Ah, well from what I picked up during that year I agree.
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Come to think of it though, I see the Navy as run by similar ideologues, who think the supercarrier is the only ship we have that's worth a damn. Maybe they're useful against some armpit countries like Iraq or Afghanistan, but against a modern enemy carriers are a classic case of putting all your eggs in one basket. They have no defense whatsoever against high-tech cruise missiles AFAIK, and of course a carrier is a sitting duck to a nuclear blast (whether at 2,000 feet to disentegrate her, or 200 miles to fry her electronics with EMP). Even North Korea could destroy our theater carriers if they chose them as targets rather than Japanese & Korean cities.
This is why I'm a submarine man; they're invulnerable to all these things because the enemy doesn't know where they are. Anyway, let's just pray there aren't any wars against real powers anytime in the next century, so our doctrine blunders don't come to the fore.
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Originally posted by Darius871
They have no defense whatsoever against high-tech cruise missiles AFAIK
BTW, IMO the USN's real weakness is it's astonishingly lame minesweeping ability. The British Navy has a much larger and better equiped minesweeping force then the USN, and even the Australian minesweeping force isn't far behind the USN's (it's ships are better for starters).
Even North Korea could destroy our theater carriers if they chose them as targets rather than Japanese & Korean cities.
You are right though in that carriers are vunerable to lots of things: hell, in it's last ever patrol a couple of years ago, one of Australia's 1960s era Oberon class submarines 'sank' the USS Enterprise in an exercise off Hawaii.
This is why I'm a submarine man; they're invulnerable to all these things because the enemy doesn't know where they are.'Arguing with anonymous strangers on the internet is a sucker's game because they almost always turn out to be - or to be indistinguishable from - self-righteous sixteen year olds possessing infinite amounts of free time.'
- Neal Stephenson, Cryptonomicon
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Originally posted by Case
That's what the carrier battlegroup is there for US Carriers are best thought of a a giant box full of aircraft. The work of protecting them is delegated to other ships, and this makes a fair bit of sence - defencive systems take up a lot of space which would be better used to squeeze more aircraft in.
IMO the -->only<-- reason we've never lost a supercarrier is because we've never used them against a country worth a damn at sea.
Originally posted by Case
Dunno, they'd be a rather hard target to hit, even with nuclear missiles.
Originally posted by Case
hell, in it's last ever patrol a couple of years ago, one of Australia's 1960s era Oberon class submarines 'sank' the USS Enterprise in an exercise off Hawaii.
Originally posted by Case
...but they're so claustrophopic. Have you ever been on a submarine? I've been on several (at various museums) and they're all awful.
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Originally posted by Darius871
Of course I know that, but you can't guarantee our AEGIS systems will down two dozen Exocets, Brahmos, Shipwrecks, Switchblades, Styx, or C-701's launched simultaneously. There's just no way.
Why would it be a hard target to hit?
Details!
Aparently it's not unusual for the USN to 'lose' carriers in this way in exercises - that's why they're quietly freaking out over the Iranian Kilos.'Arguing with anonymous strangers on the internet is a sucker's game because they almost always turn out to be - or to be indistinguishable from - self-righteous sixteen year olds possessing infinite amounts of free time.'
- Neal Stephenson, Cryptonomicon
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Originally posted by Case
I guess the argument is that the aircraft and battlegroup will keep those things out of range of the carrier, and the carrier will never go within the range of land based weapons.
Originally posted by Case
The ships are pretty tough though - the Enterprise and another super carrier (the Forstall?) both survived massive fires and the cook-off of ordanence.
Originally posted by Case
Balistic missiles can only really be targeted at a fixed spot. They take time to prepare and fire. Meanwhile the carrier would be manueuvering at 25+ knots. That makes for a hard target.
Originally posted by Case
I can't find any at the moment. From memory, the Aussie skipper correctly analysed the Enterprise's operating pattern, picked his position, turned off everything in the sub that made a noise and waited. Sure enough, the Enterprise lumbered along, the Australian skipper lined it up in his periscope, took a photograph and released a bouy. Scratch one carrier.
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Originally posted by Darius871
Out of curiousity, how wide is the standard battle group?
It doesn't depend on the generation of missile? I'd imagine if we could design targeting systems that could put a Harpoon right into the side of a ship despite the ships maneuvers, we (and therefore an enemy as well) could design a missile which would detonate a nuclear warhead within a few bloody miles.
So modern navy exercises assume that 1 or 2 torpedoes will always sink a supercarrier?'Arguing with anonymous strangers on the internet is a sucker's game because they almost always turn out to be - or to be indistinguishable from - self-righteous sixteen year olds possessing infinite amounts of free time.'
- Neal Stephenson, Cryptonomicon
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Originally posted by Case
Any cruise missile would have to first be fired within range of the carrier (easier said then done), pass through the fighters which would be desperatly trying to hit them, pass through the missile envelopes of at least two AEGIS equipped ships before facing the Carriers (weak) point defence guns and missiles. It's a lot easier said then done - Soviet doctrine for attacking carriers seems to have called for massed attacks with around 100 missiles!
Also, that's assuming they want to destroy the carrier; if you wish to disable it with EMP you don't have to be even remotely accurate. When we tested a bomb in the atmosphere over Johnson Atoll IIRC, streetlights and televisions some 1400 miles away burned out in Hawaii, which prompted the atmospheric test ban treaty. Some scientists theorize that a 20 megaton warhead detonated 200 miles above Kansas would cause blackouts across the entire United States. Long story short, a nuclear attack on a carrier group wouldn't have to be accurate at all.
Originally posted by Case
1 or 2? Most subs have at least 6 torpedo tubes, and modern torpedos generally hit.Last edited by Darius871; October 2, 2003, 12:26.
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PM sent to Choke...
...however, he hasn't posted since mid September, so I'm close to declaring him another victim of the zombies/Syrians/Euro (chose the factor you consider to be your current national enemy )
[SIZE=1] Originally posted by Darius871 Nonononono, you totally misunderstood my post. I wasn't talking about putting a nuke on a sea-skimming cruise missile. I meant that if they are able to design guidance systems SO precise that a missile can independently keep itself 20 meters above the surface, pull down to 6 meters before impact, and slam itself into the side of a ship, then designing a conventional ballistic missile that can detonate within a few miles of a carrier should be a breeze, comparatively.
Also, that's assuming they want to destroy the carrier; if you wish to disable it with EMP you don't have to be even remotely accurate.Last edited by Case; October 4, 2003, 08:35.'Arguing with anonymous strangers on the internet is a sucker's game because they almost always turn out to be - or to be indistinguishable from - self-righteous sixteen year olds possessing infinite amounts of free time.'
- Neal Stephenson, Cryptonomicon
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Ok...I need to read the thread a bit and then I'll play my turn, my ISP cut me off, that's why I was MIA but I'm back and better than ever"Long live Iraq. Long live Jihad. Long live Palestine. God is great, God is great." - President Saddam Hussein
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Good to see you Choke. All the game files are now uploaded at: http://apolyton.net/upload/files/Case/Dragon.zip'Arguing with anonymous strangers on the internet is a sucker's game because they almost always turn out to be - or to be indistinguishable from - self-righteous sixteen year olds possessing infinite amounts of free time.'
- Neal Stephenson, Cryptonomicon
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Under the new consolidated administration of Saddam Hussein, the Arab League would like to assure our allies of continued support. However the President would like to express his concern at the violence along the border with Russia and would like to see the war come to an end acceptable to all parties involved. Therefore this month a cease-fire was signed with field officers of the Russian armed forces, President Hussein hopes President Putin will ratify a permanent peace treaty, of course terms of said treaty are negotiable.
This month Arab positions along the border with Russia were heavily fortified in case President Putin makes poor choices.Attached Files"Long live Iraq. Long live Jihad. Long live Palestine. God is great, God is great." - President Saddam Hussein
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We congratulate the new Arab government for its devotion to peace. Surely the NATO will not continue their war alone.Attached Files
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