Re: How Do You Sink A Carrier?
Like I said before, I'm no expert. But you don't need to be an expert to know that a Seersucker got past AWACS, Patriot, and Aegis sensors without being seen. A Seersucker hit Kuwait City with no warning or alarms sounding. Not on paper or an exercise but under combat conditions. The argument was this doesn't happen yet it did. Somewhere along the line something failed whether it was human or technological. And back then they said nothing can get past that kind of technology too. Oh yeah I've heard the excuses but they sound more like denial. I especially like the one I heard that the Iraqis rolled up a launcher across the Iraqi/Kuwait border snuck past US forces into Kuwait rolling a missile all the way up to the capital without being noticed once during the height of the invasion and launching it there to which is why it wasn't detected. That was probably a failure in the human part. You can't have it both ways. It's either human or technological and it was under combat conditions which counters the argument made.
You really want to bring Vietnam into this? Maybe they didn't attack because they believed it would be futile. But then what was the result of the Vietnam War with all that might. On paper that wasn't suppose to happen either. A lot of stuff on paper doesn't turn out the way it's suppose to. Recent history included.
You have, IMHO, a somewhat scewed sense of history. The US abjectly defeated the VC and then fought and bombed the North Vietnamese to the negotiating table and they negotiated very favorable terms for the US and the South Vietnamese in 1972 ands 1973. In essece, the military conflict at that time was over and the US had won a substantial and very lopsided victory...despite all the efforts by people within the United States to undercut it.
Then, two years later, when the North violated that treaty, the US which was standing down, continued to do so. In essence, the US chose not to engage or fight and continue the war.
The victory for the North was not over US military or technology, it was over US politics. It was a lesson that took a long, long time for the US to grow out of...and events of today may suggest that we have again forgotten the lesson. It sent a terrible message to our allies and to our enemies.
Anyhow, just so the record can be straight, there was no military defeat of the US in that war and the historical record bears it out. Even the generals of the North admit it in their own memoirs.
It was certainly a political victory over an intentionally split public...and it certainly was compelling and resulted in the US not continuing a fight that the enemy whom we had fought and bombed into submission, and who had signed a peace treaty to that effect, violated. We just did not engage anymore.
It was a very shameful time fo the US.
But I drift far off topic.
In that war, there were in fact several sorties by N Vietnamese aircraft against the US carriers operating of their coasts. none of them succeeded in getting very close.
As I said above. The AEGIS system is not perfect, but it is arguably the best there is and any opposing force will have to make a very signifcant cost benefit analysis before attacking into the teeth of it, both in terms of the initial attack, and its aftermath.