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Aviation Sceptic's avatar

CDR Sal, happy labor day. From your article, the concluding and pertinent section: "So, with our industrial capacity only a fraction of what it was 85 years ago, and our allies’ industrial capacity in even worse shape…how would we find the capabilities we know we will need to push the fight?

Who, if anyone, would we be able to rely on? How? With what?

Do we abandon the field, or do we push the fight forward?"

Difficult for me to imagine the current administration fighting. A new administration with a different attitude might choose to fight, but given our current state of readiness (how many carriers are in the Pacific right now?), must win very quickly (preferred munitions stocks are...inadequate to need...) or lose, go nuclear (unlikely), or also choose not to fight. Our regional allies (real and imagined...Japan, S. Korea, Philippines...others to be named later) have to be squinting at the odds boards and constantly re-evaluating their decision calculus...back the side that ends up losing, or stay out of the fight and negotiate favorable terms with the new regional hegemon. OBTW, as the players continue to test each other, and we enter one of the most favorable weather windows for something "bad" to happen in the region, a mistake could trigger a cascading series of events that catches everyone by surprise. Have to wonder what that Malaysian patrol boat hit...uncharted undersea mount?

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Alan Taber's avatar

Long time reader, first time commenter. The great unspoken question of what do you do when the materiel is expended holds equally true for IAMD. The strategy needs to include going after the archers as well as the arrows, and I don't see that happening.

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