Red Pear Realty said:
Private PoopyPants said:
I've been an airplane geek my entire life and to me there is no more surprising element of this war than the lack of effectiveness of the Russian Air Force. It is mind-boggling.
Yep. I was in an Air Force outfit in the Corps and we studied the history and theory of air power and warfare (for just the two years I was ROTC) and I've had pretty much the same reaction to all these shenanigans as well. Anyone who has read just ONE "intro to air warfare" type textbook could see their whole air scheme is grossly mismanaged at best. Or he'll, just use common sense.
Well there is no doubt that that the Russian air scheme is absolutely been a complete fiasco. I don't think judging them by NATO/US standards isn't appropriate. Russia has always viewed their air arm differently. Their air force is used part anti-air umbrella part artillery extension and their helicopter component is either mobile tanks along with some mobility/evac/light resupply. Russia hasn't now or really ever used their air arm as a combined arms force.
So it's apples and oranges.
However their deconfliction, resupply, repair, maintenance and air to air has been incredibly ineffective. I'm not actually surprised by their current predicament as they have been terrible at the maintenance and resupply side at least since the 90s. A long war is going to increasingly hard on the Russians.
The complete failure of their command staff to create an operational air plan and implement interdiction and anti-air defense in the opening days of the war is still mind boggling. How the Russians could have looked at NATO/US operations over the last 30 years and especially in both Gulf actions and in Serbia all of which they had a close up view to from their clients and then implement none of those lessons in this action... really crazy. The only things I can think of are that the Russian central command didn't inform their operational air staffs of the strategic plan in time for them to put anything other than the most rudimentary target priority lists or that the Russian's experiences in Syria after the pathetic response by the Ukrainians in 2014 left their operational staffs completely and totally unprepared to understand what a modern peer/near-peer air war would entail. Likely it's a bit of both.
There are going to be some really crazy rethinks of Soviet weapon client states use of anti-air and air assets going forward. I wouldn't be surprised if the Chinese go mostly/completely away from Russian designed aircraft and the European fighter manufacturers Saab and Dassault (Rafale) will see a lot more sales.