I think we probably agree, or at least mostly.Tyyr wrote:I think there's a certain degree of polishing the cannonball that we do indulge in far too much, I can't argue that. However I also think that for someone like us the need or I suppose you could say desire to have significant influence the world over as well as global commitments to our allies you either have to get the most bang for your buck in terms of the equipment you do buy because you're likely to be outnumbered wherever you go or you have to be willing to raise a huge military in terms of raw numbers. Well since we threw the draft out and went all voluntary we couldn't guarantee ourselves a huge number of recruits so we went for the most bang for our buck with every piece of kit.GrahamKennedy wrote:Well they'd have the same drive the real military does on that front; if they're going to be called on to fight then they'd want to win.
Of course they might think something like the F-22 was overpriced and over-capable... "why be five times better when it's good enough to be two times better" sort of thinking. But to be honest I'm not sure they'd be at all wrong in thinking that. A LOT of people think the US overspends on expensive super-toys rather than getting what they need for a decent price.
Yes, the US does need the best equipment; you certainly can't argue with the results of recent wars in terms of how successful the policy of buying the best has been.
That said, you don't always need warp speed death machines. The A-10 is slow, cheap, simple, tough - the air force hates it precisely because it's NOT cutting edge tech, but it proves to be massively good at what it does, over and over. When you're bombing Taliban in Afghanistan, there's a lot to be said for a platform like that.