Reddington777
ACCESS: Top Secret
- Joined
- 23 March 2025
- Messages
- 688
- Reaction score
- 2,216
I mean during war time, that's absolutely true, but during peace time, it's hard for me to believe that the IRS hasn't picked up enough taxes from the world largest economy - service based or not - in order to pay for military hardware even if that military hardware does cost more to produce due to lesser manufacture ability. Although I will say I am basically illiterate when it comes to economics.I think we shouldn't forget that a large portion of the US economy is service based and other "useless" stuff (useless in the context of war fighting capability). While the Industrial sector accounts for a higher percentage of the Chinese economy.
At the risk of having another ignorant hot take, I think given how far PLA aircraft can reach from their own shores, I see the air force as having a critical role in rolling back the CAP umbrella before you can meaningfully attrite their IAD network. So if by secondary role, you mean that the air force would be providing most of the air superiority / air cover for the navy, then yeah I'd agree.But the Navy, much more than the AF arguably, has to think very well about their investments right now. Because when things go south, they're the ones taking on the PLAN, PLAAF and PLARF virtually alone with the USAF playing a secondary role.
The way I've always thought about it was that in the north and south pacific areas, operating from old WWII air strips, building mobile road bases (unless the Seabees ain't a thing anymore) and using existing airports are problems of diplomacy rather than feasibility. Sure, they are all within range of PLA missiles, but that's why we have the ACE doctrine. If having dispersed operations isn't going to save us then the west pacific is a lost cause.
The central pacific would primarily be the navy's responsibility but CSGs and strategic air force assets can work to provide cover and situational awareness for each other. It could help provide greater defense and awareness from hypersonic threats and attacks from enemy aircraft. It could also providing safer air space for refueling aircraft. I'm expect the F/A-XX to survive/hold its own against Chinese air superiority assets and adaquately drive off most enemy aerial threats, but I don't expect it to be doing the major lifting during offensive counter air ops.
If you can sufficiently attrit PLA aerial assets and start to get within stand in weapon range of IAD ground units, then I can see the Navy taking a more central role, but even then I don't consider F/A-XX and F-35s to be sufficient in maintaining temporary air superiority to allow for strikes to happen. That is unless I'm sorely underestimating how capable F/A-XX might actually be.
IMO whether the air force is a player there or not depends on whether politicians and diplomats can do their jobs correctly and whether or not we have a sound western pacific strategy that can enable the air force to deploy in a distributed manner. If the diplomacy progresses as it currently is going with this administration, then the air force will be useless. With the air force out of the picture in that theater, I highly doubt the navy can stand its own against the combined strength of land and naval based assets there.
Last edited: