem, then it is a major problem."
Mr. Rice said today that the Air Force had created a special advisory panel, composed of scientists from the Air Force and military industries, to make recommendations. He said the panel was expected to report back by the end of next month.
Bad news about the B-2 could not have come at a worse time for the plane's supporters. House and Senate negotiators started work on Wednesday to reconcile their differences on the B-2 and other programs in the $291 billion military budget for the fiscal year 1992.
The Air Force wants to buy 75 of the planes at a cost of more than $60 billion, including 4 in the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1. The Senate supports the Air Force request, but the House has voted to cancel the program after the 15 planes Congress has already ordered. More than $30 billion has already been spent on the program; three planes are flying test flights.
Mr. Exon canceled a meeting today with House negotiators and withheld support for the B-2 at least until next Tuesday, when he said he would meet with Air Force Gen. George L. Butler, the head of the Strategic Air Command, for a detailed briefing on the program's problems.
Congressional critics of the Stealth bomber said they would use new evidence of flaws in the plane's ability to elude detection by radar as ammunition to cancel the program.
"The statement by the Air Force that the B-2 is not living up to its advertised technical capabilities just adds to the reasons the plane should be terminated," said Representative Ronald V. Dellums, a California Democrat who has opposed the aircraft because of what he says is an obsolete mission.
As details of the B-2 flaws dribbled out today from under the veil of the highly classified program, a major opponent of the B-2, Representative Les Aspin, a Wisconsin Democrat who heads the House Armed Services Committee, remained conspicuously silent on the issue.
"We're not saying anything about this," said a senior aide to Mr. Aspin, who met with Mr. Rice for an hour on Thursday.
Senator John McCain, an Arizona Republican who opposes the Stealth bomber, said today that the deficiencies "clearly weaken the B-2's position in Congress."
But Stealth bomber supporters rallied to defend the plane, which they say could play a crucial role in the early hours of a regional crisis like Iraq's invasion of Kuwait last August.
Senator John W. Warner of Virginia, the ranking Republican on the Armed Services Committee, said the technical deficiencies "were not substantial" and would not delay the program.
Asked if the flaws had weakened the Senate's bargaining position in the conference with the House, Mr. Warner said the Senate negotiators would "deal with the cards we have."
Pentagon officials have also expressed concern about the technical flaws, but Mr. Williams, the Pentagon spokesman, said that the B-2's failure on a test flight at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., on July 26 was not a "showstopper."
Mr. Williams refused to discuss the flaws in detail, citing classified information, but he ruled out problems in the shape, design or production of the plane.
He said the Air Force and Northrop "were confident they knew what the problem was," but he said he could not predict whether the proper fixes could be made or how much they would cost.
Mr. Rice, struggling today to explain the technical problem without disclosing what he described as top secrets, said, in essence, that the B-2 had failed to show an expected improvement during a test of one component in the plane's overall radar-evading ability.
Mr. Rice said even with the flaw, the B-2 was still better able to evade detection in the one problem area than the F-117, a hero of the Persian Gulf war and the Air Force's stealthiest plane in operation. But he refused to say whether the flawed B-2's overall radar cross section was smaller than the F-117's.
The Air Force has long asserted that while not totally invisible to enemy radar, the B-2 would be extremely difficult to track, casting an image the size of a "hummingbird."
In a statement on Wednesday, Mr. Rice said that "testing had confirmed the fundamental soundness of the B-2's Stealth design," a conclusion certified by the Defense Science Board, the Pentagon's chief scientific adviser.
In a recent report to Mr. Rice, the defense board said, "Although we think the Air Force should be commended for their open and forthright approach, we recommend that these early diagnostic testing results be treated as preliminary data."