Monad Portal
Was it me?
The new Top Gun is a lot of fun. However, it's also standard-issue military propaganda. It takes all sorts of liberties with the truth in order to present a compelling narrative... and those untruths, not coincidentally, support the agenda of ever-growing military spending.
For those who haven't seen it, the plot involves the US sending in six F-18's to blow up a uranium enrichment plant in an unnamed country (probably Iran). This requires a white-knuckle low-altitude bombing run ripped straight from the first Star Wars movie, and then a harrowing dog fight with the enemy's fifth-generation fighter jets.
Now, imagine how that mission would play out in real life. Probably, we'd just outsource it to an ally like Israel. But if we did it ourselves, we'd likely use some combination of unmanned drones, cruise missiles, and smart bombs dropped from B-2 stealth bombers above the reach of enemy air defenses. There'd be little risk to any American service members.
But even if, for some reason, we had to send in a low-altitude manned bombing run, picture what that dog fight with the fifth-generation fighter jets would look like. It wouldn't be like in the movie, where our fighter bombers are outclassed and only the sublime skills of a great fighter pilot save the day. We'd have total air superiority. Right now, even Russia has only three fifth-generation fighter jets, and none of those are in service. Iran has zero, and only about 40 4th-generation fighters (while the US has 187 operational fifth-generation fighters, and well over 1,000 4th-generation ones). We also have mid-air refueling that allows us to deploy these pretty much anywhere. So, even if a country like Russia happened to have all three of its fifth-generation fighters in service, and near the target, they'd be vastly outnumbered and outclassed by the US forces they faced.
I get why these liberties with the truth are taken. The real story would be boring, since there'd be no jeopardy for our side. But I think it also appeals to the military (which cooperates in making these movies), because they like the budgetary implications of creating the illusion that the US is in a tight arms race with potent adversaries, and the lives of our service members depend on taking huge chunks of your paycheck to cover the purchase of even more shiny new military hardware. So, such movies create alternate universes where rogue states have both fifth-generation fighters and elite air defenses, and our naval aviators are in harm's way.
Should we have just spent 40 billion + on the ukraine situation?