Navigator wrote: ↑Tue Jun 29, 2021 10:08 pm
Adding a few more things, ran out of time earlier.
I agree with Trevor that Westmoreland was a disaster for the Army. He fought in WW2 and Korea, so he thought the same things would work in Vietnam (firepower overwhelms enemy). Johnson would have followed whatever advice Westmoreland gave. In fact, its why over 500K soldiers ended up there at the height of the war. The whole bodycount thing was misplaced thinking, again, that you win by attrition (WW2/Korea). Yes, I know people will say WW2 was not attrition, but it kinda was. We were able to get into Germany because they ran out of quality soldiers.
Yes, Westmoreland's running of the Vietnam war was not distinguished, but you can't place all the blame on him. I agree the body count policy was misplaced, but that is exactly the kind of policy that appealed to McNamara who was his boss. Westmoreland actually wanted different strategies but was overruled by Johnson who had various political constituencies he had to appease.
I also agree with Trevor that Aircraft carriers are obsolete. They would have been in the Falkands too if the Argentinians had a modern submarine. They are basically a handy airfield when you need one, but with air to air refueling, you can base your aircraft in the general area and be ok. Carriers are vulnerable both to submarines and to being overwhelmed by missiles. Yes they have escorts, but they too can be overwhelmed by missile swarms. Missiles with multiple targeting (infrared/active radar/passive radar) flying in at Mach 2+. Hypersonic are even deadlier (almost no time for anti-missile missiles to react).
And yet increasing numbers of countries are building new carriers. Either all these countries are stupid or the "experts" are getting it wrong. I think the latter is more likely. Aerial refueling is and will remain a necessity, but tankers are extremely vulnerable targets. They are slow, unmaneuverable and almost too important to lose. While a European war would have a lot of airbases to work out of, the situation is quite different in the Pacific which is the area of concern now. The closest US base to China (excluding Okinawa which may or may not be available in a crisis) is Guam. The next closest US base is Wake, 1,500 miles away. That's within ferry range for combat aircraft, but barely. The USAF actually started upgrading Wake last year. After that you have Midway, 1,200 miles away with even more limited facilities and than Hawaii, 1,100 miles further east. You're seeing the problems here?
And guess what, land bases don't move so they're even easier targets to hit with missiles. Oops! Guam is the only defended island with a THAAD battery and an Aegis ashore site planned but not under construction yet. For carriers you first have to find them and then get past the aircraft it carries and 2-3 Aegis ships full of missiles designed expressly to defend carriers.
Of course this debate will only end when it comes to a US vs China war. And I bet the Chinese have a warstart strategy that involves taking out carriers before their defenses are primed and ready.
That would difficult since only 1-2 would typically be within range of Chinese forces.
Carriers equipped with F-35s would be the bad guys dream, as this plane is an out and out disaster. Any research online will show that. But again, for absolute proof, we have to wait and see a real combat test. Anyone building a carrier right now is making a giant budgetary mistake. Much better to put the money into modern submarines.
You are completely wrong here. The F-35 is currently the best aircraft flying with the possible exception of the F-22 for certain roles. You need to understand that there has been more information published about the F-35 than any other aircraft and that there are people with interests in portraying it in the worst possible way to suit their agendas. There are some 12 countries already operating the F-35 with more to come. it just today was announced as the winner of the Switzerland contest and Finland is due to announce a winner later this year.
Submarines can deny territory, but not control it. They also are poorly suited to attacking land targets. Carriers excel in those two tasks. Again, there are an increasing number of countries building carriers and they seem to believe they are good ideas.
Next topic: We will need millions of infantry replacements once a real war starts. This has been the case in every major power vs major power war. We will have to take all of the people that cannot enlist right now. It will take at least an extra month or two to get them into shape. The Army will take the drastic measures it needs to to get people into shape. This will have to include almost starving those overweight and running them through a longer bootcamp that is much more strenuous than the current program. They know how to do this.
Last topic: China imports a lot more than oil. Most important to them is going to be food. In the end this is how I predict we win. The Chinese will starve their population in the prosecution of the war.
We won't need millions of infantry because no one will ever have that many infantry again. Even China has been downsizing its military over the post decade or two. Modern infantry simply cost too much and need too much support to be used en masse.
China will run out of fuel before food. Any war would result in a complete halt in tanker deliveries to China and pipelines are inadequate to make up that lost volume. At the same time military operations take a lot of fuel.