Patroklos
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- Joined
- Feb 25, 2003
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Actually Pat there's a fairly powerful argument against having so many eggs in such a big target, I mean basket.
So your solution was to just not have any eggs

And the Falklands bears out the fact that enormous air groups are not entirely necessary if you have better tech.
Well why don't you ask the sailors of your surface fleet and the marines/commandos on the ground if they thought complete air superiority resulting in zero losses do to air attack seems entirely necessary?
Patroklos, your argument as a bit like saying
- In the US we have bigger cars, so everyone should build big cars.
- In Europe, we don't need big cars, and they consume more.
- Yes, but the US car market is the biggest one, so if we make mostly big cars in the US, it's the standard, so everyone should make big cars, and it serves us well to have big cars to accomate fat americans, so everyone should have it, even if they don't need it.
Your points fail because 1.) sea warfare is sea warfare, it doesn't change until you get to the pack ice 2.) Britain proved in 1982 that Europe can find itself in situations where real carriers are useful and 3.) the US is the biggest market in cars, but it isn't the majority of the market in cars. In carriers, the US is both.
That is a helpful train of thought though. In Europe the standard is small cars, in the US it is bigger cars. However, worldwide taking into account all markets the standards is small cars. For the same reasons, worldwide (like in this ranking), the standard is US style/size carriers.
Just one question... When exactly did having 100,000 tons carriers instead of 50,000 tones carrier proved mandatory to the US?
Every operation where the US carriers provided overwhelming firepower while the Euro carriers sat around for the most part idol and useless (Desert Storm, Kosovo, Afghanistan, Iraq Freedom). Even today, and I have served with LUST (as the Brits so lovingly abbreviate her) extensively she never launched her aircraft for anything but training the entire time, even while the Enterprise just a few miles away was sending a steady stream of F-18s into Afghanistan for CAS. The Harries simply were not up to the task of supporting the UKs own troops.
More importantly, what situations have the Americans NOT had to deal with because of its carriers? From the GIUK gap back in the day to China even up to now there are hundreds of possible flash points that probably would have flared if not for the simple fact that the US would have air superiority (not just presence like the UK in 1982) and overwhelming strike capacity in the area instantaneously or within a day or two.
Simple proof. If the UK had had a full sized carrier before the Falklands started would the Argentines have attacked in the first place? The very inadequate but still quantifiable performance of the Hermes proves this nicely. If the air wing had been twice the size of what was there, and was using not handicapped (relative) harriers but full blown carrier born aircraft it is doubtful an Argentine jet would have ever gotten close to those islands.
I've been checking up on this actually Steph. Basically at the end of WWII carriers were 20-40,000 tonnes. Since then everyone else has carried on building them at about the same size, while the USA started building it's 'supercarriers', starting with the 75,000 tonne Kitty Hawk.
Awesome post brennan. So which label to you prefer more, hopelessly tiny or hopelessly obsolete?
And you forgot the Forrestal class.
The idea that 100,000 tonnes is either necessary, or 'the new standard' appears to have escaped not just ourselves, but also the French, Russians, Indians, Spanish, Italians and even Thailand... in short everyone except the USA.
You assume that in all those cases they are building what they want, instead of actually building what they can.. There is no getting around the math, 21 carriers in the world (if we use the thread stated number earlier), 11 are what you so colloquially and provincially call "super carriers," which makes them the majority and normal. Where they come from is not relevant. Math is fun.