Vergennes
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Well unfortunately the US is pretty good at hitting a target thousands of miles away (Circular Error Probability was only 400 feet decades ago. You can imagine what it is now). All you would need to do is make a course correction (using a spy satellite) as late as possible at a point leading the target. The only thing you can do to counter this is to implement a random course generator by the carrier as normal SOP that would make leading impossible. However you can always saturate an area and hope to get lucky.
Or the DF21 or DF31 is fitted with a nuclear warhead, and in this case the precision of the missile may not be average.Well unfortunately the US is pretty good at hitting a target thousands of miles away (Circular Error Probability was only 400 feet decades ago. You can imagine what it is now). All you would need to do is make a course correction (using a spy satellite) as late as possible at a point leading the target. The only thing you can do to counter this is to implement a random course generator by the carrier as normal SOP that would make leading impossible. However you can always saturate an area and hope to get lucky.
China needs some Rafale M ?
Well,still waiting for Chinese trolls to come here with claims the French Navy's Chief of Staff knows jack sh*t about naval systems.
China needs some Rafale M ?
Bs,you can calculate the targets actual position in 6 minutes and send the missile to that point.
Yes...among some other things lol.
More useful than stronking "carrier missile killer" by longshot.
If its all that easy and cheap to counter, why is China long term investing in major CBG infra (including carriers themselves)? Wouldn't they follow the logic that its not a good idea to invest into things that only make sense in a conflict among other CBG-owning peers...but can be so easily and cheaply countered? Like wouldnt they just invest massively into DF missiles and skip the useless easily destroyed expensive CBG stuff?
Root of the problem is always there is a sequence of C4I infra needed for initial detection, launch, mid launch calibration and final target sensing and lock....not to mention the inherent vulnerabilities of ballistic missiles w.r.t detection and counter-targetting.
Every single part of this sequencing have counter-measures the adversary (who can afford CBG's in first place) can employ. Real world conflict never works in the way the adversary's expenseive asset is sitting in a chair tied up (and alone) and only one arm free...so you can score such an easy hit with just one .308 bullet that costs tiny fraction. It never has been the case, never is the case now and never will be the case.
@MilSpec @AUSTERLITZ @jhungary @gambit @Joe Shearer @Oscar @LeGenD @Signalian @randomradio
Like wouldnt they just invest massively into DF missiles and skip the useless easily destroyed expensive CBG stuff?
My post was for not hitting when moving only.If its all that easy and cheap to counter, why is China long term investing in major CBG infra (including carriers themselves)? Wouldn't they follow the logic that its not a good idea to invest into things that only make sense in a conflict among other CBG-owning peers...but can be so easily and cheaply countered? Like wouldnt they just invest massively into DF missiles and skip the useless easily destroyed expensive CBG stuff?
The viability of AsBMs has been in my opinion always in question. Not just because of the intricacies of targeting but by their very nature of giving a higher degree of warning than other options to kill a ship; even as large as a carrier.Yes...among some other things lol.
More useful than stronking "carrier missile killer" by longshot.
If its all that easy and cheap to counter, why is China long term investing in major CBG infra (including carriers themselves)? Wouldn't they follow the logic that its not a good idea to invest into things that only make sense in a conflict among other CBG-owning peers...but can be so easily and cheaply countered? Like wouldnt they just invest massively into DF missiles and skip the useless easily destroyed expensive CBG stuff?
Root of the problem is always there is a sequence of C4I infra needed for initial detection, launch, mid launch calibration and final target sensing and lock....not to mention the inherent vulnerabilities of ballistic missiles w.r.t detection and counter-targetting.
Every single part of this sequencing have counter-measures the adversary (who can afford CBG's in first place) can employ. Real world conflict never works in the way the adversary's expenseive asset is sitting in a chair tied up (and alone) and only one arm free...so you can score such an easy hit with just one .308 bullet that costs tiny fraction. It never has been the case, never is the case now and never will be the case.
@MilSpec @AUSTERLITZ @jhungary @gambit @Joe Shearer @Oscar @LeGenD @Signalian @randomradio