B-2, F-117 and B-1b cannot enter enemy airspace unescorted if there is even the slightest chance of there being enemy fighters.
what absolute unmitigated rubbish. did you read any of the comments made re the detection issues for the F117 - read Bandits over Bagdhad - contributions made by stinkbug pilots, AWACs controllers and blue aircraft in WVR corridors. what do you think TAC planners do? Targets generate system responses, not platform responses. The F-22 isn't some lone ranger riding in to smite the enemy, it works in with established doctrine.
what credible knowledge do you have ony any of the OP requirements for any of those aircraft? None, zip nada. All of it is an Opsec issue. The most data we have in the public domain is the aforementioned - and that nullified any of the typical fanboy comments about where and when these planes could/can be used.
These aircraft are far from invisible and are defenceless. They also have massive restrictions on day operations unless your fighting with arabs carrying AK-47's.
and what info is available to you (or anyone else in the public domain) on the restrictions applied to B1's and B2's? You have no idea about what battlespace local management these aircraft have. Stop pretending that you have implied knowledge.
The F-22 is the only aircraft that can by itself go into extremely high risk area's with enemy SAMs, CAPs, AWAC's and destroy a ground target DAY OR NIGHT!.
You persist in making these asinine comments about what the aircraft can do - and yet there is not one scintilla of info in the public domain which supports it.
As one of the qualified Flight Test Engineers and Aircraft Engineers has already said - stop making comments about aircraft capability of which you have no knowledge. There are people in here with a security level of Protected and above, and none of them make grandiose statements about technology and future doctrine. It would be worth your while to stop acting like an aircraft and capability expert and at least make some effort to qualify your statements.
As has been repeatedly asked by one of the aviation and flight test engineers - what are your qualifications for you to make such bold statements?
Of course the best option would be B-2's escorted by F-22's.. but now we have two aircraft.
The only downside to the F-22 is it poor range for a bomber.
welcome to the real world where response is delivered by a system and not by some mythical single platform capability.