Well Italy and Spain each have two, but yeah we have like ten, and then another eight Wasp-class amphibious assault ships, which are basically comparable to other countries' carriers since they can launch STOVL and helos, plus the ACV's. Is this overkill? Not for me to say. But it's a lot easier to sleep at night knowing our Navy is better than the next dozen or so combined.Despite all this doom and gloom, we are the only country in the world to have more than one carrier if I recall correctly. If not, no one has nearly as many as us. I think we'll be ok, but like Fog said, this will definitely lead to a change of policy.
Despite all this doom and gloom, we are the only country in the world to have more than one carrier if I recall correctly. If not, no one has nearly as many as us. I think we'll be ok, but like Fog said, this will definitely lead to a change of policy.
Agree…America seems to be everyone's "Favorite Sugar Daddy" these days. Whoever read a pleading headline from (fill in your crisis spot…) that read "Why Doesn't Norway DO SOMETHING???"There no doubt that the rest of the world has been free-riding under the blanket of collective security we've provided since the end of WWII. With shrinking defense budgets in nearly every country in Europe (Norway being the notable exception), that's not going to change anytime soon.
I suspect that this is going to be the norm until the west has a sustained period of economic growth. Even if the Europeans move toward a more collective approach (be it NATO or EU based), those kind of consensus demanding bureaucracies tend to not react well in crisis mode when you have to get troops downrange yesterday.
A tip of the hat to the French, however…for Mali...
A tip of the hat to the French, however…for Mali...
Phase IV …yeah…that. Shitty "implied and included tasks".Funny you bring that up, since I've literally been at the center of that whole thing in the Chairman's office as the French came begging... begging for US support. Fascinating to watch all the political machinations run their course. It's an extraordinarily complex issue, but suffice it to say that the French bark is a lot worse than their bite. That said, they've done a pretty nice job of turning things around militarily, but as we've all learned recently, it's phase IV that tends to be the real ass-kicker.
Bonnes chances, mes amis!
So…we agree?..Who needed us (USAF) for a ride to the fight and to get gas while on the way/there. I think that helps the point that our defense spending is what it is because so much of the world lives under a protective blanket paid for by the tax payers of the U.S.
That said, they've done a pretty nice job of turning things around militarily, but as we've all learned recently, it's phase IV that tends to be the real ass-kicker.
Considering the "militia" that they've been leading was pretty much the Mali's under-resourced military until a coup last year, I wouldn't exactly call it a substantial "military" victory. As long as they don't get into the nation building scene that is in vogue as of late, they should be fine. I'd imagine something more like along the lines of a Bosnia-like intervention. Oh yeah, and recently heard, Amadou Sanogo - the aforementioned leader of the militia? Yeah he went to TBS...