fallsfromtrees wrote:Ensign Re-read wrote:snip
BTW, back to one of my earlier questions... Just WHO OWNS THE DESIGN of the A-10? In theory, could the Elbit Systems company have the right to build new ones?
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They probably do, but they almost certainly will not get the ITAR (International Traffic in Arms Regulations) approvals to export them outside the US, and there is no customer inside the US that wants to (or will be allowed to) buy them. I addition, is there still a central mission to the A10 as currently designed. Would it not be better to refine the design, since the requirements for a CAS are totally different that those required for an air superiority fighter, which is all the Air Force really wants - they just can't justify building a new air superiority fighter when the F22 can already blow anything anyone else has out of the sky. They also want control over everything that flies (at least fixed wing). So the A10 has to go, since it doesn't fit their vision of the what aircraft should look like. I wouldn't be surprised if sometime in the future they attempt to convince some president that the Navy shouldn't have pilots - we'll just put some AF pilots on board the aircraft carriers, and the Navy can just run the ships. And eventually, try to get all of the helicopters under their control as well - "It'll be much more efficient if all of the flight training is centralized in one service".
I agree about ITAR.
Theory and practice are two completely different things.
As for the rest of your post, I hope you were being sarcastic. Yea, there's bound to be a lot of Air Force officers who think that way. That's why I dream of a future SecDef who will have the guts to rip up the Key West Agreement, and then transfer the A-10s to the Army. Let THEM do the CAS (Close Air Support) mission.
Heck, you could even still keep the units in the Air Force, just have the "ownership" be by the Army.
One problem with doing this is that A.F. personnel would be dealing with a "brain drain" issue. In other words, A.F. personnel may not see the A-10 units as a relevant career path. (Think about the Missileers that have been in the news lately.) One possible fix would be to put new language in the same modified Key West Agreement that says something like future promotions to the General rank would be dependent upon an officer having served in a CAS unit, regardless of if it's "owned" by the Army or Air Force.
Pie-in-the-sky dreams, I know.
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