No they should not cancel the F-22. I think the air force needs at least 60 more for a total of 243 F-22s and they should still keep the F35 going.
F-15 Eagle, If the F-22 and tanker programs are not stopped where do you suggest the extra money will come from to keep the other programs running at 100%?
By cutting the budget of the F-35 by 10% it will result in more than 20% reduction in numbers.
If you directly take money from the F-35 program to buy more F-22's, then vy ordering 100 additional F-22's it will reduce the number of F-35's by potentially 500 aircraft. By trying to do the right thing you end up with less capability as 500 F35's are far more valuable than 100 F-22's.
You say the F-15 fleet is too old but by ordering 100 additional F-22's you would have 400 LESS aircraft in total. That means by going with the additional F-22's you put MORE strain on the F-15 fleet not less.
We both agree that the F-22 has the best aerodynamic performance but it does not make economic sense. The true aerodynamic performance of the F-35 remains hidden from the public eye for good reason. In my opinion the USAF does not want the public knowing how good the F-35 really is as it makes the F-22 look like a huge waste of money.
Once the F-22 production shuts down the public will find out just how good the F-35 is at air dominance. Efficient is the best word to describe the F-35.
The current KC-135 is over 50 years old and thats way past the 1/3 mark. Some aircraft are already showing cracks and fatigue in the airframes. A new tanker is needed soon and it can't wait.
Nope. The average number of flight hours on the KC-135 is only 12,000hours. The airframe is certified for more than 36,000 hours. At the current high level operational tempo the KC-135 can keep flying for another 30 years before the fatigue life runs out.
For your information, all aircraft as soon as they fly start growing fatigue cracks they are just extremely small. So even though the KC-135 has fatigue cracks in the airframe they are not an issue and can still fly for many decades before they reach critical size.
Please re read my post regarding the short term cost difference between keeping the older aircraft and buying new ones. It makes no logical sense replacing the tanker fleet now if you have a short term cash flow problem such as a recession.
The USAF can easily wait 10 years until the recession ends and the war in Afghanistan is over.