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SupersonicMax said:Don't forget, we are talking about NORAD here. I am not talking about having you overseas. When is the last time that Canadian Land faced an artillery threat? I'd guess pretty much never. Hence, the requirement to maintain equipment and personnel to man this, for a practically non-existent threat. The capabilities of the ADATS were severly limited by range and max altitude...
And DCA and OCA and Air Interdiction and ISR...
The capabilities of the JSF are not questionnable. Having been exposed to those, I can tell you that the ausairpower website is a bunch of bull.
How do you conduct Air Interdiction with an Attack AH or a UAS? How fast can you move from 1 AO to the other? How do you do DCA? In our last 3 operationnal deployments, we have done anything but CAS.
What air threat does Canada face on Canadian soil? Russian Bears? Suicide Cessnas's? Is the threat such that it requires $9 billion in assets to counter, or could we simply save 1 or 2 billion and get a similarly capable jet (Gripen, etc) for the threat.... if we just want to launch something up to watch for shipping, subs, and do ISR HALE/MALE UAS are a cheaper option. If we want something to chase away 1960 era Russian relics like the bear than a Gripen, Super Hornet, or something similar would suffice. If we're talking about a near peer force on force where we anticipate Gen 5 OPFOR, than I would also suggest that the ability to have a GBAD capability to augment the total of 60 F-35s we would have would be neccessary as well. The threats noted in previous posts include systems which can affect the army in adverse weather (artillery and rockets) or in low cloud cover (small to mini UAS) when the air force may be grounded.
The artillery threat faced in A-Stan (mortars, rockets, the "strategic bullet, etc) and will face in future deployments to unforeseen areas is very real, same as the UAS threat faced by Canadian Army units. The threat of artillery on Canadian soil is similar to the threat faced from Chinese or Russian aircraft. The GBAD is an army SHIELD function permitting freedom of movement of the manoeuvre force. These are real world issues faced on previous deployments (arty) and will be faced in future warfare scenarios, particularly with the available of small to mini UAS for intelligence collection. On a side note, the ADATS was limited only in that there was no HIMAD system in Canada to cover higher level threats... I spent a couple of years on Maple Flag where we did pretty good against you guys, which is surprising since they went to the same spot every year.
Predator and Global Hawk are capable platforms for conducting air interdiction. Future iterations of predator will be jet powered and have stealth features also, which make them entirely capable of this task, plus a CAS and ISR capability. With better loiter times than a F 35 at a fraction of the cost ($10 million-ish per according to the manufacturer) it is an affordable option.
Also, the F35s capabilities are not beyond reproach.... see article below. It notes that there are concerns with performance and the system is still unproven.
http://www.defenseindustrydaily.com/the-f-35s-air-to-air-capability-controversy-05089/