The U.S. and its allies could not have conducted recent operations in Libya and other areas without the Bell-Boeing MV-22 Osprey, says Marine Corps Commandant Gen. James Amos.
this has probably been asked somewhere but too lazy to search.
what are the differences in the army avaition mission requirements that make the v-22 unappealing to them?
same for other allies.
thanks
Will the extremely high cost of these new airframes make us a more risk-adverse population in Naval Aviation?
The Marines desperately need the A-29 (Super Tucano) or even the AT-6B. It could provide CAS in places like Afghanistan, be a natural in the FAC-A role, as well as escort Ospreys wherever they go. Plus, they're cheap. This is probably too logical & apparent ever to happen. I'm sure they'll put a couple of wings of F-35Bs into this role. At a time when the DOD is starrting to run out of $$, the USMC really seems to have an aversion to cheap aircraft (lately). Am not trying to stir the pot here, just stating a point of view.
Anyway, I think the best thing would be for us to lease two squadrons of turboprop CAS planes, one training, and one in theater. Take UH, AH, and strike guys, train them to fly the props, then deploy them as a B-billet assignment.
Once the OEF gig is over, maybe those guys could start doing foreign military training for some of these POS foreign air forces we're helping to set up.
Since I grew up with (and currently fly) tired, bent, POS aircraft, I don't have any frame of reference for this...but I wonder: Will the extremely high cost of these new airframes make us a more risk-adverse population in Naval Aviation? In other words, will the fact that it's currently a Class-A if you fart in the general direction of some of these newer birds make the pilots more "timid" than they were in the past? Or, will the fact that MALS/AIMD can't just shit parts on demand...or, in the worst case, Uncle Sam won't just shit us a new plane on demand...make commanders more hesitant to send us into harm's way?
It just seems that at $50-100 Million a copy for your average warbird nowadays, and in the face of the current budget situation, we're going to have a more finite pool of resources than ever before.
I think the same phenomenon can still happen to some extent with older equipment, e.g. "They aren't making any more of X, so we'd better not break it."