Recently the US Secretary of Defence highlighted the dilemma that advanced, and thus expensive, platforms such as naval ships and aircraft are posing for the military. In particular their cost results in far fewer platforms that is desirable. We have seen this already impact smaller nations such as New Zealand which moved away from deploying jet fighters some years ago. Recent announcements in the United Kingdom will result in the reduction of the Royal Navy fleet of destroyers / frigates to not much more than a handful. Long range maritime anti submarine aircraft are being phased out altogether. Even the United States cannot afford more than a dozen B2 bombers and numbers of F22’s are lower than initially planned which perversely expands per unit costs even more. I suspect F35 procurement will be lower than currently projected.
I know we often focus upon the quality, the performance of individual platforms. However Stalin once said that quantity has a quality all of its own. In his war huge numbers of simple T34’s drove smaller numbers of more capable Panthers and Tigers from the Russian homeland. Do larger numbers of more austere platforms have a role in the future? For example would a squadron of propeller driven light counterinsurgency aircraft be more effective than a single Apache attack helicopter? Would a squadron of small simple but nimble jet fighters perhaps carrying modern munitions do the job of a F35?
My concern is if such options are not created we shall find an increasingly number of western nations being unable to field a worthwhile military capacity. Many of these nations currently face the implications of an economic recession but the issue is in fact long term. Their populations are aging and the focus on their governments will increasingly be health and welfare.
The situation for many nations is not that much different from Soviet Russia when in the last days of the cold war they were unable to keep up investment in the arms race without driving their economy down. Western democracies won’t do this; they will reduce their military budgets first.
Without change toward more affordable platforms the military capacity of the west will wither.
So what are the options?
I know we often focus upon the quality, the performance of individual platforms. However Stalin once said that quantity has a quality all of its own. In his war huge numbers of simple T34’s drove smaller numbers of more capable Panthers and Tigers from the Russian homeland. Do larger numbers of more austere platforms have a role in the future? For example would a squadron of propeller driven light counterinsurgency aircraft be more effective than a single Apache attack helicopter? Would a squadron of small simple but nimble jet fighters perhaps carrying modern munitions do the job of a F35?
My concern is if such options are not created we shall find an increasingly number of western nations being unable to field a worthwhile military capacity. Many of these nations currently face the implications of an economic recession but the issue is in fact long term. Their populations are aging and the focus on their governments will increasingly be health and welfare.
The situation for many nations is not that much different from Soviet Russia when in the last days of the cold war they were unable to keep up investment in the arms race without driving their economy down. Western democracies won’t do this; they will reduce their military budgets first.
Without change toward more affordable platforms the military capacity of the west will wither.
So what are the options?