Message from @urzu117
Discord ID: 547220555099668492
And the USAAC/USNAF handle the ground support
those generals would never give it up
"BUT MUH BUDGETS REEEEEEE"
The USAAB only has EW fixed wing aircraft currently
***psssssst, that means electronic warfare***
Hmmm, I just found a problem. Do SEAD runs fall under ground support or air superiority?
Depends on who you ask and where
ground support to establish air superiority
Well in the context of a restructured USAF/USAAC/USNAF, would it fall to the ground pounders or the fighter jockies to do SEAD?
I mean urzu has a point
It's a ground target, but then again, to establish true air superiority you need to push beyond the AO of the ground support to proactively intercept enemy fighters
Hell it's redundant
You're aware the U.S Army still has a minor air corps with Apaches
And the USMC has its own entire *wing*
The USMC MAGTAF/MEU system gives us everything from bombers to transport to attack and support helicopters. Not even including all of our jets.
You know, that branch dedicated to Amphibious landings when the largest amphibious landing in history was done by the U.S Army
<:TamamoDab:483459011463741451> <:tamamodab2:485506018227257346>
honestly
SEAD duties fall onto the air force
because they got the anti-radiation missiles
but the point of the missile is to engage radar air defences from long range without being detected
might as well just walk up to the radar system and put on some c4
at that point
@Punished Ggnome lets be real tho when was the last time the Marines actually did the job they were created for? WWII? Korea?
I mean the USMC is basically the Army in different camo nowadays
More like stormtroopers. The USMC wins battles, Army wins wars.
We've seen this with Somalia handover and Fallujah handover.
USMC holds and keeps those places relatively secure, hand it over to the Army and they lose it within two weeks.
<:oof:483708998399557642>
lmao, I mean you aren't wrong
Aren't Army units fitted out with National Guard anyways
They called us White Sleeves in Somalia due to rolling BDUs
Basically, during the Surge until '14, a lot of the U.S Army troops were fucking nasty guard
Most of our friendly fire incidents in the past 100 years have been reservists btw
Because what is maintaining manpower levels
And almost all of them have reservists involved
not to be unexpected
I use this to regularly piss off National Guardsmen
reservists don't see much action, if any at all
And reservist Marines