I was rattling your cage a bit as you were a bit of a moving target with the name, but mea culpa anyway....Bunels (BTW, why persist with the r - his name isn't Brunel)
I was rattling your cage a bit as you were a bit of a moving target with the name, but mea culpa anyway....Bunels (BTW, why persist with the r - his name isn't Brunel)
Interesting thread... but to go back to topic, why would anyone with good sense risk the most expensive air-to-air fighter ever built on air-to-ground operations ?
Good to know that given its characteristics it can also perform secondary air to ground missions, but USAF will most likely never use it in such a role. Neither will the only other air force that could eventually one day buy it (the Japanese).
Somebody will end up commenting on ASW role soon enough
cheers
I guess it all comes down to the usual argument mission-specific jets versus multi-role ones. For air forces that can afford to operate and maintain more than one type, I believe it makes sense to buy pure fighters on one side and fighter-bombers on the other side.Obviously some have more good sense than others. There is nothing secondary about the F-22's air to surface capabilities both now and, more so, into the future.
The reason is simple. It is all about achieving and maintaining the Air Power State known as 'Air Dominance'. It is the one which closes the loop on weapons' effectiveness and, by definition, is above the state known as 'Air Supremacy' which, in turn, is the state above 'Air Superiority'. After all, that is what this particular air power system was actually, in an engineering and operational sense, designed to achieve. Others that have not been designed with air dominance as their charter from the ground up are now trying to be bootstrapped into this league by the marketeers with their hype and spin.
The 'salesmen's' attempts at trying to make out their machines are 'air dominance fighters' (aka pseudo 5th Gens) is one of the reasons why Don Gaddis is copping so much flack in the Pentagon and the trade mags at the moment. Systems alone do not an air dominance fighter make!
Kicking down the door on Day 1 is not all about air-to-air kills - far from it. It is about being able to do both, at will, plus a whole lot more (eg. data hovering, etc) throughout the whole air combat continuum, while staying outside the other guys kill envelope, whether he be in the air or on the surface.
Sorry if I missed previous comment to this effect, but with retirement of F-117, isn't F-22 the most logical choice among current operational aircraft to undertake its mission?
Considering the expense of maintaining F-117's and the capability of F-22 to do it faster, better and with lower risk of loss, it seems like a decision that would appeal to ops and bean counters.
I completely agree, but that might be a good topic for another thread.Real War isn't going to be some air show pirouhettes at 1,200'. Real war against America is going to mean about 600 missiles heading your way, a couple hundred bombers/fighter bombers mowing in, your air defense network, air bases, command and control...ect getting smashed on opening night and never being able to recover.
Is the USAF still pursuing the idea of using the F-22 in the F-117 role or are there too few F-22s approved at this stage for this to happen? I agree with you and Scott that the F-22 seems a logical choice for this mission. If more F-22s are approved for procurement what are the USAF's priorities likely to be regarding their roles?Scott,
This is correct and it was announced by Defense Secretary Cohen back in cc 2001 that the F-117 role would be replaced by the F-22. Just goes to show how BS belies history and facts. The BS artists never let such things get in the way of their good "spin" stories.
I think there is a post on this with the actual 2001 report and news articles from 2001 up on the Air Power Web site. If you are interested, you might try the Media page or use the search engine.
The F-117s are being retired as we speak and replaced at Holloman AFB with F-22s. This has been widely reported for over a year now but clearly, like GeorgeW, the Australian Department of Defence does not read newspapers.Is the USAF still pursuing the idea of using the F-22 in the F-117 role or are there too few F-22s approved at this stage for this to happen? I agree with you and Scott that the F-22 seems a logical choice for this mission. If more F-22s are approved for procurement what are the USAF's priorities likely to be regarding their roles?
Cheers
Tasman,What is the current status of the proposed FB-22 variant of the Raptor? Is it dead or is the development of this concept still occurring?
Cheers
Surely you mean Gulf-2? I can't recall any strikes on Iraq on the first night of Gulf-1. The Iranians were taken by surprise. And who were their allies?... The reality is more like the opening night of Gulf-1, with lethality and accuracy multiplied by a factor of X, when an enemy air defense network is knocked on its arse by a combined arms air offensive. The Allied pilots in Gulf-1 were starving for Iraqis to come up and fight however after the opening night of the war the Iraqi air force had already lost the war. ....
Oh no. I remember it. I just dont want to turn the thread into a Iraq/Iran thing. Even tho its a fairly fascinating war to study.Surely you mean Gulf-2? I can't recall any strikes on Iraq on the first night of Gulf-1. The Iranians were taken by surprise. And who were their allies?
Tut-tut, Rich. A war that lasted 8 years, & you forget all about it.
Given the overall differences with strike weapons in the modern era it has comparatively the same strike capability as the F-15A had in it's time.The Strike Raptor?
Back in 2002, when there was significant opposition in Congress to award production contracts for the F-22, the USAF began beefing up the multimission capability of the fighter. They even renamed it the F/A-22.
--- from the USAF factsheet:
The program received approval to enter low rate initial production in 2001. Initial operational and test evaluation by the Air Force Operational Test and Evaluation Center was successfully completed in 2004. Based on maturity of design and other factors the program received approval for full rate production in 2005. Air Education and Training Command and Air Combat Command are the primary Air Force organizations flying the F-22A . The aircraft designation was the F/A-22 for a short time before being renamed F-22A in December 2005.
From wikipedia:
In September 2002, Air Force leaders changed the Raptor’s designation to F/A-22. The new designation, which mimicked that of the Navy’s F/A-18 Hornet, was intended to highlight plans to give the Raptor a ground-attack capability amid intense debate over the relevance of the expensive air-superiority jet. This was later changed back to simply F-22 on December 12, 2005. On December 15, 2005, the F-22A entered service.
While the USAF did remove the silly "F/A" designation, they have continued with air-to-ground weapons integration.
Again, from the USAF Factsheet:
The F-22A has a significant capability to attack surface targets. In the air-to-ground configuration the aircraft can carry two 1,000-pound GBU-32 Joint Direct Attack Munitions internally and will use on-board avionics for navigation and weapons delivery support. In the future air-to-ground capability will be enhanced with the addition of an upgraded radar and up to eight small diameter bombs. The Raptor will also carry two AIM-120s and two AIM-9s in the air-to-ground configuration.
I'm not saying its a good idea, or that they actually plan on using the Raptor to attack ground targets. But, they were forced to add enough ground attack capability to keep funding.
Regarding Mr. Cohen, he was SecDef until Jan. 20, 2001, so if he announced that the F-117 would be replaced by the F-22, it would almost certainly have to have been before that, but not before Jan. 24, 1997 when he was sworn in as SecDef.Scott,
This is correct and it was announced by Defense Secretary Cohen back in cc 2001 that the F-117 role would be replaced by the F-22. Just goes to show how BS belies history and facts. The BS artists never let such things get in the way of their good "spin" stories.
I think there is a post on this with the actual 2001 report and news articles from 2001 up on the Air Power Web site. If you are interested, you might try the Media page or use the search engine.