I'll say this about tanker crews...
During the Gulf War USN pilots in an F-14 definitely preferred Canadian tanker crews over USN.
The reason is simple...a tanker configured CC-137 crew went north to get them when nobody else would. The F-14 was leaking fuel badly and would not have exited hostile territory unless fuel was available.
The CC-137 was low itself, but the crew elected to extract the F-14 to a position where other tanker assets were available. The Canadian tanker then made an emergency landing with fuel reserves below minimums.
As for the concept that logistically the US handles the air war better...
That's a joke.
At exercises like Red Flag, Maple Flag and many others integrated C3I operations are conducted...Allied as well as US operators learn how to do their jobs in the exact same way, modified only for national assets. The NATO AWACS at Geilenkirchen uses and teaches AWACS tactics and uses to all NATO members. Exchanges between Allied nations ensure that the knowledge base gained by one country is shared across allies.
I conducted many exercises with USAF or USN units...their performance was acceptable, nothing more. The one advantage they had over us was numbers...a much bigger budget granted much higher force levels.
One last point for beefhole.
As a former technician and Technical Air Crewman in 414 (EW) Sqdn, CAF I found nothing to indicate that US aircrews communicated any more or less than Canadian crews, British crews or anybody else's. The only deciding factor was how well they responded to disruptions in communications caused by our jamming efforts. On that point British and Canadian crews worked better...they had more practice working against EW Aggressors. Both forces had access to their own training forces, which the US military lacked (one of 414's most common calls for deployment came from Tyndall AFB to work as the primary during Copper Flag or Green Flag Exercises).
It was fun though watching the USAF commit to "blue on blue" kills during an exercise.

Forget to validate a target instruction and the bad guys can send you where they want, point your weapons where they want...and have you expend weapons and freindlies when they want.
Nothing better than listening to the exercise over the Gulf of Mexico and hearing:
"LA 24, that's a kill. LA 21, steer 175 for 75, flight level 210 to regenerate. Confirmed kill by LA 24. LA 21 contact Blue control before turning inbound."
It was worth about 15 seconds of dead silence on the radios monitoring Blue freqs.

It was also worth a case of beer from both LA crews.