Reuters
Brendan Nicholson, National Interest: F-35: A Mistake or Super Weapon?
"It’s often claimed that the RAAF would be better off with the US F-22 Raptor, a bigger, twin-engine cousin of the F-35 produced in the 1990s. In reality, the F-22 is an air superiority fighter very good at clearing the skies of enemy aircraft but not designed to do other tasks as well as the JSF can. It was expensive to buy and operate and the assembly line closed years ago."
One of Australia’s most experienced military aviators, Squadron Leader Andrew Jackson, is a RAAF instructor teaching pilots from a range of nations, including the US, to fly the JSF. Jackson is one of two Australians who are flying the F-35s from the US to the Avalon air show in Victoria over the coming days. He says it’s vastly better than any fighter he’s flown. ‘This aircraft will give fighter pilots a level of situational awareness that far exceeds legacy platforms,’ Jackson says. ‘Experiencing this level of capability first hand is something every pilot dreams of.’
This first appeared in ASPI’s The Strategist here back in 2017.
Perhaps apocryphal, the story goes that a senior US Air Force officer on the Joint Strike Fighter Program found himself sitting next to a Chinese general. ‘I like your aeroplane,’ the General said. That’s nice,’ said the American, How many would you like?’ The general smiled and raised a single finger. ‘Just one,’ he said.
Read more ....
WNU Editor: This analysis is from an Australian perspective. But from my point of view .... this fighter jet is years late, over budget, and its performance reviews when put beside planes like the A-10 when it comes to ground support or against other fighter jets in other operations is still being kept from the public.
That was such a terribly written and uninformative article, especially considering the title and source..
ReplyDeleteRussia And China Are Developing Impressive New Weapons Systems In Preparation For Looming War
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteAnon, haven't read the article and seldom do when I see it's NI. A bunch of speculation that usually can be boiled down to a few sentences that answer the title's question. If there is an answer.
Fred,
ReplyDeleteThanks for the link on this. Actually I have been pointing this out for sometime. Far from being some kind of superpower victory for America in such a war is not only far from certain but may be problematic at best. The last sentence about not making wise choices is particularly spot on. In the case of being faced with this, perhaps going out of one's way to pick fights with certain powers may not be the wisest course of action. In fact, I think a case could be made that such actions are the hallmark of insanity.