Talshere said:
AccursedTheory said:
Talshere said:
I know its going a way back but in both world wars Britain was at Total War. So was Germany actually (or near enough). A state of total war is far more complete in terms of military capacity and spending than the US is at present. A few years ago the Royal Navy might have bought the Carriers

They have recently commissioned 3 new ones.
Saying the tech is illegal to export is a bit....off isnt it? If the government wants it sold they are the ones making the laws, this just comes back to the fact the policy makers really have little interest in solving the problem. Most of the countries in a position to buy that sort of aircraft are more than capable of developing their own if they really wanted to, so if its a case of "national secrets" its a little misplaced. On the other hand just scrap em. Time is bad right now but 4 years ago the value of scrap was amazing. Ok not carrier amazing but an object is only worth what someone will pay for it. Ultimately a carrier is worth noting if noone wants it.
Stealth planes are worth about nothing in scrap - their extreme price is related to R&D and manufacturing. It would be like taking apart a book and expecting more then a penny for the scrap paper.
As for carriers... modern carriers are actually pretty cheap to run, all things considering. It's mostly just the initial cost, and then plutonium/uranium fuel (Which would be the problem). A Nimitz class carrier cost slightly less to run then an entire F-15 wing, if the numbers I read a few months back can be believed.
In any case, I don't understand how anyone can justify decommissioning a super carrier that's not even close to the end of its life span. No mater the cost, its cheap as hell, considering that its pretty much the most powerful weapon currently in existence (Besides some weaponized small pox I KNOW Russia's got somewhere.).
Fair point on the carriers. I didnt know they were that cheap to run. *Shrug*
Also, be fair, pretty much every developed country has the capacity to manufacture within a shot time or already has significant and potent bio weapons. Some of the crap our pharmaceutical companies play around with on a daily basis could wipe out a country. I dare to think what our own military R&D departments have their hands on.
The US government has mandated that no further research be done on bioweapons, with the exception of cures. USAMRID, of Fort Detrick, USED to have a bioweapons program, run on the basis that if they could create bioweapons that were likely to be manufactured by other nations, they could proactively create countermeasures.
Fort Detrick has been out of bioweapon creation for over 3 decades. Most of the stock of weapons created there have been destroyed 9in some cases, entirely, which is probably a bad thing). The primary focus is now on counteracting natural pathogens, creating equipment and standard procedure for counter-bioweapon deployments, and being a second opinion for the US, when the CDC's answer is questionable.
Actually, recently, the Army's USAMRID program has become quite militant in its role as front line defenders against disease. They've gone head to head with both WHO and the CDC over matters such as Ebola (The most dangerous thing the US Army has, completely natural) and small pox. They strongly disagreed with the destruction of WHO's small pox vaccine stockpile (Cost - 10s of billions of dollars to replace), and have actively petitioned to have Small Pox samples remain is existence (The CDC/WHO wants all samples and data on Small Pox's DNA structure destroyed, which is kind of like throwing away all the guns and hoping no one remembers how to make more of them).
So, to my point - A civilian organization (CDC) actually has MORE DANGEROUS pathogens stored then the US's own Army. Something to think about.
Talshere said:
My point is that while you say the US mlatary guards its secrets, the technology is such that its not really any more advanced than any other 1st world country. They wont sell any f-22's to Australia but your not telling me they are really that much better than say the Euro Fighter? Any first world country could build this stuff if it wanted too. Easily. Not selling them then is just pointless because theyl just make their own or buy a slight different design from a different 1st world country.
Yes. I hear Breakfast calling
Gn.
Actually false. US airplanes don't cost billions in R&D because their construction and technology is common knowledge.
The F-22 cost so much because it has dozens, if not hundreds, of technological break throughs that no one else, at this time, possesses (Well, Britain maybe. I think we still owe them for Chobham Armor). Just because those technological leaps don't translate into a fighter craft that can fly in space and break mach47 doesn't mean they are any less out of reach by other countries who have not started the research.
For example - The PAINT on the B-2 bomber is just now starting to become available to other countries, after they spent billions on its research. And its still not as good as what the US could field. And that shits old as sin.