And would the American military buy an airbus product *cough*KC-X*cough*....perhaps not
.mic
Sounds feasible to me.. But I don't think they'd want to drag national emergency communication and control hardware around on every junket, campaign, public relations, political and and "appearance" flight. Like.. would you want the E-4B systems parked somewhere in the Middle East while the President is attending a funeral or something ?
. Like.. would you want the E-4B systems parked somewhere in the Middle East while the President is attending a funeral or something ?
I'm fairly sure it'd be parked in a secure location, and there's only a couple of huge USAF bases in the middle east.
We can't have THE command and control platform hopping around the globe.
Well, to add my two cents, and to highlight what I think Brett is getting at...
...I belive such a platform would cost far too much to be viable. The beauty of the VC-25 is that it is furbished mainly for its role of carrying the president. With some satellite communications. The airframe is relatively cheap.
The beauty of the E-4B, is that it has a dedicated purpose of being the doomsday airplane. Radiation filters, hi-band satellite antenna etc. There is a relatively high need for multiple aircraft too.
ONE A380 costs around 317 MILLION USD. An A380 without a comms suite, and other military requirements.
One E-4B costs about 200 million.
One VC-25 costs 325 million.
Buying two A380s and refurbishing them as a cross between the VC-25 and the E-4B would be too expensive.
Yes the MILITARY would......Congress however will notAnd would the American military buy an airbus product *cough*KC-X*cough*....perhaps not
.mic
Ditto
Actually, they do drag a E4 around every time the president goes overseas.
That's why this is a bad idea.. We can't have THE E-4B going every whwere that the President would go. Secure base or not. We can't have THE command and control platform hopping around the globe.
But for the question at hand, with today's computers being 10-times faster then what they were in the late 70's-early 80's, not to mention smaller too with flat screens,
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