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F-22 Raptor Cancelled

BayaWeaver writes "Slate reports that the F-22 Raptor has been cancelled by the Senate. At an estimated price tag of $339 million per aircraft, even the powerful military-industrial-congressional complex couldn't keep this Cold War program alive in these hard times. They look very cool though and have appeared in movies like Hulk and Transformers. But not to worry too much about the future of the military-industrial-congressional complex: the F-35 Lightning II begins production next year! As a side note, in 2007 a squadron of Raptors became deaf, dumb and blind when they flew over the International Date Line."

48 of 829 comments (clear)

  1. Poor Title by MozeeToby · · Score: 5, Informative

    Reading the title and summary would make you think that the entire program has been cancelled and the planes aren't going to be used by the US military. This is not the case. The Senate reduced the number of aircraft being produced such that no additional planes will be made. The F22 is already in service and will remain in service for quite some time.

    1. Re:Poor Title by Kamokazi · · Score: 5, Informative

      The cost is also a little misleading. Additional units cost ~$130M each (which is still expensive as hell), the $339M figure is total program cost plus build cost divided out per aicraft. That number only decreases the more we produce. So if we ordered another singe aircraft, it would not cost $339M.

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    2. Re:Poor Title by Reason58 · · Score: 5, Funny

      The cost is also a little misleading. Additional units cost ~$130M each (which is still expensive as hell), the $339M figure is total program cost plus build cost divided out per aicraft. That number only decreases the more we produce. So if we ordered another singe aircraft, it would not cost $339M.

      If that is the case then why don't we keep building them until they are free? As a bonus, we will have an unstoppable Air Force. Oh wait, we already did before the F-22.

    3. Re:Poor Title by Luyseyal · · Score: 4, Informative

      Having read about the F-35, I can see why the administration and the Pentagon would favor it over the F-22.

      -l

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    4. Re:Poor Title by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 4, Funny

      no it wont. it requires extensive upgrades because the RAM or the skin of the aircraft cannot survive a rainstorm. it does not have a working heads up display on the helmet. the canopy blisters and peels with exposure to sunlight. it does not communicate with other aircraft because the electronics are deficient. it requires 44 HOURS of maint for every hour in the air. the raptor is a pile of crap and will eventually be phased out.

      So it is a high maintenance dry night fighter. Reminds me of my girlfriend ...

       

    5. Re:Poor Title by bjdevil66 · · Score: 4, Informative

      The per unit cost is so high because, unlike past US-built fighters and the upcoming F-35, it is illegal to build an F-22 and sell it to another country, per Congressional mandate. Because there are no other customers available besides the US, and because the US has enough of them (for now), there's no way to take advantage of the economies of scale that could be brought to bear with continued production.

    6. Re:Poor Title by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 4, Funny

      What, she also has advanced stand-off capability?

    7. Re:Poor Title by jpmorgan · · Score: 4, Informative

      Interesting? Wrong more like. The cost of the program is $39,000M + 187 * $130M. The marginal cost per plane is $130M. $209M of the $339M is the upfront R&D costs, and that money has already been spent. /. should replace the new account captcha with a math exam.

    8. Re:Poor Title by sunking2 · · Score: 4, Interesting
      That's a nice twist of the numbers that is severly warped because of initial one time costs. If you compare it by calendar year as the plane approaches maturity you see 2008 numbers of 18H/1H, and so far in 2009 that is down to 10.5H. Keep in mind that the contractual requirements are 12H/1H once the plane reaches 'maturity', which is 2010. This is a goofy number anyway because it has more to do with how they pace it. It's not like someone has a monkey wrench on it for 3 days straight if it flies for 4 hours.

      As another comparison, the cost per hour in 2008 was $19K, compared to the F15 which was $17k. History shows that this typically goes down as the plane matures and is ironed out

      I'm not arguing it shouldn't have been cancelled, but to outright bash it isn't being honest either. I'm hoping we don't find ourselves in a situation where we were wishing it hadn't been canceled because that means we're in a much bigger mess than we currently are in Iraq/Af.

    9. Re:Poor Title by flitty · · Score: 4, Funny

      Also, an interesting point from that conversation (IIRC), was that The computer in the F22 is unhackable because It's based on 1989 IBM code, and most modern military jamming/hacking equipment doesn't know how to obstruct code that old.

      --
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    10. Re:Poor Title by timeOday · · Score: 5, Interesting
      The F14 is a good cautionary tale for the F22. They were expensive, high-strung, kick-butt air superiority fighters. And they saw more action in Top Gun than they ever saw in real life. The total number of engagements by the entire fleet of F14's you could count on one hand.

      I do believe in designing and building these things to stay sharp, but not thousands of copies in peacetime. (And yes, this is "peacetime" so far as the F22 is concerned - they have flown 0 sorties over Iraq and Afghanistan, and why would they?)

    11. Re:Poor Title by je+ne+sais+quoi · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The F-14 did the same thing when it was first deployed until the Navy worked the bugs out of it. Once they did it was arguably the best carrier-borne air superiority aircraft of all time.

      I'm blowing my mod points to respond, but I had to: The way things are going, the F-22 will never get the bugs worked out because it's NEVER been used in combat. According to the NYT article:

      But the F-22 has never been used in war, and the Pentagon's focus has shifted to simpler weapons needed in Iraq and Afghanistan.

      So great, we've already spent billions of dollars on a plane that is not helping us win the wars we are currently fighting. Fat lot of good it will do us to have incredible advantage to fight against China or someone else in the future if we lose our current wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The time to stop worrying about the future is when it started impinging on your ability to cope with the present. The F-22 is designed for a war that hasn't happened, but for the price of ONE F-22 ($97 million), we can buy nearly NINE A-10 Warthogs ($11.7 million each), which actually do help us win our current wars. The F-22 should have been canceled, and more so, 187 should never have been bought in the first place.

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    12. Re:Poor Title by Shakrai · · Score: 4, Insightful

      France isn't known for checking with us before they sell military hardware, either.

      Actually the worst offender in this arena isn't France or Russia -- it's our "major ally" Israel. At least when the French and Russians sell hardware to our adversaries they are selling stuff that they designed with their own resources. The Israeli's are all to happy to sell stuff that we designed.

      --
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    13. Re:Poor Title by PopeRatzo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Considering that they fly far above the clouds, the rainstorm shouldn't pose much of a problem.

      Really? Do they take off and land from 25,000 feet, too?

      Each one of these planes requires 44 hours of maintenance for every hour in the air, as someone has already mentioned. They are obsolete, and they have gone over budget by a factor of 3 or more.

      The F-22 is now, and has always been, a boondoggle granted to military contractors by lawmakers who get large contributions from those contractors. As far as I know, no F-22 has ever flown a combat mission. They cost hundreds of millions of dollars and have never been used.

      Meanwhile, we fight over whether a working family should have the god-given right to go bankrupt if one of their members gets sick.

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    14. Re:Poor Title by Dahamma · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Oh, come on. The only country with an air force REMOTELY competitive with the US is Russia, and if the US and Russia ever get in a war, a lot of good a few stealth fighters will be. There is a REASON the superpowers haven't fought a real war since WWII. Did you miss the whole Cold War thing?

      In terms of AF size, China comes in a distant second (about 1/3 the size of the US, and made up largely of ancient MiG21s)

      Plus, the US has *12* nuclear powered supercarriers that can take about 90 aircraft each anywhere in the world. Take just 4 of those carriers and it outnumbers the entire air force of all but about 10 countries worldwide.

      Congress made the right decision. We have spent trillions of dollars on mega-defense projects and equipment has largely been totally unnecessary apart from a show of force to the rest of the world. The fact is, US really doesn't need to keep building $140M fighter planes in today's political landscape (the USAF already has over 180 of them!) Which is good, because we can't AFFORD to anyway...

    15. Re:Poor Title by relguj9 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      As with any complex system it's going to take time to fully integrate it and work the kinks out of the program. I don't pretend to know exactly how many F-22s we need but I do know that once you terminate production it's not a simple matter to start it back up again. That's why I said that we could find ourselves regretting this decision if we find ourselves in a conflict with an actual Great Power.

      FTFA:

      No U.S. soldier has been killed by an enemy aircraft since 1951.

      Production of F-35s actually starts next year and ... the FY 2010 budget contains money to build 30 of them. In other words, Levin said, "There is no gap."

      As someone more knowledgeable than me on another forum eloquently put it:

      The F-22 was more of a research project put into production because of it's gee-whiz capabilities, the F-35 offers a platform to refine those capabilities in a much more capable product for the threats that we face.

    16. Re:Poor Title by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Funny

      So great, we've already spent billions of dollars on a plane that is not helping us win the wars we are currently fighting.

      Oh, now you're nitpicking.

      --
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    17. Re:Poor Title by Senjutsu · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The whole needing F-22s if we ever get into a conventional war with a Great Power thing is a canard. Great Powers have nuclear weapons, so conventional wars aren't possible; we send in F-22s and 8 hours later half the planet is glass.

      Conventional fighting these days is done against guys hiding in caves in third-world countries, and the F-22 does precisely nothing to help in those scenarios.

    18. Re:Poor Title by c6gunner · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Nonsense. Israel has sold US technology ... to India, in order to keep Pakistan in check. How in the world does that make them "the worst offender"?

    19. Re:Poor Title by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      .The F-22 program provides thousands of Americans with jobs.

      So, now the F-22 is nothing more than a jobs program? A regular GOP stimulus package, huh?

      How about we take the money and have those same people build high speed rail? The jobs will last longer and Americans will actually benefit. Plus, high-speed trains have a use beyond killing people (though, to be fair, the F-22 is probably the least efficient way to kill someone ever devised).

      --
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    20. Re:Poor Title by osu-neko · · Score: 4, Informative

      I don't know why they went with the F-22 over the "F-23" anyway. It was a better plane on many levels...

      Both planes met USAF requirements. One was produced by Lockheed, the company that had recently delivered the F-117 on-time and under budget. The other by Northrop, which had suffered delays and extreme cost overruns on the B-2, and McDonnell Douglas, which was having even greater problems with the A-12 bomber (the DoD would eventually sue them over this one).

      The plane may have been better, but the companies behind it where not. Since both planes met requirements and were good aircraft, DoD chose the company with the better track record.

      --
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    21. Re:Poor Title by Shadow+Wrought · · Score: 5, Interesting

      It's not necessarily a superior craft from a combat standpoint.

      My understanding is that the F-22 is much superior as an air-superiority fighter, but the F-35 has more air to ground capabilities. The difficulty with the F-22 is that the F-15 is still the most dominant air superiority fighter in the world, and because of the cost involved in making anythign remotely better, is likely to stay that way for a good long time. The "Super Power" enemies, such as they are, relied on a greater number of less capable aircraft because they couldn't afford the price of the nicer aircraft. So in some ways, the cost of the F-22 making fewer units practical plays into the hypothetical "Super Powers" hand.

      The other factor to maintaining air superiority is the AWACS platforms which can direct the air war over very large distances. I think the West, and the US in particular has a huge advantage in that as well. Plus, as far as protecting our airspace goes, mounting air to air missiles on UAVs is just as easy as air to ground. So we would likely use those to counter any numerical superiority that our hypothetical "Super Power" posses as well.

      Finally, FWIW, I subscribe to the two level theory of war. The first level is the infantry, the second level is everything else: it exists to support the infantry since only the infantry can take and hold ground. Artillery, sea power, aviation, even tanks can deny the enemy ground, but only the infantry can hold it. So more A-10s putting more ordance where the infantry needs it seems a better deal than F-22's holding air superiority over a non-existant enemy air force. IMHO.

      --
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    22. Re:Poor Title by Hognoxious · · Score: 4, Funny

      and has performed beyond all expectations in simulated air-to-air combat exercises.

      Marvellous. If ever the Russkies start a simulated war, we'll be knocking on the simulated door of the Kremlin in two weeks.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    23. Re:Poor Title by anarkhos · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I have news for you: China is funding our wars.

      They don't need to fight us. What, are they going to fund our war against China, too?

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    24. Re:Poor Title by dzfoo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      >> "You'll be eating those words when China unveils their brand new designed-in-secret anti-ICBM system."

      China doesn't have to engage us in war. If they ever get pissed at the U.S., all they have to do is stop investing in our economy and call in all our notes.

      We won't be able to buy ammo or fuel to attack or defend against anything, then. Instant capitulation.

      Now, that's a scenario that we should be fear.

              -dZ.

      --
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      ...Can you save Christmas?
    25. Re:Poor Title by c6gunner · · Score: 4, Informative

      That's not strictly true - the F-22 has a decent internal carriage capability. It can carry two JDAMs plus four missiles internally. For strategic bombing missions that's plenty. If you want saturation bombing, get yourself a B-52 :)

      But yes, your general point is correct - expanding it's payload beyond that does tend to lose you the stealth characteristics.

    26. Re:Poor Title by msi · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The Germans made the same calculations with tanks during the second world war. It turns out that quantity has a quality all of its own.

    27. Re:Poor Title by steveoc · · Score: 4, Funny

      >> As far as I know, no F-22 has ever flown a combat mission.

      The F-22 fought with some distinction against the decepticons in Transformers. They suffered heavy losses, but the proof of their effectiveness as shown in this documentary was enough to convince congress to keep funding the project.

      There are also several novels out there that provide additional hard proof of their combat effectiveness.

    28. Re:Poor Title by Solandri · · Score: 5, Informative

      U.S. Imports from China accounted for about $338 billion in 2008. Exports were about $70 billion. The U.S. GDP in 2008 was about $14.2 trillion, so trade with China accounted for about 2.9% of the U.S. economy. China holds about $800 billion in U.S. treasury securities. Even if you add that (which you shouldn't since it's a dollar amount while the other figures are dollars/year, but let's do it since we're talking about them hypothetically dumping all their securities on the market), China's impact on the U.S. GDP is only 8.5%.

      China's GDP in 2008 $3.9-$4.4 trillion, so their trade with the U.S. accounted for about 9.3%-10.5% of their economy.

      So economically, China needs the U.S. more than the U.S. needs China.

  2. Only $339 million each? by Duradin · · Score: 4, Funny

    With the way the gov't is throwing money I'm surprised anything under a billion registers on their radar. They've probably got rounding errors (intentional or not) that could pay for a whole squadron of these.

  3. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  4. Re:Most deserving by Jeremi · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What's amusing to me is that if you want to education or health care funded in the US, you have to lobby Congress like hell to fund it.

    Conversely, if you are the head of the Department of Defense and don't need or want a pointless weapons program, you have to lobby Congress like hell not not fund it.

    --


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  5. Re:Most deserving by Duradin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You don't build them to use them, you build them so you don't have to use them. You also force anyone who thinks they need to counter them to spend resources on developing and deploying the countermeasures.

  6. Which seems to make sense over all by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 5, Informative

    The F-22 is a cool plane, but there are only so many the US really needs. Reason is that they are not carrier based planes, which is how a great many missions are done these days. It also is more or less strictly air superiority, not multi-role. Ok well there is value in that, while there may not be any current threats to the US, doesn't mean there won't be. You don't have good defense, in the real world or on your computer, by staying complacent. However that doesn't mean that there is the need or reason to roll out tons of the things.

    The F-35 is more suited to a larger scale production because it is multi-role, and carrier capable. Thus with it likely to come out soon (next year if they remain on target) it doesn't make sense to produce a ton of F-22As. The F-35 also has the advantage of having a good deal of support from other nations, which helps pay for R&D and will also bring unit costs down in the form of increased orders.

    So it makes sense to keep the F-22 around for when top-notch air defense is needed, it doesn't make sense to keep building them if an all around more useful plane is going to be coming out. Use what is complete, and use the research from the project on other projects (like the F-35).

    1. Re:Which seems to make sense over all by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 4, Informative

      They blow up other aircraft :D.

      In terms of what makes a good air superiority fighter these days, it is a number of things:

      1) Stealth. If the enemy can't see you, they can't shoot at you. Thus if your aircraft has a low radar signature and thermal signature, you have an upper hand. That was one of the big design characteristics of the F-22A. You'll notice that it very rarely has weapons on the outside. The missiles are instead kept in internal bays. The bays pop open, eject a missile and close quickly. Makes it a hard aircraft to find.

      2) Maneuverability. Even though you aren't dodging bullets any more, dodging is still important. This is in part because no matter how good a missile is, it can still be fooled and evaded. However it is more because to get a missile off, a plane has to have another plane in its sights. So you need to maneuver behind the other guy, then he can't shoot you and you can shoot him.

      3) Communications. This is important for any military vehicle, but particularly fighter craft. A bomber can very well be given targets back at the base and then sent on its way. It follows a pre setup flight plan, unless it has to evade enemy fire. Not so for a fighter. Your objective is to track the enemy fighters/bombers and engage them. More, you want to approach them in such a way they don't notice you. Well having an AWACS tell you where to go via radio is good. Having the AWACS directly cross link target and navigation data to your computer is better (the F-22A does this). Having fighters than can then take over and act as mini-AWACS in the event an AWACS is lost or unavailable is even better (the F-22A does this too). You need to be able to locate targets and coordinate an attack.

      4) Speed. Part of what makes a good fighter good is the ability to be where it needs to be, when it needs to be there. If you've incoming attack craft, you don't have the luxury of waiting. You need to hit them before they are in range of their target. Means your craft has to be able to go extremely fast when needed, even if that means having less payload.

      So it isn't as though multi-role craft can't play fighter, and indeed they do, it is just that you can optimize a craft for the fighter role. Same deal with a bomber. The B-2B is a good example of a pure bomber. It can't defend itself, it is slow, it is larger, etc. All it does is drop a LOT of bombs, and do so unnoticed (hopefully).

      The F-35 should hopefully be the jack of all trades. Should be a good fighter, good bomber, good attack craft and so on. However as such it is likely to never be quite as good a pure fighter as the F-22A.

  7. Re:How many soldiers die if 187 F-22s aren't enoug by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Only because the U.S. doctrine has been to have total air superiourity and the Air Force (and Navy) have been able to achieve it through superiour technology (and training) --- if 187 Raptors aren't sufficient to achieve that in some future conflict, a lot of soldiers are going to die, and that statement will cease to be true.

    William

    Yeah - or you could just stop invading countries. That's a good way of keeping your soldiers from dying.

  8. communications problems by plopez · · Score: 4, Insightful

    they have problems communicating with other planes:

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/09/AR2009070903020_4.html?hpid=topnews&sid=ST2009071001019

    and don't seem to like the rain:

    http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/archives/individual/2009_07/019076.php

    among other things like jammed canopies.

    And it's funny too. People who don't like unions, bloated government and stimulus packages seem to think the government owes them a job when it comes to flawed weapons systems and unneeded military bases.

    But it's nice to see A10s and B52s still in service. Made dack when the US actually knew how to build something.

    --
    putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
  9. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  10. Remote Drones by Herkum01 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Fighters are needed less and less now a days, if we want air superiority we can just put up dozens of cheap drones with Air-to-Air missiles with remote pilots. I am pretty sure they would not cost $100+ millions each either.

  11. Re:Most deserving by spacefiddle · · Score: 5, Funny

    What's amusing to me is that if you want to education or health care funded in the US, you have to lobby Congress like hell to fund it.

    What's amusing to me is that people think education or health care is a proper role for the Federal Government.

    What's amusing to me is that people think education or health care is a proper role for unaccountable entities whose primary responsibility is profit.

  12. Re:How many soldiers die if 187 F-22s aren't enoug by interkin3tic · · Score: 5, Informative

    if 187 Raptors aren't sufficient to achieve that in some future conflict

    Which conflict would that be? It's not the ones we are in now, which we're going into astronomical debt over. I don't know who has an air force that would rival us, but I'd guess China and North Korea. Either way, we can't afford it even with these cuts. In fact, I think/hope we can't afford to fight ANY more unilateral wars against ANYONE.

    Any war/conflict in which 187 raptors is insufficient is a war our economy is also insufficient for.

  13. That liberal lunatic lefty John McCain by Weedhopper · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The Lightning is seriously cool but it simple cannot replace the Raptor - and it was never meant to, except, it appears, in the minds of Democrats.

    Yeah, it's not like that liberal left lunatic John McCain guy knows anything about war fighting and fighter aircraft.

    Here's a clue for you: Levin-McCain Amendment.

    I predict. And I've been dead right about every prediction I've made about Obama and his lunatic lefties.

    People like you are never wrong.

  14. Re:R&D by hardburn · · Score: 5, Informative

    So one F22 (properly maintained and competently piloted) is equal to how many old F16s?

    Many. In war games, single F-22s often take out entire squadrons of F-16s before they're even seen on radar.

    http://www.acc.af.mil/news/story.asp?id=123041831

    --
    Not a typewriter
  15. Re:Bad move by Bassman59 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Thank you, Congress, for sacrificing the nation's safety so you can buy up the problems of those who make bad decisions. Not going to sacrifice power for their bad decisions, t.

    Actually, the people who were OPPOSED to continued F-22 production include the Secretary of Defense, the Secretary of the Air Force, and other top brass. The only people who are FOR the continued production are members of Congress whose districts include the defense contractors who build the plane, and those contractors themselves.

    IOW, the MILITARY does not want any more of these planes.

  16. it's wartime by fishbowl · · Score: 4, Interesting

    During war time, there should be no profit driven motivation for developing the military, period.

    War industry employees should all work for subsistence wages, and really should be volunteers if not draftees. Industrial business should not even be allowed to take profits for the duration of war. If they must be paid, they should be paid in interest bearing war bonds that are redeemable upon victory. Take away the profit-driven parts of the equation, from raw materials down to workers being paid more than subsistence wages, and I'm sure the cost of these airplanes will be considerably lower per unit.

    The stakes should be "winning the war so that the nation can continue to exist", not something that's even measurable in monetary value.

    --
    -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
  17. Manned fighters are a joke by Well-Fed+Troll · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The military nearly always gears up to fight the last war, not the next one. I'm waiting for an air to air combat drone that can kill Predators, etc. Once those are in the air there will be no manned fighters; their performance is utterly abysmal by comparison.

  18. Re:How many soldiers die if 187 F-22s aren't enoug by BCGlorfindel · · Score: 4, Insightful


    A good way to solve this would be to stop being the world police and pissing everyone off.

    So you think that America would be better off for that? You may be right, it's hard to say. I wonder though at the 'pissing everyone off' part being better for everyone else.

    America has certainly done a lot of damage around the world, but they've also done a lot of good. I'd say, on the whole, it has been more good than bad. At the end, some nation, somewhere, is going to have the strongest military. For all my problems with America, I can't pick a different nation I'd rather see as the strongest. Unfortunately the real world doesn't require that a perfect, or even good option exist, merely a choice of options from which you take what you can get and try to improve upon it. In my book America is a better starting point than any other nation.

    I also am sure many would argue about the world being better off if America just minded it's own business. For all that people argue the good America has done in removing or fighting worse governments/dictators, the other side declares it would be better if America did not do so, that things would be better if those wars were not fought. For proof one can easily point to Africa and the fact America has no interest there because there is no profit in it. This would seem to prove that America is acting selfishly. I would point out that just because it is selfish, doesn't mean that it isn't also in the better interest of the civilians of the affected region. Disagree? Look no further than the original example. Which region is better off, the American manipulated Middle-East or the Africa it ignores?

    For every Saddam that America is damned for warring against, there is an African genocide like Rwanda it is not being damned for ignoring. I used to be alongside the peaceniks in damning America for going into Iraq because they failed to go into a place like Darfur where people needed the help even more. I've now realized that if I really think they should be damned for not going into Darfur, it was contradictory to damn them for removing a genocidal dictator like Saddam.

  19. Re:How many soldiers die if 187 F-22s aren't enoug by MaWeiTao · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Even if everyone in the US unanimously decided that we were no longer going to meddle in international affairs other nations will inevitably drag us back into them due to the simple fact that we're an economic superpower. It's unavoidable.

    And the US government already spends plenty on social programs. The problem, like with this F-22 program, is that the money isn't being spent wisely. The US in general already spends more on education per student than most countries, and many areas, including the city where I live spends close to double what any other country spends. And yet education is by and large crap compared to other countries. The reason isn't because we're not spending enough money, it's because we're not managing anything properly and have this idiotic notion that more money will fix anything.

    And back to my original point, there are a lot of nations out there that could potentially become a threat in the future. I realize some people hold the believe that love will fix anything, but there are many more who disagree and may try to take advantage. China might currently be behind the US, but they sure are working hard to catch up, working on their own advanced fighter. Russia may not currently be a threat to the US, but they are working hard on their own competitors to the F22 and will certainly be selling the aircraft to China.

    That said, it made sense to cut back the F-22 program although it really is a drop in the bucket compared to how much the government is spending.