• bignavy@programming.dev
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    1 year ago

    You know what I don’t like about them? They’re kind of a symbol of American arrogance and bullying.

    It’s only useful where there is zero AAA and zero threat from enemy fighters. It’s a cargo plane - it packs a wallop, of course, but you use it when “the other guy” is a bunch of dudes running around on the ground with no chance to fight back.

    The fact that we have them in inventory says a LOT about the types of wars we’ve been fighting for the past 40 years.

    (Super unpopular opinion - the A-10 is not much better, but at least it has some genuine anti-armor capabilities.)

    • Attaxalotl@ttrpg.network
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      1 year ago

      The A-10 was obsolete on arrival; The only thing that’s kept it “effective” is the AGM-65 Maverick, which almost anything can use now.

      Apache Helos, F-16s, and tossing Hellfires from drones do the same job a whole lot better.

    • Persuader9494@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      It has more to do with the American war strategy in general: air supremacy is just the plan, and America has a lot of tools to root out AA and destroy enemy air forces. Compare to someone like Russia who is explicitly choosing not to dominate the airspace and relying on artillery for its fire support, and as a result has different focuses.

      It doesn’t have zero defense against AA- as a commenter upthread pointed out, this picture is literally showing it launching flares against heat-seeking missiles- but it’s not something that’s designed to work only when fighting non-peer forces, it’s essentially capitalizing on the air supremacy that other components of American forces will be creating.