When the A-10 was developed, it simply was not a precision guided munition world, back in the 70's and 80's, it was still the age of the dumb bomb, with a few semi active laser homing kits to take out bridges, to kill tanks and attack troops, you had to fly around and engage them linearly with guns and rockets and cluster bombs, but it's simply not the case anymore, that whole concept of operations is obsolete, in the age of precision guided munitions, you just don't fight that way anymore.Hastur wrote:Multirole is the only logical way forward if you don't have unlimited money. That said it can sometimes be economic to keep existing platforms in a limited role until upkeep becomes unsustainable. The challenge is to resist the tendency to give in to nostalgia. Recognize when the time has come to stop throwing good money after bad. That is a hard decision to make for any business and for individuals as well. The sunk cost fallacy is the most common economic error we make as humans.
In terms of engaging the target, the PGM does all the work, the launch platforms job is largely reconnaissance in support of that.