I'm quoting from this morning's editorial titled "Misspending Military Dollars":
The biggest cuts should come in the three advanced-tactical and Joint Strike Fighter aircraft: the Air Force's F-22, the Navy's F-18 and the shared F-35. The Pentagon plans to spend hundreds of billions of dollars over the next two decades on these planes, which are designed to replace older models that are already superior to anything any other country can put in the air. They would be ideal for dogfights against the equally futuristic MIG's the Soviet Union might be building if it still existed. But in real places like Afghanistan and Iraq, they have serious disadvantages. Unlike helicopters, they cannot hover over battlefields. Unlike unpiloted drones, they place fliers' lives at risk. They have restricted flying ranges and require expensive airborne tankers for refueling.
The American people are ill served by this passivity. The strong defense everybody wants will not come from throwing ever larger sums into the wrong weapons.
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/02/05/opinion/05THU1.html
Edited by - viperttb on Feb 05 2004 11:13 AM