Taskiss wrote:
I'm not for weakening anything that protects the US, but I'd be good with cutting our fleet of carrier groups in half. Carriers are for projecting power and I'm feeling a bit isolationist at the moment.
And before anyone objects, tell me the nature of the threat, where the threat is coming from, and how many carrier groups we need vs how many there are aligned against us. As far as protecting Europe, I'm for abandoning the savior of the world complex we got going on. If we were flush with cash, possibly, but that's not the case these days.
I'm not for cutting entire department budgets in half willy nilly, but I'm for at least a 50% across the board cut. Manpower is where the costs are, and I'd for sure cut government head count by 50%
You can feel isolationist all you want, but the ability to project power has nothing to do with whether you're isolationist or not; it's about being able to address threats somewhere else as opposed to where we are. As for "aligning them against threats" we don't do that. each carrier doesn't have a specific threat it addresses because they can't all be at sea all at once. Having ONE carrier continuously available for, say North Korea and China contingencies means having a minimum of FOUR - maybe five.
Carrier groups have been cut 50% since the Cold War already. Given maintenance and training cycles, cutting carrier groups in half would mean the abilty to consistently maintain 1 at sea in both the Atlantic and Pacific at any given time would be jeopardized. Furthermore, the ability to build warships
at all is already in jeopardy due to endless cuts to the size of the fleet and its effect on the domestic shipbuilding workforce. Cutting carriers by 50% would most likely meant the total inability to build new carriers some time in the next 50 years.
Our military was never outsized given the size (both geographic and population) of our country. We are making major cuts already with the budget situation; the Army for example will actually have 1 Brigade Combat Team
fewer than it had prior to 9/11 and the expansion that followed. The Nevy has continuously shrunk since the cold war, and Obama's debate point aside, it still does matter how many ships you have. The Air Force has shrunk similarly.
We have made more than enough cuts to the military. It has become a sop for politicians, the press, and even the average person to simply claim "But it's too big!" and avoid the reality of any other part of the budget. We could eliminate the military entirely, and still be deficit spending. Cuts to the military are utterly counterproductive at this point; they have become cosmetic.