Re: Latest Varyag Info and Photos
Let's take your statement to the extreme . Will a single 200 kiloton nuclear cruise missile/ ASBM sink a CVN ? Yes of course, Easily . One doesn't need to have served or visited a Nimitz class to know that . What about a 900 pound conventional warhead ? A 1000 pound ? A 1499 pound warhead ?
To make a sweeping statement to suggest that a single missile could never sink a CVN is extremely hopeful at best. To have made this suggestive statement after having served on a CVN - Priceless .
Even if US planners come to realize that the aircraft carrier battle groups
(which are the mainstay of the US Navy and the main instrument
of US power projection worldwide), have been rendered
vulnerable or obsolete by a changing naval landscape , can it ever be acknowledged ?
The US cannot simply change strategy or discard such a weapons
system. To change strategy or "retool" would mean wasting
hundreds of billions of dollars invested in those highly
sophisticated systems. The strong lobbying of influential defense
contractors making those systems would make change extremely
difficult.
For defense authorities to admit the strategic blunder constitutes
an almost insurmountable barrier to a change of strategy. And
finally, the loss of hundreds of thousands of jobs related to those
systems may be politically and economically unbearable for any
US administration to bear should the program for the aircraft
carrier battle groups be scrapped. Because of these factors,
America may be stuck with an obsolete system that is too
expensive to maintain but will may not best serve US interest when
employed in a major conflict.
The notion that a CVN can not be sunk by a single missile , or a storm of ASBM , will have to be believed , for those who need to believe .
I guess it is a case of Fox Mulder vs Dana Scully.
You don't really believe what you posted do you? Have you ever served or even visited an Nimitz class? Do you really think any single missile could sink a CVN? Damage yes, but sink?? No.
The redundancy built into a USN CVN would have to be seen to be believed.
..
Let's take your statement to the extreme . Will a single 200 kiloton nuclear cruise missile/ ASBM sink a CVN ? Yes of course, Easily . One doesn't need to have served or visited a Nimitz class to know that . What about a 900 pound conventional warhead ? A 1000 pound ? A 1499 pound warhead ?
To make a sweeping statement to suggest that a single missile could never sink a CVN is extremely hopeful at best. To have made this suggestive statement after having served on a CVN - Priceless .
Even if US planners come to realize that the aircraft carrier battle groups
(which are the mainstay of the US Navy and the main instrument
of US power projection worldwide), have been rendered
vulnerable or obsolete by a changing naval landscape , can it ever be acknowledged ?
The US cannot simply change strategy or discard such a weapons
system. To change strategy or "retool" would mean wasting
hundreds of billions of dollars invested in those highly
sophisticated systems. The strong lobbying of influential defense
contractors making those systems would make change extremely
difficult.
For defense authorities to admit the strategic blunder constitutes
an almost insurmountable barrier to a change of strategy. And
finally, the loss of hundreds of thousands of jobs related to those
systems may be politically and economically unbearable for any
US administration to bear should the program for the aircraft
carrier battle groups be scrapped. Because of these factors,
America may be stuck with an obsolete system that is too
expensive to maintain but will may not best serve US interest when
employed in a major conflict.
The notion that a CVN can not be sunk by a single missile , or a storm of ASBM , will have to be believed , for those who need to believe .
I guess it is a case of Fox Mulder vs Dana Scully.