- Reaction score
- 35
- Points
- 560
An interesting site to surf: http://worldatwar.net/chandelle/
It is in the form of an internet "magazine", which covers various aviation topics. Of interest is the March 1998 "issue" with an article on COIN: French counter insurgency aircraft 1946-1965, and Nov-Dec 1998 Tigers and Lions in Paradise: Siri Lanka's Civil War. This same issue also talks about "Combat crop dusters"; a black program to harden and potentially arm crop-dusters to carry out spraying operations against narcotics fields in South America.
Various other articles throughout the site talk about trench strafing and "contact patrol" aircraft from the end of the Great War, so there is an overall view of the evolution of CAS from 1918 to the end of the insurgency in Siri Lanka.
One thing that becomes clear overall is the evolution of CAS aircraft is a drawn out and expensive program to create a small number of specialized aircraft with few other possible roles; one reason air forces in general hate them. The resources needed to devote to this role are great, and with the end of the war you are left with a bunch of planes parked at the end of the runway and no one willing to pay for them. In the back of the mind is also the feeling that the next time there is a call for this service, the existing fleet of airplanes will be obsolete or operating in an unsuitable area they were never designed for (imagine if the British had carried out operations in Turkey in the early 1920's, flying heavy and underpowered Contact Patrol aircraft in the mountains of Anatolia....).
Certainly the A-10 is operating in a much different environment than envisioned in the 1970's when it was designed, and some of the factors above are indeed in play (the EW, SAM and GBAD environments are orders of magnitude more lethal than they were 30 years ago, while masses of armoured targets are no longer a factor on the battlefield).
It is in the form of an internet "magazine", which covers various aviation topics. Of interest is the March 1998 "issue" with an article on COIN: French counter insurgency aircraft 1946-1965, and Nov-Dec 1998 Tigers and Lions in Paradise: Siri Lanka's Civil War. This same issue also talks about "Combat crop dusters"; a black program to harden and potentially arm crop-dusters to carry out spraying operations against narcotics fields in South America.
Various other articles throughout the site talk about trench strafing and "contact patrol" aircraft from the end of the Great War, so there is an overall view of the evolution of CAS from 1918 to the end of the insurgency in Siri Lanka.
One thing that becomes clear overall is the evolution of CAS aircraft is a drawn out and expensive program to create a small number of specialized aircraft with few other possible roles; one reason air forces in general hate them. The resources needed to devote to this role are great, and with the end of the war you are left with a bunch of planes parked at the end of the runway and no one willing to pay for them. In the back of the mind is also the feeling that the next time there is a call for this service, the existing fleet of airplanes will be obsolete or operating in an unsuitable area they were never designed for (imagine if the British had carried out operations in Turkey in the early 1920's, flying heavy and underpowered Contact Patrol aircraft in the mountains of Anatolia....).
Certainly the A-10 is operating in a much different environment than envisioned in the 1970's when it was designed, and some of the factors above are indeed in play (the EW, SAM and GBAD environments are orders of magnitude more lethal than they were 30 years ago, while masses of armoured targets are no longer a factor on the battlefield).