Todjaeger
Potstirrer
Unless and until NZ decision-makers realize and understand the potential threats (or at least some of them) and therefore the rationale and utility of having and maintaining an ACF, including everything required to actually operate and sustain itself, then yes, stating that it is essential to raise an ACF is futile.So rather than futile, I would argue that it is essential that the current RNZAF capability is raised.
The NZDF budget as a whole entity likely has sufficient funding to start raising an ACF, but to do so would further wither existing NZDF capabilities, including ones which are also essential to NZ and all too often, already too small and underfunded/resourced.
In short, buy-in from policy and decision-makers is required, so that the additional funding and resources can be provided so that everything needed to raise an ACF could be done. This means being able to recruit the additional personnel to serve in the ACF as pilots and groundcrews or aircraft & ordnance maintainers. There would also likely be a need for additional base facilities (more aircraft so more hangars, likely expanded fuel storage and delivery, etc.) and/or even more bases used, with an associated increase in personnel to guard, maintain and utilize the expanded or additional facilities. Then there is the cost for base expansion, in addition to the costs involved in establishing and implementing a fast jet training syllabus, as well as the actual purchase of the fast jet trainers and fast jets themselves. I could keep going, but it should be clear by now that significant additional resources would be required, likely costing billions. To provide some context for numbers, a contract for 16 F-16 Block 70 to be built in Greenville SC by LockMart for Bahrain was signed in 2018 for USD$1.12 bil. which works out to a rough flyaway cost of USD$70 mil. per aircraft. Six years later and with US inflation numbers at 40 year highs... The flyaway cost for a mere dozen is going to approach if not exceed USD$1 bil. and honestly if NZ were to be raising an ACF, two dozen or more would likely be necessary to provide an actual, credible capability.
This all leads back to the question of how would the NZDF and RNZAF be able to afford to purchase and build everything which would be required by an ACF, as well as recruit, train and then retain all the additional personnel which would be needed either for the ACF, or to replace existing RNZAF personnel who transferred from their current posts to the ACF.
I just do not see Treasury and other policy and decision-makers in NZ increasing the NZDF budget beyond the existing ~NZD$4.2 bil. to anywhere near what would be required to start the multi-year process of raising, training and then establishing an ACF again. I do not see any such increase in Defence funding ever happening until those able to authorize such an increase actually start to realize and understand (and admit, at least to themselves) how precarious NZ's security situation really is.