tskasa1, on 13 Nov 2008, 6:03, said:
Yes, but when I say morale-degrading weapons, it is a given that I'm talking about countries and not terrorists, and most countries won't use chem/bio/nuclear weapons against the US or any other country with nukes, especially us since if we fall we can choose to fuck the whole world before we go out.... sorry but its just MAD; we go down in a blaze, the world goes down too... Also, I see your point about MOABs and such, but I have to disagree, its like our fear of the dark, through our culture and history we have been almost trained to fear guns. On top of that, I would like to say that although you CAN make MOABs, its not the same as constant fire support going on for hours/days as that would easily make a country run broke in a few days.
Want to bet? Asymmetrical warfare, which is what any conflict with the US against any other power than China or Russia (and soon India) will boil down to, is exactly the environment in which chemical, biological and nuclear agents are at their most attractive. If you have nothing else to lose - your homes are being invaded by an enemy many times your power and size which you most often can't even see - then why
wouldn't you resort to NBC? You know that world opinion will savage your enemy if he replies in kind.
tskasa1, on 13 Nov 2008, 6:03, said:
Like I said, I'm starting to see your point about Carriers, so make a Kiev-class-kind carrier. The ability to both attack+ defend as well as launch aircraft... although losing some the aircraft of a full-sized carrier can cause problems, in long term battles where planes are not needed, it will be more effective. After all, don't forget that the military also takes cost effectiveness into weapons manufacturing... in fact that is probably one of the biggest factors.
As I said eariler, the Kiev-class were something of a miserable failure thanks to their poor sea-keeping and compromise in the weapons loadout (and also the fairly useless Yak-38 'Forgers' they embarked). About the limit I think you can take weapons on a carrier is the Project 1143.5 Brezhnev
'Admiral Kuznetsov' (and her sister ship
Varyag, though she was never completed and sold to China, and no-one's quite sure what's happening to her these days); she mounts an absolute plethora of CIWS guns and twenty P-700 Granit (SS-N-19 'Shipwreck') missiles in VLS silos under the flight deck. Any other weapons systems will take up space on the deck and reduce the number of aircraft carried, reduce the space there is to maintain and support the aircraft, and have a generally detrimental impact on combat effectiveness.
tskasa1, on 13 Nov 2008, 6:03, said:
As for having to see the target, I say not necessarily. They can use a combination of radar and and "live feed" satellite imaging to find and hit a target. True, individual targets won't stand out and tanks and such may be hard to see. The areas that you need to see, however, are usually either a building (which are easy to see), large masses of soldiers (for shock and awe and also they are VERY easy to see) and, of course, defensive installations. On top of that don't forget that their working on smart shells for tanks and they could be applied to naval guns for only a fraction of the cost of a missile with the same effectiveness.
I don't believe I ever claimed line-of-sight as an issue. Shells are ballistic after all. Although I would point out radar (with the exception of
OTH-B installations, not that these are relevant to naval combat) is also strictly line-of-sight. Even though it is longer ranged than normal optical tracking modes, it still can't find targets behind a hill. The best way to do that is with... reconnaissance aircraft. Satellites have severe limitations, even today. They're supremely useful for strategic intelligence, but not so much for tactical information gathering. For taking out targets behind cover, a missile is arguably much more useful than a shell. For one thing the missile can itself be used as a quasi-reconnaissance platform, actively seeking out its target instead of having another unit doing that job for it. Once more I do not and never will argue the cost-effectiveness of using cruise missiles for land attack (each one is in effect a miniature aircraft after all, and they cost millions per round to make and deploy) but when the alternative is putting people in harm's way and the force concerned has this money to spare (and then some) it is, has been (the Gulf Wars provide all the proof you need) and will remain a viable method of shore bombardment.
tskasa1, on 13 Nov 2008, 6:03, said:
Also, another adv. vs. disadvantage: Shells: usually have more brute force on impact with targets, meaning more structural damage in a smaller area. Missiles: not as much brute force (for the most part) but more explosive, making much bigger AoE and making a bigger hole to let more water in, although it probably won't penetrate as deep unless its a delayed explosion (not sure how else to say it) model which will wait a little bit before exploding, allowing it to go in deeper.
Land usage:
Tomahawk disagrees. Naval usage: an anti-ship missile is far, far more effective against a naval target than a shell. Single AShMs have sunk targets without their warheads even going off. Can the same be said for a shell? I think not.
For shore bombardment in support of a landing, as is the Marines' primary concern, I will reiterate once again that the battleship, and therefore the heavy naval gun, retains its usefulness as the best weapon for the job. But a carrier has a fundamentally different mission role, design requirement and tactical and strategic application which cannot be reconciled with that of naval guns.
Edited by CommanderJB, 13 November 2008 - 01:34.