Blakey said:
Duey (or anyone else...)
What would you think of an "Army Air Corps" ala USMC fashion. In which all air assets (fixed and rotary wing) are sole property of the Army, and as such all pilots of said ac are in fact Army. This would give the Army the assets that it needs, in house. (CAS, CSAR, UH, AH, etc..)
Thoughts? am I right out of 'er?, aren't there any zoomies, or wannabe zoomies that would want to be Army?
Blakey, prior to unification, I would have been an Army officer and aviator -- it worked fairlye well in the past...pre-unification. After tac aviation turned into a bit of a ba$tard-child, borne of two parents but not really acknowledged by either. This, interestingly, in stark contrast to the Navy's continued sense of ownership over maritime aviation. Tac Aviation had a few different "ownership/funding" configurations (capital acquisition = Army, operations = Air Force) in the FMC days, but come 1992, the Air Force took overall all responsibility for aviation: capital, ops, fuel, system engineering support, PY's etc... The Army only had a request/advisorial role to tell Air Command what it wanted. Where the capability is today is testament to the lack of co-ordination and co-operation between the two elements.
It will be intersting to see how 427 works out...small correction, it's actually OPCOM to CANSOFCOM (vice TACCOM)...a noticably more intertwined relationship than originally envisaged by some folks. There's a lot to the "why for" on that one...we'll have to see how it works out. The Air Force is still responsible for manning, aircrew and maintenance standards, flight safety and accident investigation, and CANSOFCOM controls how the assets operationally generate and employ. Jury's still out on that, but responsiveness to the user will likely increase noticeably.
One of the main reasons you won't see any other squadrons heading under Army control is based on the Chief's moves towards a more (truly) integrated force. Moving aviation under any kind of command relationship beyond the inter-element tasking process of today would not be consistent with the regional delineation of assets within the respective regions and the regional commanders' purvue, i.e. what about aviation as a domestic capability doing things other than hard Army/green support? It's also not to say that the Army would run things any better if they had more responsibility over aviation -- after all, as I've noted before, it was Comd FMC in 1989, LGen Ken Foster, when the Army still had the hammer for equipping and resourcing of "army" aviation (a.k.a. tac hel) who signed the death warrant for Chinook and Kiowa and started the process towards supplementing the Twin Huey (and eventually outright replacing it) with the CH146 Griffon. Yup, the Army did it, not the Air Force...so I am very wary when I hear guys say, "it would be much better under Army control." As in, when the Army scrapped three fleets (Chinook, Huey and Kiowa) for one? See what I mean...nice to hear the sentiments in the bar, but the talk doesn't go far when it comes to the real world. BGen MacDonald (IIRC) was also the Amry man at the table during DMC (Defence Management Council) when the recce pod (ERSTA) was being discussed for the Griffon. VAdm Garnett asked who supported it (CH146 ERSTA - electro-optical recce surveillance and targert system) and not surprizingly got an avertive look towards the ceiling from MGen Bastien (A/CAS, and a fighter guy) and when Gen MacDonald was asked for the army position on the Griffon, he noted that there were many projects of greater importance than Griffon ERSTA and the project was officially killed (and, BTW, the $75M held in the CFUTTH project was redirected to the CF-188 System Life Extension Program [SLEP] and CP-140 Aurora Life Extension Program [ALEP]...convenient, hunh?)
Thus, while a nice though and raised for the right ideas, reality (which bites) causes things to turn out a little differently.
Cheers,
Duey