To say it's a strike fighter or Super Hornet replacement is not enough. Why not just continue buying F-35C or a NASCAR F-35? What are the requirements and operational concept for a near peer war in the Pacific, especially Taiwan scenario? For the AF, air superiority is an easy sell. The vulnerability of land bases are a concern. But the reality is that if you cannot operate from air bases in the First Island Chain you cannot defeat a Chinese invasion of Taiwan.Let's be honest here - with the state and speed of shipbuilding, by the time the man himself leaves office, this ship will still be nothing more than a render - for better or for worse. I think I'm less worried about the carriers. I'm more worried about DDG(X). The USNI article on this seems to indicate DDG(X) getting the axe in place of this:
The implications of that can (and should) be in it's own thread so I won't go into that
I still don't think F/A-XX is going anywhere. Yes - I could be wrong - but I think there really isn't another option that sensibly replaces the capability F/A-XX brings for naval aviation. It makes little sense why this administration would beat around the bush for F/A-XX when they have not at all been shy or hesitant about killing or starting new programs. For an administration who really isn't known for being subtle, if they really wanted to axe F/A-XX, they would have come out and done that - and then patted themselves on the back for "cutting dead weight"
I've said this before, but I still get the sense that the navy hasn't sold congress or the powers that be on the use case and cause for any of their programs, especially compared to the air force. Before anyone thinks I mean different - I'm not trying to say F/A-XX's intentions weren't clear in the normal sense - F/A-XX was from the start a strike fighter replacement for the hornet. What I AM trying to say is packaging this as a strike fighter replacement for the hornet really isn't enough of a sell for politicians.
The USAF has not only been clear, but also very demanding in both the equipment they need for the future as well as how they will be operated. From the NGAD concept to CCAs and distributed operations - they've been vocal, clear and focused on that all the way back in the mid 2010's (and possibly earlier). They didn't just run about with the PCA part and dabble in CCAs. They framed their use case, their operational concept and defined in sensible terms which pieces of equipment would enable that operational concept. Even with Kendall's review, the focus and the core operating concept still has not changed, even as the USAF has rolled back a large number of organizational changes. At the very least, the past 10 years of this messaging has yielded real fruits - LSRB was awarded and built, two incr1 CCAs prototypes are in testing, the F-47 contract awarded, and recently another 9 vendors for incr2 chosen for prototyping. In contrast, the navy seems hesitant and 10 years late to commit to a number of things the USAF have gone balls deep into - NGAP engines, CCAs, distributed sensing etc. It's plan for shipbuilding and ship procurement is and has always been a mess. MASC/MUSV/LUSV seems to have major program changes every year or two. Now S-M-L USV programs all got collapsed down to the MUSV/MASC program. DDG(X) remains a power point render (and now completely gone apparenlty). The only thing off the top of my head that the navy seems to have done successfully in the past 10 years was work on CPS and that was done in tandem with the Army. Otherwise, the navy seems to have trouble deciding what to do, what can be done, and how to go about it.
I've been digging through the past threads on NGAD and F/A-XX and it's extremely fascinating to see how much the focus has been on NGAD and not on F/A-XX. NGAD's unmanned and PCA elements have been screamed about for at least 10 years now. During these last 15 years, the MSM, the government and all the way down to us forum nerds have talked and talked NGAD and NGAD's PCA / unmanned elements to death and back. We've gone through relevant technologies, we've dug out patents and most importantly, from these technologies, we've been able to piece together the ways in which NGAD, CCAs, distributed sensing and EW and F-47 PCA will work together, but F/A-XX has almost always been the after thought. We're on page 45 of this discussion and at least half of this thread has just been us reiterating and chewing on past info. Even as we say the words "strike fighter", what does that entail in terms of capabilities, weapons carried, required technologies and operational use? Is it a pure strike fighter like the A-12? Is it strike + a good enough air to air complement like the F-18's were in their heyday? Will it be carrying out the EW role too? When officials say it complements the F-35's role, what does that really entail? Which roles is it performing that an F-35 can't? How does that fit into the navy's plan to fight a high end war? What does the navy's plan for fighting the high end war even look like? Does the navy even have a coherent plan?
We have good guesses. We have authoritative forum members who have given us valuable information, but what we don't have is the kind of clear, consistent and bold messaging. Indeed, much of what the navy desparately needs can't really be packaged neatly into a shiny new operational concept like USAF's agile combat employment could (even though I'm 100% certain I've seen the navy put out their own version of this, just named differently). But even so - a more active and coherent job could be done here I think. You can say what you say about Allvin and Kendall, but they did a terrific job selling what they wanted.
I can feel two glowing laser eyes staring holes into my back so I'll say it before he says it - yes, I could play the FOI game with the government quellish, but ultimately, the slightly more informed people like us forum nerds aren't the ones making decisions. The good-for-nothing politicians, and by extension the general chock-full'o-idiots public, who may or may not know what the F-18 hornet actually does, or ever thought about how an operational concept might fair in an opening clash with the enemy - those are the ones making the decisions. If the nerds here aren't willing to do FOI, those guys certainly aren't going to take the time to think through these ideas. The navy doesn't owe us clear answers about anything, but then people are free to think whatever they want about your demands. Then when the next administration enters office and appoints people that were not in the know before, it isn't surprising that they've formed their own, no so friendly opinion of you. So if the navy fails to make it clear to them why F/A-XX is important and frame it's importance as dire enough (and that might be hard to do given the nature of the program), then delay after delay is the logical conclusion when times are tough. And in decisions concerning the department of the navy, times have never been tougher.
This is compounded by the incompetence of Navy leadership. Has the AF every purchased a useless full buy of combat aircraft like the Navy did with LCS?
Regarding the F/A-XX award Vago Muradian thinks it will be NG. A few weeks ago Steven Trimble thought it was Boeing but this seemed more to be a hunch while Muradian seems to have had inside information. Trimble also said he thought it would be awarded this year. If it is not then the competition would have to be restarted.