Hello all, here is today's article posted on TheArmoryLife.com. It is titled “A-6 Intruder: The Iron Tadpole” and can be found at https://www.thearmorylife.com/a-6-intruder/.
That's the second time I've heard Cheney and POTUS 44(?) get the blame when in fact the aircraft were inactivated in 1993 and 1997. I think POTUS '42 was in charge then. I was in a Navy/USMC command in the early 90s and the aviators were extremely upset at losing the A-6, but I don;t remember anyone griping about Cheney. Another thing is I do not recall Cheney being the point man for a "post-Cold War" mentality especially coming off of Desert Storm which used several divisions of heavy combined arms. Service members naturally look to civilian leadership for this stuff, when they should instead look to the service chiefs and their role.Of all the A-6 nicknames, I prefer the “The Mighty Alpha Six".
The USN lost a lot of long-range capability when they retired the A-6 (like the F-14) due to the post-Cold War mentality pushed by Sec. of Defense/VP Dick Cheney & POTUS 44. We're still paying the price for all that.
Secretary of Defense (1989–1993) President George H. W. Bush nominated Cheney for the office of Secretary of Defense immediately after the U.S. Senate failed to confirm John Tower for that position. The senate confirmed Cheney by a vote of 92 to 0 and he served in that office from March 1989 to January 1993.That's the second time I've heard Cheney and POTUS 44(?) get the blame when in fact the aircraft were inactivated in 1993 and 1997. I think POTUS '42 was in charge then. I was in a Navy/USMC command in the early 90s and the aviators were extremely upset at losing the A-6, but I don;t remember anyone griping about Cheney. Another thing is I do not recall Cheney being the point man for a "post-Cold War" mentality especially coming off of Desert Storm which used several divisions of heavy combined arms. Service members naturally look to civilian leadership for this stuff, when they should instead look to the service chiefs and their role.
Once John Lehman stepped down the A-6F was canceled, and Cheney cancelled the A-12 because of development problems and a focus shift to littoral ops, and then the F/A-18 E/F was developed to fill in after the F-14 & A-6s left the fleet air.That's the second time I've heard Cheney and POTUS 44(?) get the blame when in fact the aircraft were inactivated in 1993 and 1997. I think POTUS '42 was in charge then. I was in a Navy/USMC command in the early 90s and the aviators were extremely upset at losing the A-6, but I don;t remember anyone griping about Cheney. Another thing is I do not recall Cheney being the point man for a "post-Cold War" mentality especially coming off of Desert Storm which used several divisions of heavy combined arms. Service members naturally look to civilian leadership for this stuff, when they should instead look to the service chiefs and their role.
I don't think active military service members are paid to openly criticize the Executive Branch decisions without consequences.That's the second time I've heard Cheney and POTUS 44(?) get the blame when in fact the aircraft were inactivated in 1993 and 1997. I think POTUS '42 was in charge then. I was in a Navy/USMC command in the early 90s and the aviators were extremely upset at losing the A-6, but I don;t remember anyone griping about Cheney. Another thing is I do not recall Cheney being the point man for a "post-Cold War" mentality especially coming off of Desert Storm which used several divisions of heavy combined arms. Service members naturally look to civilian leadership for this stuff, when they should instead look to the service chiefs and their role.
No, but we mumble and grumble to each other in the office.I don't think active military service members are paid to openly criticize the Executive Branch decisions without consequences.
BTW- Thank your for your service.
I cannot connect to your link, but I do know there are so many moving parts to development and procurement activities in the Imperial City that it's mind boggling. The congressional/contractor/service merry-go-round works in strange ways. Case in point, my post on the B-2 article. One lone congressman from Maryland energized the congress to adopt an uber expensive bomber the USAF didn't even want. I would like to see who the the other players were in this drama.Once John Lehman stepped down the A-6F was canceled, and Cheney cancelled the A-12 because of development problems and a focus shift to littoral ops, and then the F/A-18 E/F was developed to fill in after the F-14 & A-6s left the fleet air.
The A-6F, the A-12 and the End of the Intruder Community - The Aviation Geek Club
The A-6F, the A-12 and the End of the Intruder Communitytheaviationgeekclub.com
And Cheney got us into Iraq.
As did we in the Fed govt business.No, but we mumble and grumble to each other in the office.
The link works on this end. Too bad you can't access it since you'd likely enjoy it.I cannot connect to your link, but I do know there are so many moving parts to development and procurement activities in the Imperial City that it's mind boggling. The congressional/contractor/service merry-go-round works in strange ways. Case in point, my post on the B-2 article. One lone congressman from Maryland energized the congress to adopt an uber expensive bomber the USAF didn't even want. I would like to see who the the other players were in this drama.
I was onboard the USS Coral Sea attached to VAW-127 during the Gulf of Sidra Line of Death cruise. I was in the back of our backup AEW package when some officers came in and connected to the data link sent by our airborne E2-C’s. We watched as the bombing played out even seeing the F-111’s from England as they hit Tripoli. The A-6’s were loaded for bear when they left the ship and came back empty. Nothing shakes your bones quite as hard as an A-6 on the catapult.Hello all, here is today's article posted on TheArmoryLife.com. It is titled “A-6 Intruder: The Iron Tadpole” and can be found at https://www.thearmorylife.com/a-6-intruder/.
A great article and pleasantly unexpected. I spent over 5 years flying Intruders until their untimely demise in ‘97 and then finished my Navy career flying Prowlers. There was no plane like the A6 and nothing more intense than flying low level at night in the midst of weather that kept everything else grounded…..all while never looking out of the cockpit. Thanks for bringing back some great memories….and a few I’d rather forget.Hello all, here is today's article posted on TheArmoryLife.com. It is titled “A-6 Intruder: The Iron Tadpole” and can be found at https://www.thearmorylife.com/a-6-intruder/.