but its also about threat scenario and threat likelihood as well flexibility of response. don't get me wrong,. I'm all for response flexibility.All aircraft are resource intensive, the question is how much more intensive is it to place them on a ship verses than put them on a land base and what additional capacity does that give you if you do?
again it gets back to scale and scope of that threat. sustained response requires different force effect. at some point, the nature of our own SLOCs would see others stepping up as coalition partners very very quickly, that doesn't mean that you abrogate responsibility etc... but its part of the vignette assessment when you establish what you're about to throw into the fire.The other question is what other method would you used to protect your lines of communication that would be better, cheaper or safer?
The Jeep Carrier concept with just one of the New Electric Catapults which is now coming on line making catapult launch far more practical for smaller hulls, could lunch and recover all of the big carrier’s type aircraft though the Jeep itself is far too small to be used as an operational base. But it would work just fine for launching an E-2D every 6 or eight hours.
true, but any flat top holding E2's or equiv has become an automatic preferred target - and that means you need proper fleet support as every man, dog, LR air striker and sub will be looking to chalk it up - you can't avoid cost and then the associated cost benefit analysis that must accompany it
at a public perception level maybe - within the military? decidedly and unequivocably not. SLOCs for an island continent like australia are primary issues, 98% of our trade is by sea, we straddle critical delivery lines, we sit astride 2 large oceans where the neighbourhood could get testy quite quickly. one of the reasons for subs and LR PGM's having greater focus is because subs pound for pound are far more cost effective at causing a disproportionate shifting of an enemies military resources to find or avoid them. More than any other maritime asset, subs cause navies to stay in port, cause commercial shipping to remap their routes, cause naval fleets to call up other assets to protect and interdict etc.... They are one of the best manned INT assets available (as we've seen in the gulf). Out of sight, out of mind to the blissfully ignorant, but always lurking.I know that the problem of keeping your lines of communication open is not a sexy one in today’s imagination.
there's a break point when carriers are more viable, I'm just not convinced that in the scenarios that we do game out that a RAN flagged carrier would change our outcomes - at the elevated theatre level then we won't be fighting alone irrespective of what nationalism and idealism would prefer us to do.