On page 50 (previous page) of this thread there was talk about RAAF & Shornets, here is a recent article quoting retired AVM Brown about such matters that will interest some to be posted on the RAAF thread probably - so anyhoo.
Crafting a Fifth Generation Combat Force: The Perspective of Air Marshal (Retired) Geoff Brown 24 Nov 2018 Robbin Laird
My response will consist of a rant followed by a digression, then I will present a counter argument regarding the SHornets and finally write something to make the post relevant to the Canadians.
First off, the rant.
What does AVM Brown mean by “maybe the Poseidon and Triton” (grumble, grumble). Clearly he must have been a fighter pilot. Some platforms are keystones. Both the F-35 and P-8a are of this nature. When it comes to maritime denial missions, the P-8 is a dangerous platform, at least if it were armed with something like LRASM. Fast combat jets don’t have the range.
Think about a carrier group. By the time it was in range of land based tactical AirPower, the carrier airwong would also be in range to attack back. Plus all those cruise missiles the escort ships would bring. That is assuming the carrier even had to get in range of land based tactical aircraft to complete its mission.
The network out at sea should be built around P-8, enabled by Triton, cube stats, JORN, etc. just as tactical air power is built around the F-35, using it’s enablers. AVM Brown sees everything revolving around his fighter jets, but that is only one paradigm of AirPower. Possibly fighter pilots get too much say?
Ok, rant over. Next, the digression.
For the benefit of some readers, we should expand on how the F-35/Growler concept works. The F-35 is LO, but only in shorter frequencies typical if targeting radars. This effectively reduces the range of those radars allowing first engagement against opposing aircraft and creating gaps in SAM radar coverage that can be exploited. However longer wavelength search radars can detect a stealth fighter (stealth bombers being a different kettle of fish).
This is where the Growler comes in. The jammers can inhibit search radars, at least at range. So the F-35s become hard to track as well as hard to target. Furthermore, the Growlers have detection equipment that can receive, categorise and give a bearing on all sorts of emissions, even mobile phones. Three Growlers supporting a strike package can triangulate to give a location then hand the information over to the F-35s. So they complement LO aircraft nicely.
Let’s consider the alternative approach of using 4th gen aircraft with long range cruise missiles to overcome a strong integrated air defense. The cruise missiles will take losses to the air defences and those that get through won’t always hit the most desirable targets. So it would take a lot of missiles and a lot of time to neutralise those defences. In war, the idea is to get inside the enemy’s initiative cycle. Otherwise he will recover from your attacks and maintain organised resistance. This slow and clumsy approach isn’t going to win air superiority. Particularly if your side doesn’t have intergrated air defences of their own and the opposing airforce starts attacking your airfields.
Now, if we were to combine those cruise missiles, at least if they were comparable in range with the F-35 and had data links, with the F-35/Growler group, most of those missiles would get through and the F-35s could direct them onto the best targets (bearing in mind the F-35 is as much a sensor platform as it is a strike aircraft). So a better outcome would be achieved more quickly with the resources employed. The F-35 is often predicted to gain escort drones in future, but the only difference between drones and cruise missiles in that one aspires to get the former back. Cruise missiles would make fine wingmen for F-35s, particularly in light of the F-35’s main failing, which is lack of payload in stealth mode.
So there is state of the art tactical air power. Overcome their defences as rapidly as possible, follow up by destroying as much of their airforce as possible on their own airfields, then roam around bombing at will. The F-35 doesn’t do it all by itself, it needs the Growlers, AWACS and possibly the cruise missiles (not necessarily launched from air platforms).
Ok, digression over. Now, finally, my response regarding retiring the SHornets.
The SHornets were a stop gap between the F-111s and F-35s. Given the F-35s will need up to another decade to be brought into service and mature in capability, the SHornets have to hang around until the late 2020s. But should the RAAF retire them at that point in favour of more F-35s? The currently building tactical Air Force will be the bees knees for a decade or two. But it won’t cut the mustard forever. At some point the RAAF will have to start thinking about jumping on the 6th gen bandwagon. See, if the SHornets were still in service in the early 2030’s about when the next generation of aircraft are getting close to production, the RAAF would have a good arguement to replace its worn out Hornets with the new replacement design. At least the public and pollies could be convinced that way.
I don’t think we need to rush to hasty decisions on exactly when to retire the SHornets.
So what should the Canadians make of this exchange between two Australians? Clearly the AirPower debate in Australia is more sophisticated. This is because Canadian pollies have set the bar so low that the debate is on which single platform is best rather than talking about air doctrine as a whole. Of course the National defense strategy has to be agreed on first, as doctrine follows from that. The politicians have turned your National defense debate into a farce, something to be deflected rather than addressed.
Defence Connect
A recent UK study claims Australia now ranks just below Canada and deserves a place in the G8. Canadian pollies need to wake up or they might find other countries over take Canada and those Canadian pollies won’t be so important anymore.