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New Russian Weapon Hides In Shipping Container

shmG writes "A Russian company is marketing a devastating new cruise missile system that can be hidden inside a shipping container, giving any merchant vessel the capability to wipe out an aircraft carrier. Potential customers for the formidable 'Club-K' system include Kremlin allies Iran and Venezuela, say defense experts. They worry that countries could pass on the satellite-guided missiles, which are very hard to detect, to terrorist groups. This is a scary new development in the global arms race that allows for the proliferation of cruise missiles to anyone who will pay for them — even terrorists. This could be the next big thing in strategic weapons, as they can appear anywhere there is a container ship. The company even made a commercial and posted it onto the Internet." The article notes that a Russian defense expert said that "as far as he understood, the Club-K was still at the concept stage."

618 comments

  1. Containment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    This threat must be contained

    1. Re:Containment by SimonTheSoundMan · · Score: 1

      Yeah, you can try to stop one Russian company from selling these weapons, but this is nothing new. The French government sell weapons like this to anyone, try stopping them. :S

      Oh, and thank you for a funny FP. :)

    2. Re:Containment by Z00L00K · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I would say that it would be sufficient to ship the warhead in a container and then detonate it when it arrives at the right port.

      A decent sized hydrogen bomb in a container would be able to cause some mess.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    3. Re:Containment by aliquis · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yeah, you can try to stop one Russian company from selling these weapons

      Why should they not sell them?

      I find it kinda hilarious with the "omg, this new weapon, it can be used for bad purposes!", no shit ..

      Kinda the risk with all of them so one either have to decide if one want them at all or not. And I guess in reality maybe one really need them (though I would be somewhat ok with dropping them in a country or multiple ones as an experiment to see what would happen.)

      Personally I dislike that people in my country (Sweden) are so against weapons trade at large since we seem to develop a lot ourselves (or well, nowadays with BAE systems I assume) since we don't want to depend on others and support local industry but why not take full advantage and sell it to as many as possible for lower cost and more profit? Yeah, war is bad, but why not take economic advantage / only take economic disadvantage from it? If we can produce it and someone want to buy it do it :D

    4. Re:Containment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Imagine a Beowulf cluster of these...

    5. Re:Containment by WrongSizeGlass · · Score: 2, Funny

      I am so going to get a empty shipping container, paint some Russian letters on it and put it in my backyard ... and then make sure my neighbors see that article. Your move, Mr. Jones.

    6. Re:Containment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, now we can bomb civilian ships, trucks and trains!!! HURRAY!

      On the other hand, isnt it cool that your cheap chinese toys probably were transported with quad missile defense system!

    7. Re:Containment by SharpFang · · Score: 1

      I imagined. A freight ship.
      Cruise Katyusha?

      --
      45 5F E1 04 22 CA 29 C4 93 3F 95 05 2B 79 2A B2
    8. Re:Containment by Mindcontrolled · · Score: 1

      Your move, Mr. Jones.

      Done, dear neighbor. Now please wait for the black helicopters. I hear Guantanamo Bay is quite nice this time of the year. ;)

      --
      Ubi solitudinem faciunt, pacem appellant.
    9. Re:Containment by mhajicek · · Score: 1

      More than meets the eye...

    10. Re:Containment by mhajicek · · Score: 1

      It's hard to get your shipping container close enough to the enemy's military base for direct detonation to be effective. Use of nukes would incite global retaliation. A precision cruise missile that only has to get to the general area before launch is much more useful and politically acceptable.

    11. Re:Containment by vegiVamp · · Score: 4, Insightful

      > Yeah, war is bad, but why not take economic advantage / only take economic disadvantage from it?

      It's called ethics, and I know for a fact that not all swedes lack that trait.

      --
      What a depressingly stupid machine.
    12. Re:Containment by Caffinated · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The concern isn't that they're weapons as such, but that they're weapons designed to be hidden on merchant vessels. In a tense situation, it would likely make all merchant ships potential threats and would likely end up with a lot of innocent civilians being killed.

    13. Re:Containment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Ethics"? What are you? An islamist or something?

    14. Re:Containment by delinear · · Score: 1

      Well, it would certainly be a surprise for pirates...

    15. Re:Containment by jedidiah · · Score: 3, Insightful

      > Why should they not sell them?

      One word: Stinger.

      It might sound like a nice payday but these things might end up pointed at YOU.

      Nevermind the rest of the world, the Russians should be considering their own expanding frontiers here.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    16. Re:Containment by Eunuchswear · · Score: 3, Informative

      The French government sell weapons like this to anyone, try stopping them.

      Citation needed maybe?

      Worlds largest arms exporters (in 2007, Source):

      1. USA ....... 7.454 G$
      2. Russia .... 4.588 G$
      3. Germany ... 3.395 G$
      4. France .... 2.690 G$
      5. Ukraine ... 1.395 G$
      6. Netherlands.1.355 G$
      7. UK ........ 1.151 G$

      (Damn but the UK is fucked, they used to be a contender).

      (why is it so fucking hard to do a table in slashcode?).

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    17. Re:Containment by Eunuchswear · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Use of nukes would incite global retaliation.

      Against whom? If Al-Queda let of a bomb in New York harbor who would you nuke? Saudi? Afghanistan?

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    18. Re:Containment by Vectormatic · · Score: 1

      just to point something out, up to 2006 the netherlands were doing only a fraction of what they sold in 2007, my guess is both 2006/2007 saw a few navy ship deals, as that is basically all we make in terms of military equipment, so once you get into that range of money, things can fluctuate a lot.

      anyway [nelson]*points at the uk* HA-HA [/nelson]

      --
      People, what a bunch of bastards
    19. Re:Containment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are self-contained, so that brings down the required cost of the launch vessel and gives more space for other activities. The storage, packing and handling costs would decrease and the speed of loading would increase significantly. A new type of a military vessel could use the available commercial technologies developed for container handling. They also require satellite capability so that removes the issue of terrorists, unless a state is ready to provide an access to their military satellites. Basically, it sounds like a weapon equivalent of a modular, mobile data center in a container.
        Although one could possibly hide this system in a merchant vessel, it would be more probable that the cost savings and the efficiency increases of the system would mostly benefit military vehicles and vessels. It resembles a cheaper and bigger version of the American NLOS-LS.

    20. Re:Containment by TheCarp · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Meh war is war eh? Whats with all the "we must sugar coat war". It is what it is. Sorry about that, but its called "reality".

      Frankly, my view on war is that we shouldn't fight it. Its bad, its disgusting. There hasn't been a war since WWII that I really am happy that my country (the US) has been engaged in. This is to the point that I don't even like to refer to "our troops". They aren't my troops. I don't support this shit except in the ways that I am forced to under threat of legal action (that is to say, I pay my protection money to the warmongers).

      Now... all that said, you might think that I am against these sorts of weapons or armament in general. Far from it. When it does come time that war is needed, as a last resort, then I see no reason to hold back. Merchant ships should arm themselves as, war should be kept in such reserve as we should not engage in it until we are at such a point that even blasting enemy supporting merchant ships out of the water is considered justified.

      Until we are ready to attack the hearts of the people supporting "the enemy" with all the ferocity of General Sherman, then we shouldn't send a single bomb.

      Plus, if merchant ships could defend themselves, they would be safer. Just think what one of these containers could do to a group of Somali pirates! Forget that ridiculous long range sound attack that has already failed and gotten people killed, its high time that merchant ships stop being simple targets.

      As usual "the police" (in this case governments with their navys) don't have the resources to make a difference, so the merchants should be taking these matters into their own hands. I say....arm them to the teeth!.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    21. Re:Containment by Kerckhoffs+Principle · · Score: 1

      This threat must be contained

      This thread must be contained as well

    22. Re:Containment by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      Yeah maybe the Netherlands beat the UK on some ship deals, but the fucking Ukraine is beating BAE &co by selling fucking AK47s!

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    23. Re:Containment by BlackSnake112 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Who ever said the target was a military base. Nuking the trade ports with a nuke in a container would be easy to do and very devastating to the country who now has one less port. With careful timing (and container ships are very coordinated) they could hit more then one port at the same time. Effectively stopping the flow of goods in and out of said country for a while.

    24. Re:Containment by modecx · · Score: 1

      Don't worry... The Russians already have and will surely market effective countermeasures to this missile system. But, so does every other country with a navy budget capable of supporting aircraft carriers and other strategic naval systems.

      --
      Constitutional rights may be respected, repealed, or modified; but they must never be ignored.
    25. Re:Containment by daveywest · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Doesn't concealing weapons in civilian areas violate several international conventions and treaties? The only market for this device is terror based organizations.

    26. Re:Containment by Sir_Lewk · · Score: 1

      Ethics are relative. Claiming that someone is without them simply because their idea of ethical does not align with yours is incredibly ignorant.

      --
      "linux is just DOS with a UNIX like syntax" -- Galactic Dominator (944134)
    27. Re:Containment by Shompol · · Score: 1

      Except one little detail: Russia has very little access to important international waterways (and very small fleet where it does have access). Arctic ocean is only useful for launching nuclear submarines. So if every container ship in the world is turned into a destroyer, they could not care less. Of course, they also don't think twice before selling anti-aircraft, ballistic missiles and such to "close" neighbors like Turkey, Iran, North Korea, etc. I guess they have a kill switch somewhere :P

    28. Re:Containment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We should be more worried about the millions of missiles not in shipping containers!

    29. Re:Containment by wagnerrp · · Score: 1

      Plus, if merchant ships could defend themselves, they would be safer. Just think what one of these containers could do to a group of Somali pirates! Forget that ridiculous long range sound attack that has already failed and gotten people killed, its high time that merchant ships stop being simple targets.

      There are three problems with this. First, many ports do not allow weapons. Of course you could just hide them, but the repercussions of being caught are severe. There's not much use for a merchant who is banned from docking at port.

      Second, cruise missiles are EXPENSIVE. You're talking several million for launch facilities, and several more for each missile. That's why the navy is trying to partially replace them with long range rail guns. Price estimates put one container with four missiles to be up to $20M. The missiles would be worth far more than the ships they would be destroying. They would be worth more than the bounty the pirates are asking for. Now certainly there is worth in taking such a hard line, but that worth doesn't show up on a corporate balance sheet.

      Third, cruise missiles are long range. If merchants are going to defend themselves, you want them to have positive visual verification of a threat first. Cruise missiles aren't going to work against something a mere half mile out, and you don't want them firing on something a hundred miles out because 'they turned toward us menacingly'.

    30. Re:Containment by vegiVamp · · Score: 1

      There's certainly a degree of truth in that, but it is not the absolute that the people who earn billions selling weapons would like you to believe.

      --
      What a depressingly stupid machine.
    31. Re:Containment by Mysticalfruit · · Score: 1

      What this just did was make the waters much less safe for any ship that's capable of carrying a shipping container.

      Now any navy in the world that sees a ship larger than a skiff is going to see a threat and act accordingly.

      --
      Yes Francis, the world has gone crazy.
    32. Re:Containment by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      Everyone.

      It's the only way to be sure.

    33. Re:Containment by rgviza · · Score: 1

      This is a case of the pot calling the kettle black, considering that the US companies supplied and supported the nazis in ww II. We kept the gold bars for them in a bank presided over by Thomas H. McKittrick, a US citizen, their troops driven in ford trucks built under license (which remained in effect throughout the war) standard oil supplying them fuel via Switzerland. There was Chase and Morgan banks servicing nazi soldiers in occupied France. Then there was GM, ITT, RCA, General Aniline etc etc etc. The rabbit hole is very deep.

      GM built JU-88's, ITT supplied communications equipment used to crack our own coded messages. Ford built the factory which supplied Rommel's tanks to the Afrika Corps, among other things. This went on until after 1944, which is basically when Nazi Germany's credit rating started to fall like a stone, after D-Day.

      This is the tip of the iceburg... Wars are good for everyone except the soldiers and other people that die and the US corporations are no better than anyone else. You can trace this pattern right up to the present day, I'm sorry to say. US companies still sell arms to countries that supply our enemies. If they have money, our corporations will sell to them.

      Sad really but that's how the world works. I suggest you read 1984. There's always a war somewhere because it's good for business and every government needs at least one enemy.

      --
      Don't kid yourself. It's the size of the regexp AND how you use it that counts.
    34. Re:Containment by tmosley · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It also makes aggression by big fat bullies less likely (think USA).

      This is analogous to having civilians having concealed weapons. With concealed carry laws in Texas, violent crime has dropped significantly, even as it rises in other populous nations. With a weapon like this, wars are much less likely to break out.

      This is sort of like a poor-man's nuke. No nuclear armed nation has ever been invaded (and only one has had a possession invaded--England). Maybe this sort of thing will stop us from invading any more countries using hair-brained justifications.

    35. Re:Containment by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      Makes sense. Be smarter to go for a preemptive strike though.

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    36. Re:Containment by Anonymous+Cowpat · · Score: 1

      They also require satellite capability so that removes the issue of terrorists, unless a state is ready to provide an access to their military satellites.

      Sounds like it needs GPS at most - 25 of these (100 missiles) could be fired in a co-ordinated attack worldwide before anyone thought to shut down the GPS system, and for shutting GPS down to be effective, Glonass, Galileo & whatever the Chinese one is called would all have to be killed in short order. Tell me, if you're China and the US claims that it's under attack & could you shut your GPS down to stop it, would you?

      --
      FGD 135
    37. Re:Containment by anonieuweling · · Score: 1

      Good luck with that...

    38. Re:Containment by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

      You mean by the same logic that in a tense situation would make every man a potential threat because he has a penis, and would likely end up with a lot of innocent women being raped?

      Please learn the concepts of intention and motivation. And lay of the propaganda crack pipe. TYVM.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
    39. Re:Containment by zill · · Score: 1

      Yeah, you can try to stop one Russian company from selling these weapons

      Why should they not sell them?

      Because car bombs and other terrorist incidents are still a monthly occurrence in Russia. Selling these missiles to anyone other than the Russian military will increase the odds of these missiles being used against Russian civilians, including the company making the missiles.

      Getting revenge on an ex-enemy from 20 years ago is not worth putting yourself and your family and friends at risk.

      "An atom-blaster is a good weapon, but it can point both ways." — Isaac Asimov

    40. Re:Containment by ubrgeek · · Score: 1

      > There's not much use for a merchant who is banned from docking at port.

      Oh, I don't know. I imagine Natalie would still be popular with sailors at sea.

      --
      Bark less. Wag more.
    41. Re:Containment by CorporateSuit · · Score: 1

      There are other applications that come to mind. Modularity, for one. When it's time to swap out the old weapon systems and swap in the new, it could be a simple detach, unload, load and attach -- like violent blade servers. Keeping a weapon powerful, while also making the shape more stack-friendly is a concept that could go a very long way for advancing marine warfare. (or Mechs, for the little geek in you)

      The summary's description of it, however, immediately brings the anti-conventional tactics to mind. I don't have video, so I can't view the commercial to see how they're marketing it.

      --
      I am the richest astronaut ever to win the superbowl.
    42. Re:Containment by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      Against whom? If Al-Queda let of a bomb in New York harbor who would you nuke? Saudi? Afghanistan?

      I don't know the details, but I've heard from nuclear scientists that it is possible to trace the origin of the nuclear material in a bomb even after it has exploded. It's not as trivial as, say, identifying where an ICBM was launched from, but not impossible. So, you bomb whoever allowed the nuke to arrive in the hands of al Qaeda. There should be a strong incentive for everyone to make sure their nuclear stockpile is secure, and if one of their nukes goes missing to let the international community know right away.

      As I probably don't need to say, this hardly seems foolproof. Which is why shipping container nukes are the big threat, and a missile defense shield is stupid. MAD is our missile defense shield. MAD is to a lesser extent a shipping container shield, but it's that avenue that needs additional attention. Not ICBMs.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    43. Re:Containment by kharchenko · · Score: 0, Redundant

      from orbit!

    44. Re:Containment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. I would start with those countries and add a few, being sure to take out all the major Islam holy sites.

    45. Re:Containment by TheLink · · Score: 1

      > you bomb whoever allowed the nuke to arrive in the hands of al Qaeda.

      So if some muslim terrorist buys/steals a nuke that originally came from Russia and uses it on the US, the US will bomb the Russians?

      Some terrorists would really like that. Two birds with one stone etc.

      --
    46. Re:Containment by slick7 · · Score: 1

      but the repercussions of being caught are severe. There's not much use for a merchant who is banned from docking at port

      And how the repercussions are severe. Just look what happened in the Cuban blockade.
      Anonymous containerization protects the guilty, creates plausible deny-ability and closing the door after the horse has bolted syndrome.

      --
      The mind conceives, the body achieves, the spirit manifests.
    47. Re:Containment by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      GM built JU-88's

      And Mercedes built armoured vehicles for the British. Oh, hang on a minute, it was Daimler. Just like it wasn't GM that built Ju-88s, it was Opel.

      You really think an overseas subsidiary that finds itself in a totalitarian regime answers to head office rather than the local gauleiter?

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    48. Re:Containment by religious+freak · · Score: 1

      Agreed. So all a terrorist organization needs is 1) Enough money to buy this thing... which isn't cheap 2) The contacts to do so (not difficult, but not inconsequential) and 3) A FUCKING CONTAINER SHIP... if you've ever seen a container ship, they're HUGE and enormously expensive... even the "small ones".

      I think a few dudes with AKs in a crowded NYC street is enough to cause real terror, not hoping your one time shot off an impossibly huge investment in a cruise missile and boat is successful.

      FUD

      --
      If you can read this... 01110101 01110010 00100000 01100001 00100000 01100111 01100101 01100101 01101011
    49. Re:Containment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mecca.

    50. Re:Containment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My guess is that the market for this device is independent contractors who will onload one of these to your merchant vessel prior to going through pirate infested waters... and then offload it again once you've reached clear waters again.

      Pirates would be a bit more cautious if every shipping container might be able to take them out.

    51. Re:Containment by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      That depends. Are we postulating a Republican president? Especially one of the Bush dynasty?

    52. Re:Containment by UdoKeir · · Score: 1

      With concealed carry laws in Texas, violent crime has dropped significantly, even as it rises in other populous nations.

      Nonsense.

      Texas
      New York

    53. Re:Containment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Al-Queda took town the towers & we invaded Iraq & Afghanistan. I think Iran is next on the list.

    54. Re:Containment by T+Murphy · · Score: 1

      With concealed carry laws in place, fewer people are going to stand there and point a gun at someone to make them do something. Given this describes a number of crimes, it helps decrease crime. Because most people buying guns are sane, the increase in random people playing DC sniper is relatively very small.

      Having these concealed cruise missiles is likely to decrease willingness to openly start a war, but given the chances were already fairly low, the increase in crazy people using these missiles is likely a significant factor.

      I have no numbers to evaluate the reduction in war or increase in terrorism, so maybe it is overall a good thing. I just think it is enough of a concern it isn't as cut and dry as the concealed carry analogy suggests.

    55. Re:Containment by Mr.+Foogle · · Score: 1

      No nuclear armed nation has ever been invaded

      Except Israel.

      --
      Display some adaptability.
    56. Re:Containment by aliquis · · Score: 1

      I will just follow the other guys response:

      Ethics are relative.

      And using that on your response I guess one could argue whatever it's wrong of us ourselves to have weapons to defend the country just in case or well, rather make it less likely to get attacked in the first place. Guess that much not as long as we aren't on the aggressive?

      So, does it really matter if we sell items to others as long as they aren't the aggressive side?

      Though that will always be a gray area and as soon as they are used in war and not just training I guess it all fail ..

      Anyway, if we don't sell them someone else will. It's not like there isn't anyone else willing to supply others with weapons. ... also I'm vegan, most people in Sweden aren't ;)

    57. Re:Containment by T+Murphy · · Score: 1

      As far as I'm aware, the missile shield is supposed to mitigate the problems with MAD- if someone tries to nuke us and we can shoot down their missiles, we might be able to ask questions before we retaliate. Of course, it does give us some protection should we decide to use nukes first, but I don't think America or the EU is crazy enough to consider that (yet).

    58. Re:Containment by vegiVamp · · Score: 1

      So why don't you eat a nice steak? After all, if you don't, someone else will; the cow gets killed anyway.

      Would you, as a vegan, be comfortable selling hydraulic pins to slaughterhouses ? After all, for all you know they'll use them just to drive nails in the wall and hang up beautiful paintings of cute bunnies.

      "Everyone else does it" and "if I don't, someone else will" just don't seem to be very good reasons to throw your ethics overboard, I think.

      --
      What a depressingly stupid machine.
    59. Re:Containment by aliquis · · Score: 1

      Nowadays?

      Yes.

    60. Re:Containment by eharvill · · Score: 1

      http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0164184/ Except it was originally a US nuke if memory serves.

      --
      At night I drink myself to sleep and pretend I don't care that you're not here with me
    61. Re:Containment by Macrat · · Score: 1

      Against whom? If Al-Queda let of a bomb in New York harbor who would you nuke? Saudi? Afghanistan?

      Yes.

    62. Re:Containment by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      the incidence of lunatics getting their hands on high multi-million dollar weapons systems is also low, and terrorists can do their thing without spending anywhere near that much money. How much did a couple of airline tickets, a little bit of flight school, and some box cutters cost again?

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    63. Re:Containment by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Too bad you are missing more recent data (which shows Texas crime rates decreasing rapidly, as a greater and greater share of the population gets permits, while New York's are spiking upwards), and that data is not corrected for population growth. Texas is growing, while New York is stagnating, and now losing population, IIRC.

      An article with evidence pointing both ways: http://www.sj-r.com/carousel/x1526463189/Concealed-carry-laws-Experts-debate-impact

    64. Re:Containment by tmosley · · Score: 1

      They had a few nukes back then. I suppose that is the exception that proves the rule. Their arsenal is now much more advanced, and has served as a deterrent ever since. You won't see anyone invading Israel any time in the near future.

    65. Re:Containment by sixsixtysix · · Score: 1

      i'd like to know if "accidental" gun deaths have gone up.

      --
      ...
    66. Re:Containment by sixsixtysix · · Score: 1

      iran will be much, much tougher than those 2 combined.

      --
      ...
    67. Re:Containment by mpe · · Score: 1

      Having these concealed cruise missiles is likely to decrease willingness to openly start a war, but given the chances were already fairly low,

      It might also help deter military coups backed by other governments.

    68. Re:Containment by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      Actually, Somalia pirates have accumulated quite a fleet of container ships for little money down and very cheap labor.

    69. Re:Containment by turgid · · Score: 1

      Ethics are relative.

      Ethics are thouth of Thuffolk, not to be confused with Thuthicks, and north of Kent.

    70. Re:Containment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yes

    71. Re:Containment by lennier · · Score: 1

      Meh war is war eh? Whats with all the "we must sugar coat war". It is what it is.

      And thus was born the doctrine of 'total war', which is the black cauldron out of which Godwin arose, as well as Lenin and Qutb and Vietnam and MAD and Rwanda and other nice things in the 20th century.

      When you've already decided 1) that when you fight, you fight hard and dirty and make no distinction between soldiers and civilians, plus 2) that you're facing a sneaky trans-national enemy who is actively subverting your class/race/culture and 'traditional' means won't work, it's very easy (especially in the middle of an actual war) to slide into to 3) deciding that the answer lies in taking out that group of people, civilian or not, by any means necessary.

      And while 'attacking the hearts of the people supporting...' rather than 'attacking the neatly lined up uniforms of the army of...' is obviously a lot more direct and apparently effective, it can take a culture into some very dark places that later generations may describe as 'wtf going on hth'.

      'Limited war' is an oxymoron, but 'total war' is a cliff with atrocity cactus below.

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    72. Re:Containment by lennier · · Score: 1

      Hi Sarah! Running for President in 2012?

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    73. Re:Containment by Valdrax · · Score: 1

      ...How does being the world's 4th largest arms exporter counter his assertion that they are willing to sell to a wide customer base?

      (Not that I have good reason to believe either one of you is more right than the other; I'm just boggled by the somewhat spurious rebuttal.)

      --
      If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
    74. Re:Containment by Valdrax · · Score: 1

      So, you bomb whoever allowed the nuke to arrive in the hands of al Qaeda.

      There's a small problem with that. Most countries that could let a nuke get loose are countries that have nukes. And those countries tend to allies with nukes; often, that ally is one of the two former nuclear superpowers. (i.e. American and Russia.)

      So, if say Kazakhstan lets a nuke get loose. (Yes, I know that they disarmed completely in 1995. Work with me here.) The nuke gets used and we trace it. We're basically going to figure out the weapon was of Soviet make without any way of tracing it to Kazakhstan. So, which former Soviet republic do we bomb, and how do we expect Russia to act?

      Also, what the hell do you think happens to the tattered remnants of America's moral credibility if we execute an attack with a WMD against (inevitably) a large swath of civilian targets? I can barely imagine the international fecal storm that would come in the wake of doing that.

      Nukes are for having, not using.

      --
      If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
    75. Re:Containment by religious+freak · · Score: 1

      I would imagine the itchy trigger finger of the military would be very intolerant of a pirated ship anywhere remotely close to an aircraft carrier.

      --
      If you can read this... 01110101 01110010 00100000 01100001 00100000 01100111 01100101 01100101 01101011
    76. Re:Containment by Zancarius · · Score: 1

      Most (though not all) concealed carry states have basic requirements that have to be met before you can legally carry a concealed weapon, and many of those requirements include classes teaching you state law with regards to self defense along with basic weapon safety.

      Though, I suspect you're probably trolling since you didn't even attempt to define what you meant by "accidental," which can include self-inflicted gunshot wounds, the accidental shooting of other individuals, or generally mishandling the firearm until it goes off, injuring or killing someone.

      --
      He who has no .plan has small finger. ~ Confucius on UNIX
    77. Re:Containment by mjwx · · Score: 1

      (Damn but the UK is fucked, they used to be a contender).

      BAE systems was sold to EADS (Airbus). The Enfield Armoury is now producing German designed rifles for the Royal Army (G36) and British naval designs just cant keep up with Australian, Spanish and US designs (no-body mention the Collins class underwater vacuum cleaner).

      The only thing the UK is really selling is the Harrier, most of which are made under license somewhere else and will eventually be superseded by the JSF.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    78. Re:Containment by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 1

      They also require satellite capability so that removes the issue of terrorists, unless a state is ready to provide an access to their military satellites.

      Do you know that countries ranging from Pakistan to Indonesia to Saudi Arabia to Malaysia to Libya to Iran to Bahrain all have their own satellites orbiting above?

      What is there to stop them from lending a hand to the terrorists?

      Couple with the fact that these rogue countries can always pretend that they know nothing about how their own satellites being used by the terrorists.

      Some of the above listed countries have helped the terrorists by giving military training, teaching the terrorists how to handle explosive, making bombs, et cetera.

      There are even documented cases where countries like Malaysia trained the terrorists in secret army bases deep inside their thick tropical jungle.

      But, as usual, they have categorically denied any knowledge of the link between their military personnel with the terrorists.

      Nobody can do anything to those rogue countries, certainly not UN, which has enlisted Malaysia in deploying "peace keeper troops" patroling the border in between Lebanon and Israel - with full knowledge that the Malaysian's so-called "peace keeper troops" would give aid to the Hizballah and other splinter mujahhedin groups which launch attacks on Israel's civilian population.

      To lend a hand to the terrorists by giving them access to their satellites is even easier, with much deadly consequences.

      --
      Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
    79. Re:Containment by aliquis · · Score: 1

      It does not. One don't just kill cows for fun, one kill them for the demand.

      And one sell weapons for demand to ... So if we don't sell them someone else will ..

      No, I wouldn't, but I like animals more than people ;D

      If we sold weapons what say they wouldn't be used by democratic countries for peacekeeping/defense only?

      Or as said remove them and hope no-one attacks anyway, or rather, as any country in the world would had preferred it, have the US pay for and safe-keep you instead.

    80. Re:Containment by Nyder · · Score: 1

      > Yeah, war is bad, but why not take economic advantage / only take economic disadvantage from it?

      It's called ethics, and I know for a fact that not all swedes lack that trait.

      I'll do ya 1 better, I know not all humans have that trait.

      --
      Be seeing you...
    81. Re:Containment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is analogous to having civilians having concealed weapons. ... This is sort of like a poor-man's nuke.

      This is analogous to terrorists having concealed weapons.

      Why would civilians need cruise missiles when they are being protected by the US Navy (or one of the other navies that has a presence in shipping areas)? The only people these will benefit are those who want to *look* like civilians.

      This is not at all like nuclear deterrence. If someone shoots a missile at a carrier battle group, they are going to get themselves blown to hell rather quickly. The Navy doesn't just sit there and hope no one shoots anything at them. There are layers of defense that would ideally identify and destroy it before it hurts anything. This would be perfect for attacks against civilians though. Or maybe if the target ship is in port and not on a mission.

    82. Re:Containment by rdnetto · · Score: 1

      Given (what I've heard about) the state of the American education system, probably Australia (the one with the kangaroos).

      --
      Most human behaviour can be explained in terms of identity.
    83. Re:Containment by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      BAE systems was sold to EADS (Airbus).

      No it wasn't. In a typical piece of British stupidity BAe sold it's share of Airbus in 2006 severing all connections with Airbus and EADS.

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    84. Re:Containment by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      ...How does being the world's 4th largest arms exporter counter his assertion that they are willing to sell to a wide customer base?

      I think I was trying to imply that if they were selling to just anyone they might be more than the 4th largest.

      Or maybe it was just mere corrobarative detail intended to add verisimiltude to an otherwise bald and unconvincing narrative.

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    85. Re:Containment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are honestly requesting containment when the US has and will give tons of weapons to ANYONE who they think will further the US' interests?

      Do we really need to recap who got weapons and/or financing and/or other support from the US?
      Let's start off with Saddam, Osama, The Taliban, terror organizations such as the MEC, C.&S.A., Asian and middle eastern dictatorships or contras to name just a few.

      The hypocrisy in the US populace is amazing.

      Guess only the US is allowed to blow up children people from miles away .. oh wait, if they die they are terrists right?

    86. Re:Containment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For starters.. Yes :-)

    87. Re:Containment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are no "innocent civilians" cf Republicans and tea-partiers. I want to know where they conceal their brains. Very scary.

    88. Re:Containment by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

      Don't forget that major ports are located at major cities, which in turn means that you can get a huge impact.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    89. Re:Containment by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Ummm, the US isn't always the good guy. In fact, it has demonstrably become evil, having killed almost as many Arabs as Hitler killed Jews, having overthrown democracies to install dictatorships (in both Iraq and Iran), and its record of oppression against its own citizens (largest prison population on Earth, by FAR the largest per capita prison population of Earth).

      A few dozen of these things would be enough to stop a carrier fleet from attacking your non-aggressing nation, but would be more or less useless offensively. The analogy was not that civilians would use them, it was that civilians use them for self defense, as a nation-state would use these cargo container missiles.

    90. Re:Containment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Use of nukes would incite global retaliation.

      Against whom? If Al-Queda let of a bomb in New York harbor who would you nuke? Saudi? Afghanistan?

      Yes.

    91. Re:Containment by JustABlitheringIdiot · · Score: 1

      With concealed carry laws in Texas, violent crime has dropped significantly, even as it rises in other populous nations.

      Since when did Texas stop being a state and become it's own nation?

    92. Re:Containment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Use of nukes would incite global retaliation.

      Against whom? If Al-Queda let of a bomb in New York harbor who would you nuke? Saudi? Afghanistan?

      D) All of the above

    93. Re:Containment by WNight · · Score: 1

      Dunno about that, the bombing of Germany/Japan was pretty reasonable. That's why we tell Palestinians that stopping violence is (partly) their responsibility by refusing to be used as meat shields.

      Rwanda wasn't reasonable because it was racial (many victims were actually unaligned) even if it was roughly motivated by attacking those supporting the troops fighting your allies... But that says nothing about the general case of taking the fight to the enemy instead of playing nice and letting their mercenaries kill you over there in the "field".

      There's a real double-standard around it though. On one hand it's presented as perfectly reasonable to treat the funders of violence like the perpetrators of violence (terrorist supporters!), except that all tax payers would be war criminals after Abu Ghraib came to light and was just brushed away.

  2. Taking out capital ships? by Carewolf · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I really hope a single cruise missile can't take out an aircraft carrier, if they can, then you have far bigger problems that missiles in merchant ships. They or their escorts should have the defenses to evade or destroy most missile types.

    1. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Thanshin · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Exactly my first thought.

      I can't believe it's possible to get anything bigger than a football close enough to a cruiser, bypassing all anti-missile systems.

    2. Re:Taking out capital ships? by sentientbeing · · Score: 5, Funny

      We once ordered a bulk shipment of used ISA abnd SCSI cards on ebay from Russia for a recycling project.

      Due to a mix up at customs I received a mislabeled container destined for a well-known middle east state. Imagine my surprise when we opened it and found four fully-armed intercontinental nuclear cruise missiles. How we laughed. Needless to say we left negative feedback and returned the item. The sales manager was not happy AT ALL.

      --

      ------
      beware he who would deny you access to information, for in his mind he dreams himself your master
    3. Re:Taking out capital ships? by delta98 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Hate to float a turd but... there has been a cruse missile with these capabilities for sometime now. The military won't generally acknowledge this fact because doing so would kill the budget for big carriers. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS-N-22 this is a link to an older type so feel free to correct me(as if /. needs an invite)-;.

    4. Re:Taking out capital ships? by bertok · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I really hope a single cruise missile can't take out an aircraft carrier, if they can, then you have far bigger problems that missiles in merchant ships. They or their escorts should have the defenses to evade or destroy most missile types.

      Precisely.

      First of all, carriers are escored by... carrier battle groups!

      The container ship would have to have a really good excuse for being anywhere near the group in the first place, and would then have to evade battleships on the way to the centre of the fleet where the carrier is, under the fire the whole way, and then the missile it launches will have to make it past the batteries of anti-missile systems like the Phalanx.

      Err... no, this won't be taking down aircraft carriers any time soon.

      What it could do however is allow the equivalent of guerrilla warfare on the high seas. Container ships could target cruise liners, merchant vessels, etc... and if nobody was around to see the attack, they might even make it away and claim innocence later. Even the survivors wouldn't see much, because it's fairly simple to attack "over the horizon".

    5. Re:Taking out capital ships? by professionalfurryele · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Never mind the offensive capability, this system has to be one of the stupidest ideas I've ever heard. You never, ever, ever camouflage your military systems to look like civilian infrastructure. If you do, you leave your opponent with no choice but to blow up your privately owned merchant marine, your trucks and every cargo container it can see. Part of the reason Germany started using unrestricted submarine warfare was the my countries use of Q-ships. Part of the reason civilian casualties in Gaza are so high is 'police stations' and 'schools' that are anything but.
      Is the idea here to sell this product to countries looking to get their civilians killed for propaganda purposes?

    6. Re:Taking out capital ships? by warGod3 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Remember back a few years ago, an IED did some damage to the USS Cole (Arleigh Class Destroyer).

      As for taking out a capital ship, such as a carrier, would require some planning, some skill and a damn good bit of coordination... good luck with that.

      --
      "Be polite, be professional, but have a plan to kill everybody you meet." General James Mattis
    7. Re:Taking out capital ships? by CarpetShark · · Score: 4, Funny

      I can't believe it's possible to get anything bigger than a football close enough to a cruiser,

      The trick is to pretend to be a rock band, and have Erika Eleniak in tow.

    8. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Yvanhoe · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This is, however, the sad truth. Aircraft carriers nowadays are very vulnerable beasts. I read that it is acknowledged that in the case of a conflict against Iran, all the US navy in the Persian Gulf would be sunk within hours. One may joke about Russian tech, but they are good at one thing : building missiles that bypass American protections.

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    9. Re:Taking out capital ships? by AlecC · · Score: 5, Insightful

      While I agree that the defensive armament of a carrier battle group is intended to defend against precisely this sort of attack, the container ship would not have to be near: this sort of cruise missile typically has ranges of the order of 200 miles. You cannot enforce a 200 mile radius exclusion circle round your battle group. The missile will fly most of this distance at the height of a hundred or sofeet, so it is vulnerable only as it approaches the screening ships - which is why they are there.

      --
      Consciousness is an illusion caused by an excess of self consciousness.
    10. Re:Taking out capital ships? by AlecC · · Score: 1

      The ides is to sell it to countries with military budgets but not much clue. Many of the high tech weapons sold to third world countries are essentially useless for their real military needs. But they make the generals feel good, and therefore support the dictator (or even elected president) who keeps buying such toys for the only group with the realistic possibility of toppling him.

      --
      Consciousness is an illusion caused by an excess of self consciousness.
    11. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Zironic · · Score: 1

      It's a cruise missile not a crossbow. It doesn't have to be anywhere near the battle group when it's fired.

    12. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Pvt_Ryan · · Score: 4, Funny

      Surely then the defense is to ensure your ships cook is Steven Seagal?

    13. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US has stopped design and production of air carriers like 2 years ago following the release of some Russian made new type of missile. (www.voltair

      But I think they'll keep the carriers running, for Holywood productions and humanitarian aid :-)

    14. Re:Taking out capital ships? by CarpetShark · · Score: 1

      Surely then the defense is to ensure your ships cook is Steven Seagal?

      Yep. I prefer the other solution though: cut the movie budget. That way, Erika would turn into some old hag who does movies for less, the Navy would see her from a distance, be horrified, and blow the helicopter out of the sky.

    15. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Barny · · Score: 4, Informative

      Something further to point out, if enough dollars were thrown at this, how many such 4 missile containers could you fit in a single height on a typical container ship?

      Lets see, the biggest ships, emma maersk, can have (if they load a little light) 506 40' containers with open top, these suckers look like the longer 80' type tho, and would likely need some extra room for the hinge system on the end.... lets say 126 launch containers with 4 cruise missiles each. I want to see the carrier battle group that can stop that many incoming missiles :)

      --
      ...
      /me sighs
    16. Re:Taking out capital ships? by MoonBuggy · · Score: 1

      So paint a big red target on the side of the container.

      It seems like a reasonably sensible idea to be able to rapidly turn a civilian ship/train/truck into a missile launch system, for a country that can't afford to have that much military infrastructure sitting unused. There's no real reason that they have to look like any other old container. The tactical choice to be made is, of course, whether the risk is greater from potentially having your enemies target civilians, or from having your cruise missile stations very easily identified.

    17. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I really hope a single cruise missile can't take out an aircraft carrier,

      Quote from "Peculiarities of the National Fishing" (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0185584/). "[Commander of corvette/missile ship:] I can sink aircraft carrier. ... If I get lucky."

      You can sink or disable lots of things with little luck and 300-400 of HE or 200kT nuclear bomb.

    18. Re:Taking out capital ships? by MoonBuggy · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Interesting. I couldn't find details anywhere of how big a warhead the Club-K can carry, but apparently it can hit Mach 3, which is also one of the things that makes the SS-N-22 so dangerous. Also found a £10,000,000 per container price tag, which doesn't seem to be mentioned elsewhere.

      More importantly, though, what self respecting nation doesn't want to buy missiles that are advertised with the Pirates of the Carribean theme!

    19. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Chrisq · · Score: 1

      I really hope a single cruise missile can't take out an aircraft carrier, if they can, then you have far bigger problems that missiles in merchant ships. They or their escorts should have the defenses to evade or destroy most missile types.

      I put this down to marketing hype. It probably means that it would stand a chance of killing some older small carriers on a good day. I doubt if a fully updated Nimitz-class carrier would have much to worry about, at most they will be on a slightly higher state of alert when coming close to unrecognised container ships.

    20. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

      These days Steven Seagal is old and overweight.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    21. Re:Taking out capital ships? by YeeHaW_Jelte · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that's about as reasonable as classifying every inhabitant of a country that disguises soldiers as civilians as legitimate military targets.

      Way to go, Rambo! Keep shooting those goodwill bullets!

      Oh, and by the way, if you're an American ... even your own generals now realize that half of winning the war is in winning the trust of people, not shooting them.

      --

      ---
      "The chances of a demonic possession spreading are remote -- relax."
    22. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Capital ships will simply have to maintain bigger distances. From the shore and from merchant ships. Depending on the warning time they get upon launch of these things. Potentially they will be forced to fire at commercial traffic. They won't be in real trouble.

      A bigger problem is that due to the necessity of customs checking being on the shore, every American harbor has now become a launch site for Iranian missiles. God forbid that these missiles might be capable of carrying nuclear warheads (and might simply be targeted at the harbor they're launched in). A nuke straight into manhattan has just become a whole lot easier.

      I'd mostly be afraid that it's going to become common knowledge that defending a capital ship is a hell of a lot easier than defending a city from attacks launched from a few dozen to a few hundred kilometers. If this weapon gets on anything except absolutely tiny scale muslims will have cut sea-based trading (cutting America off from 40% of it's oil, and Europe from close to 80-90%).

      In the extreme the question (to Americans, and Europeans) forcibly becomes : which do you choose
      1) a medieval economy, with de-facto lawlessness (due to the unavailability of many resources for police)
      2) a totalitarian, but modern, economy, where one cannot move anything bigger than a suitcase around without police checking it regularly.

      There is no doubt in my mind that most people, and 100% of politicians (after all, option 1 would destroy nearly all of their power), will choose option 2.

    23. Re:Taking out capital ships? by professionalfurryele · · Score: 1

      I got no problem with that suggestion. I'm not sure that is what will happen in practice but I got no problem with it. Navies have been using converted civilian ships for years.

    24. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, they would have to be so close to the carrier, which is impossible. Heck, they'd have to be inside the battle group or something.

    25. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Lord+Pillage · · Score: 4, Informative

      Yeah, but there are counter-measures available. Just for example, the Ramses Missile Jammer. Which is capable of deterring missiles, even when traveling at supersonic speeds. It's primary goal is to jam sea surface skimming missiles such as the ss-n-22 sunburn, among many others. I'm sure the Navy has even better stuff then this.

      --
      try { Signature mysig = new CleverAttempt(); } catch(NonCleverSignatureException e) { postanyway(); }
    26. Re:Taking out capital ships? by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      I keep wondering why this isn't exploited more. An American carrier battle group (and any other for that matter) can defend against, maybe 10-20 cruise missiles. If 100 are fired at the carrier group, there's no way it would survive (and yes 100 cruise missiles is a hell of a lot cheaper than a carrier battle group). One phalanx, if it's extremely lucky, can take out 5-6 missiles, no more. More modern systems can take out 10 missiles.

      It's a matter of time till someone starts taking this approach.

    27. Re:Taking out capital ships? by maxume · · Score: 1

      But his acting is better than ever.

      Pointing out that "Executive Decision" was one of his best movies will never get old.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    28. Re:Taking out capital ships? by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 4, Informative

      You never, ever, ever camouflage your military systems to look like civilian infrastructure.

      What, pray tell, was the main tactic employed by Iran against Israel in 2006 ? It wouldn't by any chance be ... camouflaging weapons as civilian housing blocks ?

      We're talking here about people who use kindergartens to camouflage launch sites. Is there really any serious doubt that they'll use container ships ? Especially knowing that western media have for dozens of years always blamed the people taking out the missile launch site, and not the bastards using human shields ?

      Get real.

    29. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Goffee71 · · Score: 1

      Yes, the Suez and Panama canals are miles from any land....

      --
      If he's the Walrus then can I be a penguin please?
    30. Re:Taking out capital ships? by ascari · · Score: 1

      A reasonable assumption, but then again in Iraq and Afghanistan it's the cobbled-together home brew bombs that have caused the greatest damage to the world's most powerful military apparatus. Nobody expected this to be the case. And it would have been reasonable to say that they "should have [had] the defenses" - but they didn't. So who knows for sure until it's put to the test?

    31. Re:Taking out capital ships? by MrSteveSD · · Score: 1

      Aircraft carriers are good for projecting power against small weak enemies. For any reasonably advanced opponent though, they are really just floating coffins. Even if an aircraft carrier can manage to shoot down an advanced supersonic anti-ship missile, what about five of them simultaneously? It's not too difficult to saturate the defences.

      Due to the vulnerability of ships to missiles, some experts believe that there will be a move to submerged vessels. Submarines may start to take on roles that have traditionally been performed by surface ships. No doubt it will be an expensive move though.

    32. Re:Taking out capital ships? by AlecC · · Score: 1

      At $10 million the container of 4 missiles, it is still $250 million to take out a battle group - and difficult to keep that stealthy. Too big a project for terrorist groups. Remember that, for all the fuss about how well the are funded, 9/11 was done with $5 box cutters, and most of the damage in Afghanistan is being done by $200 IEDs and Kalashnikovs. A small country will have definite "we know where you live" problems: OK, if all goes right, you take out a carrier. Now what? You have undoubtedly hurt the US, but far from disabled it. And big countries fire the same missiles from missile-carrying destroyers, which have other uses.

      --
      Consciousness is an illusion caused by an excess of self consciousness.
    33. Re:Taking out capital ships? by smitty777 · · Score: 1

      Only problem is that this is a radar jammer. According to the vid, the missiles will have sat guidance.

      --
      "Before God we are all equally wise - and equally foolish"
      Albert Einstein
    34. Re:Taking out capital ships? by MaroonMotor · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A Liberian flagged, British owned, mixed Chinese-Malasian-Indian crewed ship fires Russian missiles at a US carrier? Whose merchant marine are you gonna blow up?

    35. Re:Taking out capital ships? by aliquis · · Score: 1
    36. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      But the further away you are when you fire it, the more time defensive systems have to react.

      It might have a small chance of working once, as a trick.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    37. Re:Taking out capital ships? by CarpetShark · · Score: 1

      You never, ever, ever camouflage your military systems to look like civilian infrastructure.

      You're talking as if most weapons are marketed at countries ;)

    38. Re:Taking out capital ships? by argStyopa · · Score: 1

      Then you've simply not been paying attention.

      First, the dirty non-secret of the last 30+ years is that naval vessels are FAR more vulnerable to missile attack than most people think. Since the 1960's era of big 'shipkiller' missiles with 300kg warheads that could critically damage even the most heavily armored ship, naval designers essentially 'gave up' on defeating attacks by using armor. Instead, it was felt that better c3i systems, higher speeds both strategically and tactically, and better intercommunications between fleet units would be a better 'investment' in vessel loading.

      Witness the major damage suffered by the HMS Sheffield during the Falklands war, the USS Cole, or the USS Stark.

      Ironically, this has then empowered missile designers to downsize warheads for the same effectiveness, allowing them to make smaller, faster missiles that are harder to defend against.

      Secondly, in any case, a carrier group needs time and space to deploy its defenses. Outer ring vessels detect the inbound attack, and the groups electronic and weapons systems are deployed against it.

      The danger of the 'shipping container' missile is stealth. The shipping lanes are sometimes very crowded, even well away from port. If a vessel that looks like a shabby container feeder vessel can get within a mile before launching, it may be a suicide mission, but with modern hypersonic shipkillers (dunno if that's the scale of missile involved in this system) a range of 5 miles is probably a guaranteed hit on the carrier.

      --
      -Styopa
    39. Re:Taking out capital ships? by GreatBunzinni · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Err... no, this won't be taking down aircraft carriers any time soon.

      Indeed. You know what else will never happen any time soon? Taking down a brand new 1.1 Billion dollar guided missile destroyer with a mere rubber dinghy. That is a preposterous idea, isn't it? Perfectly impossible. If it's impossible for a diesel sub to make on your major carrier group then what are the odds for that to happen? Impossible, I say.

      So, as you see, it's pretty reasonable to assume that a major threat that is capable of rendering one of your main branch of your armed forces completely useless is simply not a thread. Just dig your head into the sand and let's keep mindlessly hammering on the "we are invulnerable" mantra. That does wonders, all right.

      --
      Slashdot, fix your code or at least hire someone who is competent at it to do it for you.
    40. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Goffee71 · · Score: 1

      Iran, obviously! Why? Just cause they're next on the list

      --
      If he's the Walrus then can I be a penguin please?
    41. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Hognoxious · · Score: 5, Informative

      Have you read the Geneva Conventions? You'll find something about combatants being required to wear distinctive badges, signs or uniforms. At first it might appear that those are there to protect soldiers from being shot by "franc tireurs". Nothing could be further from the truth.

      As to gaining the trust of the population, you've got to be joking. They don't even trust the people from the next valley. The whole "me and my brother against my cousin" kind of thing.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    42. Re:Taking out capital ships? by YeeHaW_Jelte · · Score: 1

      Darn sorry replied to wrong comment please disregard.

      --

      ---
      "The chances of a demonic possession spreading are remote -- relax."
    43. Re:Taking out capital ships? by MrAngryForNoReason · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Capital ships will simply have to maintain bigger distances. From the shore and from merchant ships.

      Even what are classed as short range cruise missiles have a range of 100s of kilometres, long range missiles go up to and above 2500km range. It isn't really feasible to operate a carrier with the restraint of not going within 300km of shore or any commercial vessel.

      A bigger problem is that due to the necessity of customs checking being on the shore, every American harbor has now become a launch site for Iranian missiles.

      The containers being on shore is a complete non issue. The whole point is that the missiles are can be loaded on to and launched from any commercial ship that can carry a shipping container. If you were going to use it to blow up a port you wouldn't need a $10,000,000 missile delivery system you could just fill a container full of regular explosives.

      The point of these weapons is that they can be transported and positioned for launch without being detected and that they are flexible so you can wither load it on a truck for land operations or on to a ship for a naval strike.

      I don't really see a terrorist organisation bothering with something like this for most terrorist attacks a truck filled with explosives would do the same job a hell of a lot cheaper. Precision missile strikes aren't really necessary if you have suicide bomber willing to drive the truck right up to the target.

      The danger would come nation states buying up a load of these and launching strikes from commercial ships during a conflict significantly blurring the lines between military and civilian vessels. Which would lead to a significant increase in civilian casualties due to civilian vessels being labeled as threats.

    44. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Lord+Pillage · · Score: 1

      I don't thing the SS-N-22 has sat guidance, although with a 320kg payload, I suppose it might be able to be fitted with one. But I'm certainly no military arms expert, so I can't say for sure if this is possible.

      --
      try { Signature mysig = new CleverAttempt(); } catch(NonCleverSignatureException e) { postanyway(); }
    45. Re:Taking out capital ships? by MaroonMotor · · Score: 1

      It is not hard to defend against these kinds of missiles - when you are all spooled up and expecting an attack. Modern US carrier battle group rely on a number of layer to protect themselves - long range air cover followed by long range, medium range and short range air defense missiles plus point defense artillery, electronic jammers & seducers as well as last ditch target obfuscation. These battlegroups are generally so agile that it is a non trivial problem to find and target them with the degree of accuracy.

      Using these against a carrier battle group is not the only option. For instance an Persian-American conflict which sees half a dozen ships hit just out of the territorial waters off San Francisco or New York will likely have a crippling effect on the shipping industry.

    46. Re:Taking out capital ships? by sznupi · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Non-nuclear subs are the quiter ones BTW, just the range and submerged speed limitations don't make them used that often in open ocean.

      Though...yeah, and that's not the only example. US essentially borrowed a Norwegian, afai remember, sub some time ago for testing. And a heavily modified Kilo from my place "sunk" two US nuclear subs during one NATO training maneuvers.

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    47. Re:Taking out capital ships? by sznupi · · Score: 1

      Has those battlegroups been tested against recent technologically advanced weaponry?

      For that matter, how many types of fortifications, tactics, types of armaments, etc. were historically portrayed as essentially invulnerable to enemy action?

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    48. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Floating coffins? Hardly. Get a clue. You really need to research the damage modern US carriers have survived. IIRC, during the Vietnam war the USS Enterprise had something like a dozen 1-ton bombs detonate on deck from a fire and was back conducting flight ops the next day. Unlike the Brits (see HMS Sheffield...), the US Navy has never forgotten the lessons learned from the kamikazi attacks off Okinawa during World War II. Don't believe that? How else did the USS Samuel B. Roberts at just a few thousand tons survive hitting a mine designed to sink a 400,000-ton supertanker?

      Yeah, a cruise missile like the subject one could cause some damage to a carrier - IF you can target the ship. Because that's the problem. How do you get the information from your surveillance platform to the launcher fast enough to make the targeting data valid? And a simple radar return isn't good enough.

    49. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed. Hezbollah comes to mind.

    50. Re:Taking out capital ships? by nospam007 · · Score: 1

      Argentina sank the HMS Sheffield with a couple of french AM39 exocets a quarter century ago.

    51. Re:Taking out capital ships? by sznupi · · Score: 1

      At least for Eruope, there's another option
      3) larger part of the trade coming via rail; which accidentally would assure the income from customs for Russia, hm...
      (also, few pipelines would be just added...accidentally also giving Russia greater profits and control)

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    52. Re:Taking out capital ships? by peragrin · · Score: 1

      Tell that to alQueda please. Or maybe Hamas. Or every other violent organization that is willing to target a cafe instead of military targets.

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    53. Re:Taking out capital ships? by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1
      >BLOCKQUOTE>and would then have to evade battleships

      Actually, we don't have any battleships anymore. And they haven't been a part of a Carrier Group since WW2.

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    54. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Pvt_Ryan · · Score: 1

      So bascially he is more suited for the cook job than ever before.

    55. Re:Taking out capital ships? by LeperPuppet · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's essentially the US Navy's big dirty secret, that its carriers are essentially gold-plated floating targets. Of course no-one in the Navy is likely to admit to this until at least one or two carriers have already been sunk.

    56. Re:Taking out capital ships? by vtcodger · · Score: 5, Informative

      ***I can't believe it's possible to get anything bigger than a football close enough to a cruiser, bypassing all anti-missile systems.***

      Believe it. You may be correct about the open ocean under wartime conditions against an unsophisticated opponent. But major vessels have been taken out by clever opponents in training exercises. Here's a quote from the Guardian's story on Operation Millenium Challenge -- a major war game conducted in 2002.

      ***In the first few days of the exercise, using surprise and unorthodox tactics, the wily 64-year-old Vietnam veteran sank most of the US expeditionary fleet in the Persian Gulf, bringing the US assault to a halt.***

      And here's a link to the Guardian story. http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2002/sep/06/usa.iraq

      And, of course, islamic fundamentalists did put a pretty big hole in the USS Cole in 2000 using half their navy (one small boat -- their other boat sank when they overloaded it with explosives). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Cole_bombing

      And NPR told me the other day the US Navy is lugging some Somali pirates back to the US for trial after the pirates attempted to board and loot not one, but two, US destroyers. These may not be the smartest pirates in the Red Sea. But they did apparently manage to get into close proximity to the ships.

      --
      You can't see ANYTHING from a car, You've got to get out of the goddamned contraption and walk...Edward Abbey
    57. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Hate to float a turd but... there has been a cruse missile with these capabilities for sometime now. The military won't generally acknowledge this fact because doing so would kill the budget for big carriers.

      Yeah that is a turd because the second sentence seems to be something you pulled out of your ass.

      Those might be able to sink a carrier but to even attempt to do so you're going to have launch them from extreme range because if it is wartime and you're hostile you're going to have a hell of a time getting even that close to a carrier battle group before they get twitchy and decide to sink you. You might manage to pull it off in peace time but you'd still probably wind up getting sunk yourself, if not by the carrier then by the escorts.

    58. Re:Taking out capital ships? by EdZ · · Score: 1

      I think this is less 'hidden in a shipping container' and more 'mounted in a shipping container'. The Goalkeeper CIWS system, for example, has a containerised version. And I believe some of the variants of the ASTER SAM box launchers can be mounted as stacked containers. IT's a combination of ease of handling (if you;re weapons are in a standard shape and size, logistics is greatly simplified) and allowing for mounting on converted merchant marine ships. Remember the Atlantic Comnveyer? No defensive systems, so was sunk by a couple of Exocets.

    59. Re:Taking out capital ships? by professionalfurryele · · Score: 1

      Good point, well made.

      This would be a terrorist act however, and I was thinking of this in terms of a straight fight between states. I kinda need to get with the new warfare paradigm don't I.

    60. Re:Taking out capital ships? by professionalfurryele · · Score: 1

      You see to be under the impression I think this is a bad idea from a marketing stand point because people wont go for it. I think it's a bad idea because it's a good way to make civilians legitimate targets. I've no doubt there are customers for this sort of thing. I just think these customers are either evil or stupid, or both.

    61. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Dun+Malg · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The whole point is that the missiles are can be loaded on to and launched from any commercial ship that can carry a shipping container

      I think the bit you're missing is that you can't just simply schedule these to be loaded onto a bunch of container ships at random and then push a button in Tehran and have them automatically take out a carrier. First, it'd have to be loaded with the cooperation of the ship's operator in order to assure that it was on top. No matter how fancy the design, I seriously doubt it could launch with two layers of other containers on top of it. Targeting and firing would require some sort of last-minute interaction, because until someone sees it, I guarantee they don't know where a carrier is going to be. What this means is that any such container ship would have to be Iranian flagged (to use my hypothetical) and would have to military operated. Furthermore, these are so expensive that no one could afford to load them and actually ship them anywhere and have them be essentially out of service while the ship is unloaded in a foreign port. This means that any container ship armed with the Club-K would effectively have to be loaded with decoy containers and kept within the operational area. At that point, it's just a badly designed missile cruiser. No, the whole fantasy of a secret missile launcher has too many holes.

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    62. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Or maybe Hamas. Or every other violent organization that is willing to target a cafe instead of military targets.

      Like the 'IDF'?

    63. Re:Taking out capital ships? by professionalfurryele · · Score: 1

      I agree that is how a sensible state will use it. That is not how the system is portrayed in the marketing video, at least, not my interpretation of the video.

    64. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Have you read the Geneva Conventions?

      Yeah right. US keeps people in prison without trial on teritory of foreign country and expects that others will follow some stinking convention, which was created to give legal protection for bullies like US from people they are bulling

    65. Re:Taking out capital ships? by wvmarle · · Score: 1

      Part of the reason civilian casualties in Gaza are so high is 'police stations' and 'schools' that are anything but.

      The rest of the reason is of course the same why it's called "civil war" in the first place. In between child soldiers and suicide bombers there is not much difference between a fighter and a civilian.

    66. Re:Taking out capital ships? by dotancohen · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Hate to float a turd but...

      Another related turd is that merchant ships have been used to transfer weapons in recent memory. Israel detained the Karine A in 2002 and at least one other ship recently.

      --
      It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
    67. Re:Taking out capital ships? by wvmarle · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Please update your definitions. To groups like Al Qaeda, anything American owned (whether state or private) is a military target. For Hamas that would be anything Israeli owned. Don't forget that. One man's freedom fighter is the other man's terrorist.

    68. Re:Taking out capital ships? by wvmarle · · Score: 1

      All of them.

      Start asking questions when done.

    69. Re:Taking out capital ships? by lawpoop · · Score: 1

      The War Nerd addresses this point exactly. Carriers are big, floating sea-tombs.

      --
      Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
      -- Pablo Picasso
    70. Re:Taking out capital ships? by asaul · · Score: 1

      I would imagine that seeing an unknown mach 2-3 object heading for a carrier anywhere would be reason enough to turn on the anti missile systems like Phalanx or Goalkeeper.

      From what I have seen of those systems, even if they got 3-4 of those missles heading for a carrier, those 4200 round per minute gattlings would make fairly short work of all of them.

      --
      "If everybody is thinking alike, somebody isn't thinking" - Gen. George S. Patton
    71. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Luckyo · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I really hope a single cruise missile can't take out an aircraft carrier, if they can, then you have far bigger problems that missiles in merchant ships. They or their escorts should have the defenses to evade or destroy most missile types.

      Actually, exact opposite. Both NATO and Russian sides have pretty near perfect countermeasures for opponent's strengths. The much, MUCH nastier anti-ship missile which is installed on Russian missile cruisers and attack submarines that routinely tail US aircraft carrier task forces is this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P-700_Granit
      NATO gave it a very appropriate name: Shipwreck. Because that's what it does. I recall one of the military buff forums state that folks at NATO estimated the normal 4-missile swarm was expected to disable aircraft carrier and kill at least one of the aegis cruisers with something around 90% likelihood, while disabling the carrier only carried a 95%+ likelihood for a standard task force with three aegis cruisers and air patrols, while a swarm of 8 would literally devastate the task force entirely.. It's essentially unstoppable by any current defense weapon short of having anti-missile ship sitting on top of the sub and killing the missiles as they surface.

      One has to understand, no one really wants to KILL a modern aircraft carrier in a first strike. You want to disable it, making sure that nothing can take off or land. For this, one modern cruise missile is more then enough (iirc less then 10% tilt means that nothing lands or takes off from the modern carrier). After this, the main threat for airborne/submarine force are aegis ships for air threats and anti-sub warfare ships for submarines. Those are the things you go for next, rather then finishing the aircraft carrier off. In this regard you are correct, there are few options if you want to kill a ship size of an aircraft carrier outright, and most of them are nuclear. Notably, above missiles can fit a 500kt nuclear warhead for such a task, as did many other cold-war era anti-ship missile weaponry.

      Notably, this goes vice versa for NATO forces and Russian military. The main reason NATO utterly obliterated Iraq both times is because NATO forces are specifically designed to counter Russian-style "heavy armor assault" through far more advanced attack craft and helicopters which literally ate tanks alive once air superiority was achieved with tremendous efficiency. It is simply much easier to target the weakest link in the enemy doctrine then to defend it from such attack. Essentially NATO and Russian weapon systems are designed from get-go to be fairly exact and accurate counters for each other. This is something neither side likes to advertise much either - military hardware is expensive and no one likes to publicize that the other side has effective counters for it.

      The most important question is - which missile is INSIDE that container. Most of the top-of-the-line anti-ship cruise missiles are not exported from Russia due to legal restrictions and military secrecy which would reduce the efficiency of the system significantly.

    72. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is, however, the sad truth. Aircraft carriers nowadays are very vulnerable beasts. I read that it is acknowledged that in the case of a conflict against Iran, all the US navy in the Persian Gulf would be sunk within hours. One may joke about Russian tech, but they are good at one thing : building missiles that bypass American protections.

      Really? How many Russian cruise missles have bypassed American protections? If they're so good at it there should be quite a few examples...

    73. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      probably just propaganda and a lame excuse of Israel for attacking civilian targets.
      Journalist on site in Lebanon confirmed that sites claimed by the Israelis as military where indeed civilian targets.
      That is also the reason why they where so ineffective they where not hitting the real targets and had to stop the war without obtaining any of there objectives.
         

    74. Re:Taking out capital ships? by indiechild · · Score: 3, Informative

      Umm, weren't Q-ships used precisely because of Germany's unrestricted submarine warfare? Chicken or the egg?

    75. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Sulphur · · Score: 1

      That probably looks bad on the old man's record.

    76. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Was that the movie where he was paid by the hour, so they had to kill him off after less than 25 minutes?
      BTW a stealth fighter is not a troop transport.

    77. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Shakrai · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They are a lot harder to sink than you might imagine. It's not that easy to sink a ship that displaces 100,000 tons, short of nuclear weapons. The real danger is in having them damaged to the point that they can't conduct air operations. That's as good as sinking them from a mission standpoint and much easier to achieve.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    78. Re:Taking out capital ships? by dave420 · · Score: 1

      According to US law, attacks against military targets are not terrorism. 22 USC 2656f(d)(2).

    79. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Shakrai · · Score: 2, Insightful

      DDG != CVN. The Sheffield displaced 4,820 tons. A Nimtiz Class Aircraft Carrier displaces around 100,000 tons.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    80. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      An American carrier battle group (and any other for that matter) can defend against, maybe 10-20 cruise missiles. If 100 are fired at the carrier group, there's no way it would survive (and yes 100 cruise missiles is a hell of a lot cheaper than a carrier battle group). One phalanx, if it's extremely lucky, can take out 5-6 missiles, no more. More modern systems can take out 10 missiles.

      Phalanx is not the only line of defense. The Aegis combat system was designed for this scenario. All things being equal it would take more than 20 cruise missiles to overwhelm the defenses of a CVBG.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    81. Re:Taking out capital ships? by MrAngryForNoReason · · Score: 1

      I think the bit you're missing is that you can't just simply schedule these to be loaded onto a bunch of container ships at random and then push a button in Tehran and have them automatically take out a carrier.

      I wasn't suggesting that at all. What I was saying was that they give any ship that can carry a container the capacity to become a missile boat. So for instance you could load up lots of small ships with them and move them into strike range without anyone noticing. Or you could put several on a container ship to do the same thing. Obviously you would need control of the ship and placing but a container ship flying the flag of some random country is a lot more subtle than an Iranian missile cruiser.

      There are two advantages of this as a launch system. The first is subterfuge, they just look like regular containers so you can move them into strike range without being detected.

      The second is mobility. If they can be handled as normal shipping containers then that makes moving your forces a lot easier. Instead of having to use specialised transports to move land based mobile missile platforms you can just load these on a ship and then onto a truck at the other end.

      The British Navy are actually looking at using shipping containers for a similar reason. Because they are standardised it is very cheap and easy to transport them. Especially when Naval units are called on to support humanitarian missions it is a lot quicker and more effective to load up standard shipping containers that are kitted out as "standard crew container", "aid supplies", "Comms room" than it is to send a destroyer or other vessel.

    82. Re:Taking out capital ships? by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      Well, guess I'll have to cancel my Carnival Iranian Fun Cruise this year.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    83. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Calinous · · Score: 2, Interesting

      We're assuming you could put a container ship in close proximity to the aircraft carrier (let's say less than 10 km) - very possible while steaming in crowded waters (Persian Gulf, Panama Canal, even home ports). Maybe even faking a fire on the launching ship, to hide the thermal plume of the launching. This space would be enough to accelerate the missiles to cruise speed then send the final stage at 3 Mach. Total response time would be less than a minute (maybe 30 seconds), with the missiles in range of the gattlings for about one second.
            That makes the Phalanx systems each able to intercept one missile (we're assuming missiles on somewhat converging trajectories), and there aren't many Phalanxes. I'd say a 12-missiles attack have a fair chance to burrow one missile in the carrier (the carrier containing a nuclear reactor, aviation fuel for all its planes and plenty of ordnance). Not to mention that we might be talking about an attack from many more missiles.

    84. Re:Taking out capital ships? by dotancohen · · Score: 1

      A Liberian flagged, British owned, mixed Chinese-Malasian-Indian crewed ship fires Russian missiles at a US carrier? Whose merchant marine are you gonna blow up?

      Liberia carries the responsibility in this case. And with her huge (third only to Panama and Bermuda) registry [1], that is a lot of ships that will become targets. I suspect that Liberia, Panama and Bermuda already take this seriously.

      [1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flag_of_convenience

      --
      It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
    85. Re:Taking out capital ships? by MacAndrew · · Score: 1

      (1) The military has to do their job perfectly to survive. Um....
      (2) We're arrogant and I doubt would see it coming. The Stark is an example, or the low-tech Yemen bombing.
      (3) I've heard the anti-missile systems sometimes target our helicopter and they prefer to leave them off most of the time.

      It's just not a risk worth running, if there is an alternative. There have been many successful attacks. Now name just one that was successfully thwarted.

    86. Re:Taking out capital ships? by professionalfurryele · · Score: 1

      Fine, it would be a war crime. Fighting under a false flag. Technically you are right, not terrorism since it would not be intended to terrorise.

    87. Re:Taking out capital ships? by elrous0 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And I want to see a terrorist group that can afford 126 of these systems (not to mention the ship and trained personnel to actually operate the system), or a government that would go to that much effort just to take down a ship when conventional aircraft strikes would be much more efficient and effective.

      Seriously, this is much ado about nothing. There are a multitude of powerful weapons that are way more portable than this (like Stringer missiles) that terrorists could potentially use but never have (unless you count the time we GAVE them Stingers). Even Iran isn't stupid enough to give these yahoos their top-grade stuff.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    88. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Cole_(DDG-67)

      On the contrary, the USS Cole is alive and well. Said rubber dingy did no said "taking down" of any US Navy ship. Although some sailors were tragically lost, that's the price we pay for having such strict rules of engagement.

    89. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Calinous · · Score: 1

      3 Mach cruise missiles have approach velocity at about 1 km/s, so this gives a small window of successful engagement. Also, the Phalanx has only 1500 rounds - I don't know how many missiles it can engage with that. If firing at long range, the hit probability decreases sharply (as the shells fired will scatter). And the attacker will launch the missiles so that they will arrive at the target as close to each other as possible

    90. Re:Taking out capital ships? by kevinNCSU · · Score: 1

      I want to see the merchant ship that manages to buy 126 of these containers and then either floats around aimlessly never offloading cargo or somehow manages to offload cargo while always keeping the 126 top level crates on the ship without the intelligence agencies of the world taking notice and tracking it's every move and therefore being ready to blow it out of the water the moment it makes a threatening move towards a carrier group.

    91. Re:Taking out capital ships? by dave420 · · Score: 1

      No, that's not how reality works. Something can be designed to defeat something else, and to do so very well, without actually having to do it.

    92. Re:Taking out capital ships? by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      Iran has always held back. They may go to the brink, but they know if they ever cross the line they're toast. Why? Because wiping out the country would be as easy as bombing their oil fields, blockading the Persian Gulf, and just waiting for them to surrender.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    93. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Calinous · · Score: 1

      Diesel-electric subs are also limited in submerged time - but if they use non-air breathing engines they can recharge batteries silently and deep under water.
            You can't secure or raid the ocean with diesel subs - but there's nothing better for guarding/raiding traffic through choke points like straits, approaches to ports and so on.

    94. Re:Taking out capital ships? by sgt101 · · Score: 1

      Whenever anyone attacks any country now civilian infrastructure is routinely targeted - factories, ministries, water plants, electricity generators, ports.

      I don't see what any adversary would have to loose to be honest.

      --
      --------------------------------------------- "In the end, we're all just water and old stars."
    95. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Mr.+Foogle · · Score: 1

      The container ship would have to have a really good excuse for being anywhere near the group in the first place

      Like being within a few kilometers of the group as they transit a choke point? Happens all the time.

      A carrier battle group can devastate any target within a 600km radius. But they gotta be a target first. The concealed carry merchant ship won't be a target until _after she has launched missiles and blown up the carrier.

      --
      Display some adaptability.
    96. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Calinous · · Score: 1

      What about a US-owned, US-flagged ship captured by "Nigerian" pirates and steamed to the Persian Gulf?

    97. Re:Taking out capital ships? by dave420 · · Score: 1

      HMS Sheffield was sunk by an Exocet missile. I doubt the Japanese had many of those of Okinawa. And what the hell does the Samuel B. Roberts getting an 8-meter hole in it from a mine have to do with Kamikaze attacks? You're all over the place.

    98. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Calinous · · Score: 1

      You could use civilian ships (one armed, the rest unarmed) to herd an aircraft carrier towards a waiting submarine

    99. Re:Taking out capital ships? by peragrin · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Freedom fighters , terrorists, are not bound by rule of law or order. Hamas will fire rockets from the top schools that their own childern are in.

      When people think of 9/11. It is always the trade centers that are talked about. Targeting of the pentagon while devastating was at least a military target.

      Very few complain when Hamas bombs the isreali military. They only complain when the target can't fight back. Freedom fighters target militaries and their leadership. Terrorists targetthose who can't fight back or use civilians to shield themselves from militaries.

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    100. Re:Taking out capital ships? by baegucb · · Score: 1

      The British navy actually invented a similar concept during WWI. It wasn't successful for long. All it would take is one or two tries and the defenders would be watching out for it. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Q-ship

    101. Re:Taking out capital ships? by mhajicek · · Score: 1

      That's assuming there's time. Radar operator: "Sir, we have an unknown incoming object at mach 3! Request permission to engage defenses!" Missile "Boom." Consider also that these cruise missiles don't have to fly straight at the target; they can feint in any direction at any altitude and then jink for the kill. In order to be effective the defense systems would have to be armed 24/7, possibly with more stringent requirements for automatic engagement. Perhaps set it so anything approaching faster than mach 2 without friendly IFF is a trigger.

    102. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought the story with the sub was that it was parked, unmoving, waiting for the carrier group to waltz by - basically impossible to predict during wartime.

    103. Re:Taking out capital ships? by mhajicek · · Score: 1

      How about Iran? Afghanistan? China? China could float a couple hundred such ships into our harbors and make Peal Harbor look like a water-balloon attack.

    104. Re:Taking out capital ships? by MaroonMotor · · Score: 1

      Technically I suppose Liberia carries the reponsibility; but what does it mean in the real world?

      You mean the US will start sinking Russian, Chinese, German, French, Italian, Indian, Japanese, Saudi, Korean and ... US Ships which are flying the Liberian Flag?

      I think US can get away with willy nilly sinking of Russian or Chinese or British ships. But considering the extent to which the US political establishment is compromised by corporate insterests it is unlikely to survive sinking of US owned ships :)

    105. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean like the Deepwater Horizon...?

    106. Re:Taking out capital ships? by mhajicek · · Score: 1

      Sorry, meant "Iraq", not "Iran" above.

    107. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I really doubt the U.S. military would conduct international training exercises if they were overly worried about the occasional national embarrassment. Better to be embarrassed during peacetime and not war. It actually shows strength, IMO, to be able to set aside pride for this purpose.

      But I don't deny it carries some foreign intimidation and (mainly by citizens) boastful dick-wagging.

    108. Re:Taking out capital ships? by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      China could just bomb the shit out of us with their Air Force, or nuke the shit out of us with their ICBM's (both much easier and effective than any mere conventional cruise missile attack). And Iran could already be giving terrorists a lot more powerful stuff than they are, but they know better than to provoke an all-out war with the U.S. And Afghanistan is too poor to afford any large scale weapons system.

      Again, this whole thing is much ado about nothing.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    109. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aegis_Combat_System

      Can officially track over 100 targets at a range of over 190km. Gives the carrier a pretty good fighting chance, even against your scenario.

    110. Re:Taking out capital ships? by conspirator57 · · Score: 1

      make it knock the other containers out of the way, silly! :p

      http://reverberated.files.wordpress.com/2008/05/shipment_of_fail1.jpg

      --
      "If still these truths be held to be
      Self evident."
      -Edna St. Vincent Millay
    111. Re:Taking out capital ships? by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 1

      would then have to evade battleships

      Ummm, no, not today, not since WW II.

    112. Re:Taking out capital ships? by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      One may joke about Russian tech, but they are good at one thing : building missiles that bypass American protections.

      Really? You have personal knowledge of tests on this capability? Or perhaps you have visited an alternate world where this actual combat has happened?

      You may joke about joking about Russian tech, but you are good at one thing: building posts that bypass mods with no knowledge.

    113. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I concur, I thought the video made it clear it was referring to stealth attacks against a neighboring imperial nation with a superior military. I particularly loved how the weak nation was portrayed as a peaceful utopia under invasion by a cruel and seemingly unstoppable one.

    114. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Xest · · Score: 1

      "The container ship would have to have a really good excuse for being anywhere near the group in the first place, and would then have to evade battleships on the way to the centre of the fleet where the carrier is, under the fire the whole way, and then the missile it launches will have to make it past the batteries of anti-missile systems like the Phalanx."

      That and the container ship has to know where the carrier group is. The only way it can really know that is by either having a radar system on it that makes it stand out as blatantly not a simple container ship, or it must communicate. If it communicates it can do so securely, or unsecurely. If it does it securely the battle group and anyone else listening in is going to wonder why the fuck a container ship is conversing via military satellite or whatever, and if it's done insecurely then the battle group will likely be listening in.

      Like you say, it's more of a threat against non-military targets more than anything. To military targets who are looking for anything even remotely but potentially hostile, it'll still stand out like a sore thumb.

    115. Re:Taking out capital ships? by SethJohnson · · Score: 1

      Phalanx's mini gun fires at 3,000 to 4,500 rounds per minute, but in bursts of 60 to 100 shots at a time. The projectile is a 20mm sabot round, so perhaps only a few bursts would be required to disable an incoming missle. Crew would likely have sufficient advance warning to be able to reload ammo cans.

      Seth

    116. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd be willing to be that your typical contained ship doesn't have the manpower / equipment to fire 126 cruise missiles.

      I guess what I am saying is, I want to see the container ship than can launch that many outgoing missiles :)

    117. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Xest · · Score: 1

      Journalists on site in Lebanon? Hah!

      You do realise all press in that war were only allowed to go where Hezbollah took them and that all their reports were vetted right? Journalists were up in arms because of it, they were only being allowed to report from scenes that could've simply been set up, they weren't allowed to travel independently and verify anything at all. Because of this it's simply impossible to say whether Israel hit purely civilian targets in the 2006 war or whether they were in fact armed.

      There were multiple occasions where journalists said however that they saw mobile missile launchers being moved away from sites they wanted to report from before they were allowed to start filming and reporting.

    118. Re:Taking out capital ships? by melstav · · Score: 1

      The Ramses works great... As long as the missile's radar guided.

    119. Re:Taking out capital ships? by buback · · Score: 1

      Libera's. The flag denotes responsibility for the ship and cargo.

    120. Re:Taking out capital ships? by delta98 · · Score: 1

      what's to say that it might have a collection of both or many? Satnav to get into a general area radar to flip over to infrared to the target.

    121. Re:Taking out capital ships? by idontgno · · Score: 1

      As an opening salvo of a war, it's quite feasible. Yes, you'd lose the merchant ship and all its crew. But it's a bargain, in terms of balance of exchange.

      Hmm.... you'd have to find people who are willing to die for a chance to kill an opponent of much higher strategic value. I wonder where you'd find that?

      BTW, in case you think I'm taking a cheap shot at the "martyr mindset" we see in a lot of the world, I hasten to point out the number of posthumous Medals of Honor awarded to brave American heroes... who were willing to die for a chance to kill an opponent of higher strategic or tactical value. In warfare, regardless of culture, it's not terribly hard to find those willing to lay down their lives to strike a critical blow. And destroying the core of a carrier battle group would qualify, since it's usually the center-of-mass of American power in the region. And even if not the only game in town (like a large fixed land presence with US air power, etc.), bases would make a fine target for a supersonic cruise missile too.

      --
      Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
    122. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Not if the guy pressing the button is from Liberia. Keep trying....

    123. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Barny · · Score: 1

      Hehe, touche, but I am guessing it would be pushing it to track over 500 missiles, particularly when they (cruise missiles) typically sit pretty low over the water.

      --
      ...
      /me sighs
    124. Re:Taking out capital ships? by smitty777 · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure it doesn't, actually. I believe it's radar guided, so your jammer should actually work if that's the missile used. I was actually basing my comment on the high-tech video on YouTube.

      --
      "Before God we are all equally wise - and equally foolish"
      Albert Einstein
    125. Re:Taking out capital ships? by MaroonMotor · · Score: 1

      Why isn't a simple radar return good enough? Time of flight of the Klub at extreme range is less than 14 minutes, the carrier can move at best about 10 km in that period. That area can easily be searched by the missiles own radar.

      The mine that hit the Samuel Roberts wasn't designed to sink 400,000 ton super tankers, for the simple reason that when it was designed (in 1908) no such ships existed.

      The US carriers are extremely well protected - but no one really knows how they would fair against modern antiship missiles. While the carrier may be able to shrug off a piddling little klub or two without significantly impacting flight operations it is unlikely that it can survive a hit by a shipwreak or a 650mm torpedo and live to tell the tale.

      I suspect the lay public has a someone inflated opinion of the US military because it has not had to face a halfway decent opponent in a very long time.

    126. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Uberbah · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You do realise all press in that war were only allowed to go where Hezbollah took them and that all their reports were vetted right?

      You realize that's a little hard to enforce when a country is having the shit bombed out of it, right? And it's not like the IDF doesn't have a track record of blowing the shit out of everything in sight - doctors houses, schools where they just ordered Gazans to take refuge, clearly marked U.N. vehicles...

    127. Re:Taking out capital ships? by delta98 · · Score: 1

      Agreed. One never knows. I could have said the same about airliners.

    128. Re:Taking out capital ships? by idontgno · · Score: 1

      Interesting. You've just invented the arsenal ship, albeit in a kind of hillbilly way.

      --
      Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
    129. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would guess against aircraft carriers evading ANYTHING. They aren't the nimblest thing... in the world...

    130. Re:Taking out capital ships? by professionalfurryele · · Score: 1

      If Liberia was the power launching the missile it goes from fighting under a false flag to using foriegn nationals as human shields. Unless of course the Chinese-Malasian-Indian mixed crew were all mercenaries and oh sod it.

      Something will be very wrong with this picture barring an alliance between China, Malasia, India, Britain and Liberia against the United States. Perhaps we could throw in a US admiral with stealth technology on his boat who wants to defect to Russia but who has a small arsenal of nuclear weapons. Only Jack Ryan can save us!

      Point is, don't dress up military installations to look like civilian infrastructure, it's bad.

    131. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Rich0 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Sat guidance is only good for getting a missile to a particular absolute location on earth. Honestly, you can probably do this well enough with inertial guidance (ICBMs aren't sat-guided, and neither were a lot of earlier cruise missiles used by the US).

      Hitting a ship with a missile involves a few problems.

      1. Knowing where the ship is.
      2. Getting the missile into the vicinity of the ship, close enough for the missile to find the ship with its onboard sensors.
      3. Having the missile locate the ship's exact realtime location with its sensors.
      4. Evading defenses at every step and actually hitting the thing.

      Sat guidance solves #2 really well. A radar jamming system defeats #3.

      Sat guidance alone can never eliminate the need to solve #3 in some way - a missile going mach 3 covers a huge space in one second, so unless the sat can give the missile realtime target location with a latency of much less than a second there is no hope of getting a hit. Every foot counts so even the accuracy of GPS might be a concern. Now, the ability to deliver realtime updates with a little more latency might allow the missile to close to a range where it could use IR to detect the ship and defeat radar jamming.

      I think that the big problem is #1 - to even take a shot at a ship you need to know where it is in general, and in a serious shooting war between first world powers the first thing that would happen is that any satellite that even looks like a surveillance system would be shot down or at least blinded/jammed, and LEO will probably get so filled with debris that we won't be going into space for a few years except for short-term excursions which the military would be the only ones doing. Without satellites then air superiority or subs are the only way to find a target ship, and the US has a huge lead in both areas.

    132. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      And how else will a missile fired against a ship with only a general knowledge of target position find its target? Do you think that a GPS location a few hours old is going to be sufficient for a missile travelling mach 3 to hit a target?

    133. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh it was alive and well all right. It had to be carried out by a heavy lift ship just because the captain didn't felt like to pilot the ship to a shipyard, right?

    134. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Shihar · · Score: 1

      You never, ever, ever camouflage your military systems to look like civilian infrastructure.

      Srsly?

      The only people who are going to enter into a fight with the US are non-super power nations. China and Russia are not going to tussle with the US because both sides of the pond really are not all that thrilled with the idea of a nuclear war. Even if they were going to romp, cargo container missiles are last on the list of nasty things super powers can throw at each other. The only folks with any use for something like this are nations like Iran. Iran stands exactly zero chances of winning a stand up fight with the US. The thing about fighting the US is that they are not trying to murder you all. If they were, they would just glass your cities. They wouldn't even need nukes to do it. They are actually going to go out of their way to try and not murder off all of your civilians. That isn't to say the are going to flinch at dropping a two thousand pound bomb on a target nestled in a nice residential neighborhood, but they are not going to drop a MOAB on the neighborhood either.

      If you have to fight a nation like the US, the stupidest thing you can do is stand up and fight. The US likes pounding on nations dumb enough to leave their military standing in the open wearing uniforms and waving flags. See Iraq War I for reference. If you stand and fight, they will certainly murder the shit out of you with enthusiastic glee.

      Nope, the way to fight the US is hide your military among civilians. Eh, it is not all that honorable feeling, but it feels better than dead. Whenever the Americans murder your civilians they lose a little of their resolve. You are not going to out spend them or kill them all, so loss of resolve is really all you are after. Getting Americans to kill your civilians is the best way to inflict loss of resolve on Americans. If you send a war ship against the US fleet, you are certainly going to find yourself short one war ship. On the other hand, sending a container ship with Dutch flags or something fun like that is exactly the right tactic. Not only do they balk at blowing it to pieces, but if you are lucky, you get them jumpy enough to blow up a real dutch container ship. Asymmetrical warfare is the way to go. It isn't like they need an excuse to target your economy. If you are tussling with the US you can pretty much assume that they have already bent your economy over the barrel and are having their way with it without even having fired a shot.

      Personally, I am skeptical of the container missiles. Warm fuzzy feelings aside, you can safely bet that the US is going to get all piratical on any container ship entering or leaving a nation it is in the process of beating on. This means you need to load your cruise missiles at another non-native port, and this opens you up pretty soundly to law enforcement. It might be a nice first strike weapon, but I think once war breaks out they are going to be hard to use. I am also just skeptical of the technology. You are going to need a big ass cargo container to hold a missile with enough firepower to bring down a carrier. There are very few non-nuclear missiles that can take a carrier in one swipe. Carrier also are pretty bad ass warship that tend to be surrounded by other bad ass warship, all of which are designed to keep cruise missiles from having their way.

      I really don't see much use. You are better off to buy some much cheaper normal cruise missiles, try and hide them on land, get a lot of them, and fire as many as you can when the Americans get close to the coast. If you really have money burning a hole in your pocket, buy yourself a nice diesel / electric sub. With a little training you might get it close enough to the carrier fleet to deal real damage before it gets taken out. This cargo thing, should it magically work, is really a surprise first strike weapon, and first striking the US has proven to be a pretty dumb move time and time again. If the US comes after y

    135. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Unless the Israelis wont let you drive a truck into their country. Which is the case now, and why busses have stopped blowing up. Be able to launch one of these from gaza would be great for certain groups.

    136. Re:Taking out capital ships? by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      when a country is having the shit bombed out of it, right?

      When "the shit is bombed out of it", I'd agree with you.

      Of course, Israel (unlike Hezbollah) limited itself to launch sites, and clear military targets, which was designed no to impede people movement (a specific goal was not to disturb food distribution), and which left all Hezbollah infrastructure except rocket launchers intact.

      Hezbollah, of course, did nothing of the sort. And frankly, given that the Geneva convention is a sort of international law version of a canon law principle, it seems very logical muslims don't follow it. They have different rules of engagement. They have a slightly more forgiving attitude to enemy combatants, but treat everyone and everything as an enemy combatant. Everyone gets ONE chance to totally submit to muslim authority, anyone who doesn't immediately takes that option gets killed, or tortured and killed if they can do it (the actually "preferred way" to do it is crucifixion in sharia).

      Of course, everyone seems to agree that a muslim is someone who follows "the islamic way" and everyone truly hates everyone who wants sharia.

      Wouldn't it be very inconvenient indeed if "the islamic way" were to be the translation of the arabic word "sharia" ?

      Except that's indeed so.

    137. Re:Taking out capital ships? by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 2, Informative

      In order for such a blockade to work, you'd need the cooperation of China and Russia, though (it's very hard for progressives to count borders it seems. Or at least no-one ever blames Egypt for a certain very unpopular blockade). This is probably a lot harder to get than you seem to think.

    138. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We once ordered a bulk shipment of used ISA abnd SCSI cards on ebay from Russia for a recycling project.

      Due to a mix up at customs I received a mislabeled container destined for a well-known middle east state. Imagine my surprise when we opened it and found four fully-armed intercontinental nuclear cruise missiles. How we laughed. Needless to say we left negative feedback and returned the item. The sales manager was not happy AT ALL.

      Gotta call bulls*h*t on this one.

    139. Re:Taking out capital ships? by mea37 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      However, the threat scenario with Club-K missiles (according to TFA) is not a "shooting war between first world powers". The concern is that if a terrorist organization were to get these missiles, they could sneak up on a warship that doesn't know it's at war. Your step 1 is already solved if you have a ship within visual range.

      Not sure what you do about step 3, though. Also not sure why it's more likely that terrorists get these than any other Russian weapon.

    140. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      Sorry, meant "Iraq", not "Iran" above.

      Wha? Weirdest correction ever. Iraq are your allies dude, it's Iran that's the devil incarnate this time round.

      (Kids of today, always confusing Eurasia with Eastasia. Humpf).

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    141. Re:Taking out capital ships? by buback · · Score: 1

      This design is so impractical.
      It would also need a powerful targeting radar, and a power supply, and a trained crew to fire it.

      And if it is on top, it might get washed overboard before ever getting close to it's target.

    142. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Possibly people are also missing the other points - Trucks are also used to transport containers. This gives well financed guerrilla groups an easy way to hide or move missile launchers through built up or civilian areas. They don't have to launch these from a ship.

      Anything big enough to be a threat to a capital ship is also going to make a pleasing bang when it hits a land based target. Like a civilian airport, transport hub or fuel refinery.

    143. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

      "What, pray tell, was the main tactic employed by Iran against Israel in 2006 ?"

      Getting shot and losing?

      Also, Iran can afford better weapons. And The other countries Israel slaughters on a regular basis can't afford planes... of ANY sort. (Last time Israel invaded Lebanon they had ~5 converted news helicopters in the service and no planes). I doubt they'll be getting any kind of fancy special weapons. And since they aren't WMDs by any stretch of the imagination it hardly would bug us. I know being terrorized is the 'in' thing this decade but you severely overestimate your enemies and this threat.

      Also, to be fair human rights groups blame 'the people taking out the missile launch site' too, so it isn't really just media stupidity.

    144. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

      That and going to space...

    145. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then the counter to that would be a Crossdressing Gary Busey.

    146. Re:Taking out capital ships? by vtcodger · · Score: 1

      ***I would imagine that seeing an unknown mach 2-3 object heading for a carrier anywhere would be reason enough to turn on the anti missile systems like Phalanx or Goalkeeper.***

      Well, I'd imagine that also. OTOH, with a sophisticated opponent, the missile will probably be at wavetop height down in the scattering returns from waves, accompanied with jamming and possibly built using stealth technology. It may not be that easy to see.

      OTOH, I don't know much about this stuff. I do know that cruise missiles are generally subsonic (I believe the Russian's latest may be faster) and are traditionally optimized for distance and payload capacity, not speed.

      --
      You can't see ANYTHING from a car, You've got to get out of the goddamned contraption and walk...Edward Abbey
    147. Re:Taking out capital ships? by vtcodger · · Score: 1

      ***We're assuming you could put a container ship in close proximity to the aircraft carrier***

      I think that probably the container serves the function of the US Navy's Armored Box Launcher. It's there to get the missile -- which has been preprogrammed with a target? -- into the air. (Not a trivial job BTW). If the missile is a genuine cruise missile similar to the BGM-109 Tomahawk, the actual target can -- conceptually at least -- be hundreds of kilometers away.

      Not that I know very much about modern naval warfare.

      --
      You can't see ANYTHING from a car, You've got to get out of the goddamned contraption and walk...Edward Abbey
    148. Re:Taking out capital ships? by f3rret · · Score: 1

      The thing that gets me is that they even NEED commercial like that, I mean what are they going to do? Get some North Korean or Iranian TV stations to run the add and hope a few warlords are watching.

      --
      Admit nothing. Deny Everything. Make Counter-accusations.
    149. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

      So... you are saying that shooting indiscriminately at people in a country you are trying to help is working?

      Geneva conventions came out of the aftermath of WWII. The uniform thing is to keep citizen deaths as low as possible in large conventional wars. But contrary to what the T.V. tells you the US isn't in a war; The war on drugs? Also not a war. It is more like a police action.

      There is no bad guy to take out. The goal is to calm down and rebuild a very riled up country. And on some level to bring democracy. Think of us more like riot police on a really really big scale. Shooting into the crowd every 15minutes not helpful! I mean, unless you are Napolean and are prepared to kill them all.

    150. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Vectormatic · · Score: 1

      forget the SS-N-22, check out the SS-N-19 shipwreck: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P-700_Granit

      750kg warhead, nominal speeds of mach 4.5, with prototype engines capable of up to mach 6, an advanced group attach mode in which 4-8 missiles attack in a self-cordinated strike (1 missile flies higher and designates sepperate targets for the others).

      I'm not sure how effective anti missile defenses are these days, but with this thing, a single fregat armed with 8 of these missiles could provide a devestating blow to a battlegroup

      Just think, 8 co-operating missiles at mach 4.5 (or even 6), each with 750kg of high explosive (or a 500KT nuke), heading for your fleet..

      --
      People, what a bunch of bastards
    151. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Rich0 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually, a ship like this would be confiscated the moment it entered the national waters of any nation who is friendly with any of the major superpowers if they were aware of it.

      Any ship armed with a weapons system in a state that can be deployed is a warship, almost by definition. Warships cannot enter territorial waters without consent - doing so is a diplomatic incident at the very least, and an act of war at worst. In an actual state of war the ship would be an immediate target, and would likely be defenseless which means that any fighter bomber making a ferry run in its vicinity would probably just be dispatched with an extra anti-ship missile to take care of it.

      This is really just USS Cole Mark II. A US capital ship in constrained waters like the Persian Gulf might be at some risk if an adversary armed with these things could get an accurate location on it, and sneak this in with merchant traffic. Still, it would be a gamble, and it would certainly start a full-scale war with the US. A country like Iran would lose such a war under virtually any circumstances - they couldn't take out enough of the US navy to actually prevent an invasion. A country like China could make a much bigger impact, but at least at present they couldn't sustain an all-out war against the US. Even a diminished US military would be on the offensive and China would be fighting on its own shores against a US that would be mostly untouched within its borders. The US would also be able to resupply much more easily (more access to oil and other raw materials).

      The reality is that weapons like these just make things really messy for everybody. No sovereign nation would actually fire such a weapon, at most they would use them as bargaining chips. No nation would allow terrorists/etc to actually have weapons like these - it isn't in their interests.

    152. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Vectormatic · · Score: 1

      the GP wasnt suggesting the SS-N-22 has sat-guidance, but the Club-K supposedly does

      --
      People, what a bunch of bastards
    153. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Vectormatic · · Score: 1

      not to mention the fact that a limping carrier with still some valuable assets that could be retrieved is a bigger strain on the rest of the fleet then a sunk one. It will need to be towed/supported/protected on its way back to port.

      The same principle is used in the design of anti-personel mines. Why kill an enemy soldier when you can blow his leg off and have him take up one of the enemies hospital beds sucking down resources?

      Just to put forth my own standpoint, i think these kind of anti-personel mines are awfull, and horribly immoral, unfortunatly in terms of strategy against a de-humanized opponent, the idea is sound

      --
      People, what a bunch of bastards
    154. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      Everybody already takes this approach, that's why Aegis was invented in the 80s. Or are you asking how long until somebody actually launches an attack like this?

      Well, if somebody did, they'd be at war. Ok, they've sunk a carrier or two - assuming they managed to get targeting data sufficient to launch an attack (you do need to know within a few miles where a ship is to fire a missile like this). Now the country will be under strategic attack from the US. Even limited to conventional weapons only one or two nations on the planet could even put up a fight. The US doesn't need carriers to attack countries if it can obtain friendly bases nearby (and in a real shooting war on this scale, people will have to pick sides quickly - who was neutral in WWII?). Once shots are fired US forces would operate under wartime conditions, and would simply declare an exclusion zone maybe 1000 miles around the country - they'd be running a blockade anyway. Now getting within launch range would be very difficult.

    155. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      Just to put forth my own standpoint, i think these kind of anti-personel mines are awfull, and horribly immoral

      Why are they awful and immoral compared to a 5.56mm slug that tends to wound more often than kill?

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    156. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

      "And NPR told me the other day the US Navy is lugging some Somali pirates back to the US for trial after the pirates attempted to board and loot not one, but two, US destroyers. These may not be the smartest pirates in the Red Sea. But they did apparently manage to get into close proximity to the ships."
      You assume that they weren't intentionally allowed to get close. It could have been a trap set for them.

      --
      retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
    157. Re:Taking out capital ships? by infinite9 · · Score: 1

      Have you read the Geneva Conventions?

      Geneva Conventions... how quaint. The people who fight the next world war that's almost here will have an utter disregard for civilian life.

      --
      Disconnect your television. Do your own research. Draw your own conclusions. They're probably lying. Don't be a sheep.
    158. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Jeian · · Score: 1

      The question is, how many could be launched before they became the target of some concentrated returned fire.

    159. Re:Taking out capital ships? by GodfatherofSoul · · Score: 1

      So, you're saying you'd like to see a Beowulf cluster of these missiles? Nice job sneaking that meme in!

      --
      I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
    160. Re:Taking out capital ships? by sznupi · · Score: 1

      Did you really just suggest that detonating bombs on deck (what kind of bombs? On top of that deck of an aircraft carrier, which is in large part separated by hangar from the main structure or outright "suspended" above waves) is in any way comparable to HE bomb penetrating deep into the structure or detonating under the keel?

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    161. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wouldn't it need to stagger the firing so the missiles didn't interfere with each other? I don't think you could simulatenously launch 500 missiles from one ship without them pushing each other off course, or detonating prematurely, and if you have to stagger them you're vulnerable to an attack fleet with anti-missile defenses, their defenses take down your first volley, then you have their return volley to worry about...

    162. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      This really depends on your political plans and the scale of the war.

      In a one-sided war that you can't lose, hearts and minds is by far the best approach. I'm not sure if it is actually possible, as nobody has ever pulled it off, but I can't think of any other options other than not going to war or things that wouldn't be politically acceptable.

      In a matched war where substantial portions of your military have been lost, nobody will care about hearts and minds. Do you think the allies cared about the hearts and minds in Dresden or Tokyo? Do you think that voters in the nations that launched those raids cared about these sorts of things, when EVERYBODY had a relative who had died in the war?

      Nobody starts out shooting civilians - but wars tend to escalate. Starting out a war with a sneak attack that sinks 25% or so of the US carrier fleet using civilian-disguised platforms is a very good way to get things escalated a LOT sooner. Just look at the reaction to Pearl Harbor, and that at least was a purely military attack executed completely in compliance with the Geneva Conventions (as far as I'm aware) - it just took place without a declaration of war.

    163. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes they can.
      http://fredoneverything.net/DeadCarriers.shtml

    164. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Vectormatic · · Score: 1

      im guessing that even if you could track 500 targets all inbound at mach 3 at low altitude, taking them down would be next to impossible. Even if you assume a phalanx system can reach out 4 miles (which it probably cant, at that range the bullets are highly ineffective), at mach three that leaves each missile within phalanx range for 6 seconds. Now even if your carier has four phalanx's facing having line of sight, they would need to take out 16 missiles per second, which i'm pretty sure they are not capable off

      the phalanx also only carries a 1500 round magazine, and at several miles of range you need more then an average of 12 rounds to take out a multi-ton cruise missile i think.

      I know its totally unrealistic, but my guess is that against a co-ordinated 500 cruise missile strike, a carrier battlegroup is pretty much fucked, they just cant shoot down that many missiles without a few getting through

      --
      People, what a bunch of bastards
    165. Re:Taking out capital ships? by TheBig1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Who says they are *more* awful -- either one is ethically dubious. (Of course, warfare itself is ethically dubious, but I am enough of a realist to see that it must happen sometimes).

    166. Re:Taking out capital ships? by quenda · · Score: 0, Troll

      four fully-armed intercontinental nuclear cruise missiles.

      The fact that no current known cruise missiles have more than 1000km detracts from the credibility of your anecdote.

    167. Re:Taking out capital ships? by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      Without their oil fields, China and Russia wouldn't give a rat's ass about Iran.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    168. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Vectormatic · · Score: 1

      if we assume a 4 mile effective range (which i think is overly generous for a gun, but hey), that gives a mach 3 cruise missile approximatly 6 seconds within phalanx range, i'd love to see a crew that can reload ammo cans on an opperating, moving and firing phalanx system in that amount of time. you would just need ~8 missiles to overload a single phalanx (2 100-round bursts to take out a missile, phalanx runs out after 7 missiles), assuming its range is 4 miles (i believe that even if it is, it would be severly less effective due to bullet scatter), purely on ammo capacity

      Phalanx might work against one or two simultanious missiles, but overpowering it with sheer numbers wouldnt be all that hard

      --
      People, what a bunch of bastards
    169. Re:Taking out capital ships? by GooberToo · · Score: 1

      this sort of cruise missile typically has ranges of the order of 200 miles.

      Right! And the farther you launch the missile from its target the easier it is to detect, track, and target/intercept the missile. Also, radar is a LOS technology. The seas are more or less (wave action) flat. Modern radar ships, such as those equipped with Aegis, are specifically designed to detect and counter-act such threats.

      In short, to even have a modest hope of penetrating a modern fleet defense and hitting a high value target, such as a carrier, you must be very, very close, in an attempt to hit your target before defenses can react. And frankly, I don't see ships being allowed the opportunity to ever get that close; especially when deployed at sea.

    170. Re:Taking out capital ships? by slashddot · · Score: 1

      Here's a more recent article by the War Nerd on the same topic: http://exiledonline.com/the-war-nerd-this-is-how-the-carriers-will-die/ Seems the fact that aircraft carriers are elaborate floating targets that cannot be effectively defended is a well-known fact even to the Navy.

    171. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Sir_Lewk · · Score: 1

      Is it really that hard to jam GPS-type systems? I'd be surprised if nobody planned for the possibility of needing to do so.

      --
      "linux is just DOS with a UNIX like syntax" -- Galactic Dominator (944134)
    172. Re:Taking out capital ships? by dotancohen · · Score: 1

      In the real world? It means that Liberia is subjecting it's flagged ships to increased scrutiny. It means that captains are warned, and new registrations are stringent.

      If there would be such an attack, I would imagine the US attacking a Liberian port, not Liberian ships at first. But the US is trigger happy, and after two western-owned Liberian-registered ships are sank the Liberian registry will fall apart. Bahamas and Panama will enact strict registration guidelines and port security around the world will tighten.

      Oh, and you and me will pay for the increased port security and the rush to registration with increased shipping costs. That means inflation, because _everything_ is shipped. Though in the end, increased shipping costs might just help the US bring manufacturing back onto it's own shores.

      --
      It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
    173. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Uberbah · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Of course, Israel (unlike Hezbollah) limited itself to launch sites

      Do you think I was peaking hypothetically about doctors houses shelled by the IDF, schools bombed by the IDF (after telling civilians to use it for shelter) and bombing clearly marked U.N. vehicles? Israel has launched attacks on Gaza, Lebanon, and Egypt. Whereas Iran hasn't attacked one of it's neighbors in 200 years.

      Everyone gets ONE chance to totally submit to muslim authority, anyone who doesn't immediately takes that option gets killed, or tortured and killed if they can do it (the actually "preferred way" to do it is crucifixion in sharia).

      A load of xeonophobic crap.

    174. Re:Taking out capital ships? by lwsimon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Having an interest in terminal ballistics, I'd like to see some citation for that. While there may be some difference between 5.56 NATO and, say, 7.62 NATO in terms of lethality, I would be willing to bet that the primary contributing factor is shot placement.

      We use small calibers because it allows the soldier to carry more ammunition into battle.

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
    175. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Point is, don't dress up military installations to look like civilian infrastructure, it's bad.

      Don't let your own country commit real war crimes like torture, and then you can start complaining about rules of engagement and flags when it's an attack on a military vessel.

    176. Re:Taking out capital ships? by greenbird · · Score: 1

      Only problem is that this is a radar jammer. According to the vid, the missiles will have sat guidance.

      I'm pretty sure any anti-ship missile is going to have to have radar terminal guidance. Any kind of satellite guidance wouldn't be realtime enough to hit a moving target.

      --
      Who is John Galt?
    177. Re:Taking out capital ships? by lwsimon · · Score: 1

      Could you provide reference on Q-Ships causing the Germans to fire more often on civilians? It seems to me that a Q-Ship wouldn't work unless German submarines were *already* firing on shipping traffic.

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
    178. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Watson+Ladd · · Score: 1

      Plus splitting up warheads, and radar jamming. This can get fun fast. Also popping up then smashing down on the deck would force the system to aim vertically up, which it can't do.

      --
      Inventions have long since reached their limit, and I see no hope for further development.-- Frontinus, 1st cent. AD
    179. Re:Taking out capital ships? by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      The detail you are forgetting is the rest of the CVBG has phalanx and other anti-missile systems. If it's the carrier's weapons that actually knock down the missile instead of an escort's weapons, then that's a major failure.

    180. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You never, ever, ever camouflage your military systems to look like civilian infrastructure.

      The U.S. did it in World War II with no discernable downside:

      http://gizmodo.com/5380774/how-to-disguise-an-airplane-factory-as-a-subdivision

    181. Re:Taking out capital ships? by professionalfurryele · · Score: 1

      Not really letting my country commit war crimes, I object to them and write to my MP about them but beyond that not a whole lot I can do. I think I can complain about both.

      Torture is bad, my government sucks for doing it and I don't like it. I want the people complicit on trial in the Hague.

      People who fight under false flags, who use child soldiers and who hide behind notions of 'asymmetrical warfare' suck, I don't like them and I want them on trial in the Hague.

      See, just did both, didn't even break a sweat.

    182. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From the Wikipedia article for U.S. Carrier Group tactics:

      A standard formation provides a number of layers of defence, designed to give maximum protection to the fleet's high value units (HVUs) or main body. Furthest out are the picket ships, Combat Air Patrol (CAP) craft and early warning aircraft (AEW). These units operate at 200 nautical miles (370 km) or more out from the main body. The units of the outer screen operate between 12 and 25 nautical miles (22 and 46 km) from the main body. The inner screen is within 10 nautical miles (19 km) of the HVUs.

    183. Re:Taking out capital ships? by fauxhammer · · Score: 1

      What I don't get is why there's no ads at the bottom asking me if I want to buy the Pirates of the Caribbean soundtrack on iTunes. Maybe they're already in cahoots with the RIAA. WE'RE DOOMED.

    184. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only reason the Cole bombing even worked was a serious limitation on the rules of engagement the Navy was operating under at the time. The crew on the Cole had the terrorist boat in their gunsights for several minutes but were not allowed to fire.

      Needless to say, the Navy doesn't operate under those rules of engagement any more.

      Captcha: paranoia

    185. Re:Taking out capital ships? by rgviza · · Score: 1

      They don't need to when delivered via submarines.

      --
      Don't kid yourself. It's the size of the regexp AND how you use it that counts.
    186. Re:Taking out capital ships? by EvilBudMan · · Score: 1

      --Is the idea here to sell this product to countries looking to get their civilians killed for propaganda purposes?--

      Yeah, I would say that is about the size of it. I did like the music though, kind of portraying us as the evil empire and them as just a peace loving bunch. That was cool.

    187. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Jonathan_S · · Score: 1

      Umm, weren't Q-ships used precisely because of Germany's unrestricted submarine warfare? Chicken or the egg?

      Not really. They were used initially to counter submarines that were actually stopping merchant ships, demanding they surrender and abandon ship, and only then sinking them (usually by gunfire - to save torpedoes for military targets).

      Q-ships work well for that because the sub surfaces to demand the surrender of the "merchant" ship and the Q-ship drops its disguise and opens fire on the surfaced sub.

      Q-ships work poorly for countering unrestricted warfare because they get torpedoed without warning and most of their weapons only work on a surfaced sub. If the sub stays submerged there's not a lot a Q-ship can do.

    188. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Shompol · · Score: 1

      Hate to float a turd but... there has been a cruse missile with these capabilities for sometime now. The military won't generally acknowledge this fact because doing so would kill the budget for big carriers.

      Yeah that is a turd because the second sentence seems to be something you pulled out of your ass.

      Those might be able to sink a carrier but to even attempt to do so you're going to have launch them from extreme range because if it is wartime and you're hostile you're going to have a hell of a time getting even that close to a carrier battle group before they get twitchy and decide to sink you. You might manage to pull it off in peace time but you'd still probably wind up getting sunk yourself, if not by the carrier then by the escorts.

      ...the second paragraph seems to be something you pulled out of your ass. Lots of interesting stuff is happening during the "peacetime".

    189. Re:Taking out capital ships? by rgviza · · Score: 1

      The NATO SS-N-22 designation is actually used for 2 very different missiles with very different capabilities, the P-80 Zubr, and the P-270 Moskit. Without knowing which missile the parent is referring to, there is only speculation.

      The Zubr (also known as Oniks) was an early anti-ship rocket propelled cruise missile of short range with a 250kg warhead.

      The Moskit is ramjet propelled to mach 3 at 15 ft above sea level and is considered one of the most lethal anti ship missiles available today with a 320kg warhead.

      --
      Don't kid yourself. It's the size of the regexp AND how you use it that counts.
    190. Re:Taking out capital ships? by rgviza · · Score: 1

      Against the Moskit, you generally have 15-20 seconds to react to an object traveling at Mach 3. The guy in charge of fire control had better not hesitate ;)

      --
      Don't kid yourself. It's the size of the regexp AND how you use it that counts.
    191. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Kevin+Stevens · · Score: 1

      You might want to read this- Similar to how during the revolution, the fancy pants British army was picked off by bands of snipers in the woods, we are considerably more vulnerable than we think:

      http://exiledonline.com/the-war-nerd-this-is-how-the-carriers-will-die/

    192. Re:Taking out capital ships? by hitmark · · Score: 1

      and in these "police action" times, may not over-penetrate just as much.

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    193. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      They are a lot harder to sink than you might imagine. It's not that easy to sink a ship that displaces 100,000 tons, short of nuclear weapons.

      A decent size explosion under the center of the keel and its own weight will crack it. A modest sized explosion on the flight deck and it becomes a 100,000 ton command center.

      Sinking an air craft carrier isn't actually that hard in theory, and making it useless is even easier. That's why they're surrounded by an entire fleet of ships stuffed with weaponry and countermeasures, so it becomes rather hard to sink a carrier in practice.

      However in a war game that took place in the Persian Gulf with a carrier group vs a vastly less sophisticated force of small boats and planes designed to be reminiscent of Iran most of the carrier group, including the carrier, were sunk.

      Iran having access to a container-based weapon that feeds into the kind of asymmetric tactics used, and the Brass' seeming refusal to learn the lessons of that war game, makes me pretty nervous regarding our navy's chances at least in the opening round of a shooting war.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    194. Re:Taking out capital ships? by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      Since you clearly have made up your mind, I stop this discussion. Hezbollah does indeed use schools, UN marked vehicles (and real UN vehicles) and civilian shelters to launch missiles.

      At that point, what choice does the IDF have ?

      If you seriously think Hezbollah is more peaceful than the IDF (and presumably America), I suggest you move to southern Lebanon.

      Why is it always Jews that must endure constant rocket strikes ? I mean, suppose the worst is true, and the civilians of southern lebanon had to endure a few rocket strikes. Israel's been constant rocket strikes for over 20 years now, and apparently you demand they don't do anything about it ? I seriously suggest they tell you, and any civilians to go fuck yourself, while they're firing rockets at you.

      Apparently the only thing that can make one "peaceful" in minds like the abomination that sits on your head is a willingness to kill progressives. I would pray, if I were you, that people don't start realizing this.

    195. Re:Taking out capital ships? by sznupi · · Score: 1

      Besides, it goes all ways when it comes who "succeeds" and who is "defeating" during such exercises, with singular tactical encounters having even more mixed results; that's the point, to see what works when it's safe.

      It's just that this one example applied to the matter at hand.

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    196. Re:Taking out capital ships? by professionalfurryele · · Score: 1

      A reference? No I'd have to go hunting, I can explain the situation as best I remember it however. The first Q ships were using in 1915 prior to the full use of unrestricted submarine warfare in 1917 but after the declaration of unrestricted submarine warfare in the Channel, North Sea and neighbouring waters.

      The rules of engagement for submarines were not well defined in the Great War. The British blockade extended to food, which cause diplomatic rumbles in the States and outraged Germany. Germany tried to respond in kind but there was concern that if they annoyed the USA they might enter the war. Early in the war German submarine captains would often pull up to a craft and forcebly disembark the crew before sinking her, especially if she was sailing under a neutral flag. German escalation of unrestricted submarine warfare inlcuding the February 4th declaration in 1915 by Admiral von Pohl meant that the British civilian ships were already under attack (as was neutral shipping at times). Part of the British response was Q ships. As far as the British were concerned the German use of submarines was already a violation of the spirit (and for that matter at the time the letter) of the rules of naval warfare.

      The Germans accused the British of using Q ships with foriegn flags (whipping out the white naval ensign at the last minute) essentially 'forcing' them to shoot at everything that sailed. There were regular complaints from the Germans about the Q-ships.

      The whole thing was a mess. All sides should have agreed realistic limits on how submarines could operate and how blockades could be conducted prior to hostilities because both sides ended up doing rather nasty things.

    197. Re:Taking out capital ships? by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      NATO gave it a very appropriate name: Shipwreck. Because that's what it does. I recall one of the military buff forums state that folks at NATO estimated the normal 4-missile swarm was expected to disable aircraft carrier and kill at least one of the aegis cruisers with something around 90% likelihood

      I've also heard someone on a military buff forum state the U.S.S. Enterprise's top speed is 75 knots (it isn't), that an Akula can dive to 7,000 feet (it can't), etc... etc...
       
      You'll also note the P-700 is nearly thirty years old - you really think no countermeasures have been developed in the interim? I suspect the massive ESM capability upgrades the USN applied to its cruisers in the 80's just might have been a response to the P-700. (But then, I've only actually studied naval topics for thirty years, what do I know?)
       
       

      It's essentially unstoppable by any current defense weapon short of having anti-missile ship sitting on top of the sub and killing the missiles as they surface.

      Assuming of course a MK48 or two from a US SSN hasn't taken care of the launching submarine first. (I.E. you're making the classic error of the armchair admiral - assigning all the advantage to one side and all the disadvantage to the other.) After all, one the reasons the Los Angeles class was developed was to fill precisely this role. (And the Virginia class is even better at it.)
       
       

      The main reason NATO utterly obliterated Iraq both times is because NATO forces are specifically designed to counter Russian-style "heavy armor assault" through far more advanced attack craft and helicopters which literally ate tanks alive once air superiority was achieved with tremendous efficiency.

      Since neither war involved a Russian style "heavy armor assault", you'll have to look elsewhere for an explanation. After all, the known Iraqi flaws in doctrine, training, and materiel readiness couldn't possibly have any bearing. (Not to mention their near complete inability to prevent the US from obtaining and holding air superiority.)

    198. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Chris+Burke · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Even Iran isn't stupid enough to give these yahoos their top-grade stuff.

      Um, yes, but the entire context here is Russia potentially selling these weapons to Iran. I don't quite get the "ally" comment in the summary, but Russia is willing to trade with Iran.

      An Iranian-type asymmetric navy was exactly the kind simulated in the Millennium Challenge where most of a carrier group, carrier included, were sunk. Weapons like this feed directly into the kind of tactics used in that scenario.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    199. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      What this means is that any such container ship would have to be Iranian flagged (to use my hypothetical)

      Haha! What makes you think that?

      and would have to military operated.

      Yes, of course. But why would a military-operated vessel that is trying to pose as an inoffensive merchant vessel fly their own flag?!

      Any ship that can carry a shipping container could carry one of these missile systems. That means the number of hulls that could potentially be a threat to our ships is vastly increased.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    200. Re:Taking out capital ships? by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      Actually both are interested in conquering it. Both would prefer to have Afghanistan first though.

      Of course it's a near-certainty that China will attack at some point, the real question is when. But both are very interested in keeping any kind of capable troops out of Iran.

      As such, they don't mind the islamic idiots (who can't even keep their planes in the air WITHOUT anyone shooting at them) that currently occupy Iran.

    201. Re:Taking out capital ships? by zelbinion · · Score: 1

      So it seems the missile that is supposed to be loaded into these containers is this one:
      Klub

      This is a modular missile that, according to wikipedia, has 5 different warhead/guidance packages. The anit-ship version uses inertial guidance plus active radar homing. That means you need:
      #1 -- know where the ship is
      #2 -- get the missile to the target -- solved by inertial guidance
      #3 -- get the missile to hit the target accurately -- solved by active radar homing, but with jamming and decoy countermeasures
      #4 -- avoid getting shot down -- solved by sea-skimming (at least in this case, the Klub looks to be a sub-sonic sea-skimmer), but there are the counter measures of trying to confuse or decoy the missile #3, or trying to shoot it down with defensive missiles/guns, #4

      Against a well defended target (e.g. a carrier battle group), the Klub would probably only be effective in very large numbers (to saturate the defenses, effectively a counter to #4.)

      However, that's a traditional war scenario. In such a scenario, the likelyhood that a container ship is going to be allowed within range of a CBG is not likely. Therefore, this system would be better used to attack either smaller task groups or other merchant ships (where it would probably be very effective.) Imagine one of these choking off the persian gulf. Merchant ships/tankers are at risk of attack because other merchant ships now have the ability to shoot missiles. If you forbid any ship capable of parking a container on deck from entry into the persian gulf, you get pretty much the same result: closing the persian gulf. The same can happen at any other shipping choke point. It can also be used in more open waters where you don't have enough escorts to protect your merchant fleet. (Germany nearly strangled England in WWII with their U-Boats, and the US seriously degraded Japan's ability to continue the war in WWII by sinking lots of their merchant ships.)

      There is another scenario that is also interesting. There is also a land-attack version of the Klub. Wikipedia says it uses strictly inertial guidance, but GPS type satellite guidance seems like a natural follow on. Most navel ships spend most of their time in port.

      #1 -- you know where they are, as they are sitting right there in port. They aren't even moving.
      #2 -- inertial guidance and/or GPS will work great here.
      #3 -- since the ship isn't even moving and you know exactly where it is, GPS might be enough, no active-radar terminal homing needed. Jamming/decoys are now ineffective.
      #4 -- the ships probably aren't even manned, and even if they are, they probably aren't expecting to spool up their defensive systems with only seconds of warning to try and defeat an incoming missile.

      So, you stroll up in your innocuous looking container ship and blow up 1/2 of the enemy's fleet while sitting in port with no warning. Great first strike weapon (think Pearl Habor), but probably still effective after the outbreak of war, because most large navel bases are fairly near commercial ports, and unless you suspend merchant shipping during your war, or stop every container ship well out of range and search every container, these things are going to pose a serious problem.

    202. Re:Taking out capital ships? by DinDaddy · · Score: 1

      Now you're postulating an adversary with 12+ missiles. Not exactly a "terrorist group" level of activity as far as cost, training and coordination. And are you covering all 12 of those launches with one fire?

      Feels to me like a stretch.

    203. Re:Taking out capital ships? by pjt33 · · Score: 1

      Sat guidance alone can never eliminate the need to solve #3 in some way - a missile going mach 3 covers a huge space in one second, so unless the sat can give the missile realtime target location with a latency of much less than a second there is no hope of getting a hit.

      I don't follow your reasoning here. The missile may be going at mach 3 but the aircraft carrier is unlikely to be going at more than 20 knots (~10m/s), and probably can't even make significant course changes in the flight time of your missile.

    204. Re:Taking out capital ships? by mrex · · Score: 1

      The innovative threat here is the use of concealment to greatly complicate the targeting and tracking of these battlefield assets before they're employed. Cruise-type missiles aren't the most dangerous threat faced by carrier battle groups, but they're not an insignificant one either. Otherwise, we wouldn't be putting so much effort into defending against them.

    205. Re:Taking out capital ships? by MaroonMotor · · Score: 1

      I am unsure how increased registration scrutiny will help anything.

      Liberia (or any other registrar) is not really in any position to check what the ships are doing at any given voyage. All they can do is periodically check that the ship is seaworthy and give it a certificate to that effect. What can Liberia do about a ship registered in Liberia, owned by British company that has leased it to a Japanese firm for carrying raw material from India to its factory in China. Plus add in shell companies, intermediatories etc the picture gets quite complicated. At how many points are you going to check?

      Hitting out at the registrar country nets you nothing. Its like arguing that since a california plate car ran you over, you gotta sue the Californian DMV.

      Increasing the scrutiny of Liberian flagged vessels does nothing but hassel the Liberians and their, but there is nothing to deter the actual perpetrator.

    206. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Calinous · · Score: 1

      If what Wikipedia says is true, Phalanx in auto mode doesn't target missiles that aren't coming for the ship they are installed on. True, this might be programmed, but I think the hit percentage degrades greatly against missiles just flying by.

    207. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or simply pass within a few km of a carrier when its entering/leaving/docked at its home port. The naval yards and civilian port are right next to each other. I doubt the a

    208. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Calinous · · Score: 1

      I've read too much Tom Clancy it seems :)
      On the other hand, 12 launches are three containers, and one simulated fire on a ship might mask them enough for the missiles to reach cruise velocity

    209. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Calinous · · Score: 1

      Hypervelocity missiles run straight at the target, they don't manoeuver (they would be pressed to, at almost a mile a second). Only standard cruise missiles (like the Harpoons) have the option to pop up and dive on target (which they do on a not very steep dive, probably inside the Phalanx's field of fire).

    210. Re:Taking out capital ships? by __aajfby9338 · · Score: 1

      Hmm.... you'd have to find people who are willing to die for a chance to kill an opponent of much higher strategic value. I wonder where you'd find that?

      Or, you hire a cargo ship to go from point A to point B via route C, and you don't tell them that there are missiles in those sea containers at the top of the pile, and that they're going into battle against an aircraft carrier group.

    211. Re:Taking out capital ships? by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      I seem to recall that a typical container ship can hold over 5,000 connex/TEU (20' connex) these days - though the average capacity may have gone down in recent years due to international shipping being on the decline and the large numbers of container ships abandoned in the South Pacific, left to float.

      I did the calculations once; a malevolent force with a container ship could amass an invasion force suitable to form a beachhead on an average connex ship. Asia-America, San Diego transit takes (on average) 2 weeks; a single connex could hold a vehicle, 4 men, and all the supplies they'd need for a number of weeks (or some variation thereof) and more; and a ship can hold 5,000+ of these containers, even with air space between them. Yes, it'd be cramped, but that'd be 20k armed, irritable and mobile troops on your front door, instantly and unannounced.

      You could probably fit quite a few more in if you had sleeping rotations.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    212. Re:Taking out capital ships? by smitty777 · · Score: 1

      Great points RichO. The bad part is that your points 1-4 would be almost irrelevant in the truck/train scenario. Especially against soft targets.

      --
      "Before God we are all equally wise - and equally foolish"
      Albert Einstein
    213. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except the imperial nation didn't seem to do any actual invading, the worst thing they did was having a show of force and having a threatening soundtrack. Next thing you know the "peaceful utopia" goes nuts and starts firing.

    214. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Khashishi · · Score: 1

      The aircraft carrier will become the battleship of yesteryear.

    215. Re:Taking out capital ships? by T+Murphy · · Score: 1
    216. Re:Taking out capital ships? by modecx · · Score: 1

      I think antipersonnel mines are just fine for a properly advertised DMZ and even for temporary area-denial, providing they will be destroyed eventually. Beyond that, they're indiscriminate... It doesn't matter if it's a soldier on a battlefield, or a 10 year old kid/farmer trying to live off the earth, long after the war has ended... It's an equal opportunity munition, unlike even the most poorly designed slug.

      As for the 5.56mm bullet, it's really down to the bullet design, and the rifles in which they're used. The steel tipped bullet most often used by our soldiers does indeed have problems, if it doesn't manage to hit the target at a high enough velocity that it fragments. The shorter M4 (14.5 inch barrel) doesn't get the bullet up to speed in the same way the 20" M16 barrel can, and the bullets don't fragment as intended.

      The main problem is, the army is now issuing lots of M4 carbines, favoring mobility instead of firepower... And like in every other area, the military is often 10 years behind current trends. Bullets better suited to the weapons are just now being fielded to non-SOCOM units.

      --
      Constitutional rights may be respected, repealed, or modified; but they must never be ignored.
    217. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the moonie times is not a credible source for anything

    218. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      The carrier will still travel more than one length in the time the missile takes to fly, and GPS guidance only takes a missile to a geographic location. If you use GPS guidance ONLY then the missile can only travel to the predicted location of the ship. If the ship is even 10 feet away from that precise location in space, then the missile won't cause significant damage to it other than killing a few people standing on the deck at most.

      To actually hit the ship the missile needs to actually "see" the ship - whether IR or radar or whatever. GPS guidance only can get the missile to the vicinity of the ship.

      In the real world the problem is even more difficult - the ship's exact location may not be known, and it will likely move between sighting and firing, unless it is sighted directly by the launching platform. Plus, the original location of the target will be only accurate to within maybe 100 yards or so. That is plenty of good to get a missile close enough to find a ship with radar, but not good enough to hit a moving target with a missile with no terminal guidance.

      Now, land-based targets are an entirely different matter. A building doesn't move, so GPS alone is fine to hit it. Plus, land-based maps usually are more accurate. A ship in the middle of an ocean has no navigational reference points nearby, so its location assignment is limited by the accuracy of the servos on the sensor that located it. A tank parked in a parking lot can be measured relative to a street intersection on the same photo whose exact location is known.

    219. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      so if the 'rabs are at fault here, why is that israel kills something around 40 times as many children as the Palestinians do?

      israel knows that it only takes a few seconds for a rocket crew to shoot and get out of the area, and yet they continue to deliver airstrikes 5 minutes after a launch, guaranteed to blow the hell out of any civilians in the area, but the attackers are long gone.

      but blowing up an apartment building is ok because some guys stopped their truck in the parking lot to fire a 22 lb rocket 9assuming it was a qassam 3, the original design carried a 1 lb payload, and the 2 carried a 10-15 lb payload.

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    220. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Won't work. He'd be too busy "auditioning" Erika Eleniak.

    221. Re:Taking out capital ships? by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      And NPR told me the other day the US Navy is lugging some Somali pirates back to the US for trial after the pirates attempted to board and loot not one, but two, US destroyers. These may not be the smartest pirates in the Red Sea. But they did apparently manage to get into close proximity to the ships.

      They should make a 'lite' version of the system for dealing with the Somali pirate fastboats.

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    222. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Huh? Iran never attacked Israel in 2006, or rather, Iran has never attacked Israel.

      Get Real.

    223. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Valdrax · · Score: 1

      Surely then the defense is to ensure your ships cook is Steven Seagal?

      In his current shape, that's only a good defense against one's appetite.

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    224. Re:Taking out capital ships? by jafac · · Score: 1

      Damn, they must have tripped over their own balls!

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      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    225. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know, I had a strong impression the aggressor was readying for invasion, and the 'weaker' nation responded preemptively by devastating their massing force. But what the hell, that's CGI for you.

    226. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Ken+McE · · Score: 1

      The system operators will be fully uniformed, as per the Geneva Conventions. The weapon system will be fully camouflaged, as per universal custom.

    227. Re:Taking out capital ships? by dwillden · · Score: 1

      The bullets were never intended to fragment, such round are prohibited, that's why we use jacketed slugs.

      Second The Military has moved to almost exclusively tungsten tipped penetrator rounds. I haven't seen a non-green tip (other than tracers) in several years now. They poke holes in bodies just fine, problem is that it tends to do just that, and not tumble which transfers the force to the body resulting in knock downs, instead it just pokes straight through leaving the wounded enemy still upright and able to fight for a few seconds longer.

      Third with proper shot selection, the M4 is just as accurate as the M-16, some would say even more so as it's stock length can be adjusted to the user, rather than a one size fits all approach found with the 16. Me I have long arms and like the stock fully extended, but many shorter people really appreciate the better sight picture they can get with a shorter stock. This leads to increased accuracy. I've seen M-4 shooters out shoot 16 shooters at professional level competitions.

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    228. Re:Taking out capital ships? by dwillden · · Score: 1

      The Iowa Class Battleships were the last ships in our inventory armored sufficiently to survive a missile battle. Today's ships carry impressive armaments but are not really designed to take hits. Definitely not like the old battlewagons were. They were designed to slug it out with rounds weighing as much as 2700 lbs.

      Today's ships rely on their defenses to keep from being hit by incoming rounds. Not on armor capable of shrugging off such hits.

      --
      I'm too lazy to compose a creative sig.
    229. Re:Taking out capital ships? by mjwx · · Score: 1

      They are a lot harder to sink than you might imagine. It's not that easy to sink a ship that displaces 100,000 tons, short of nuclear weapons.

      Not as hard as you would imagine. A good shot below the waterline would do it (or fuel tanks or munitions stores).

      The hard part is getting the weapon there un-harassed. First you have to get in range undetected. launch the weapons (preferably undetected) and hope that it is not intercepted and successfully strikes the target. With modern guidance jammers and countermeasures (flares/phalanx) the last bit is the most difficult part.

      But with drones and VTOL aircraft becoming common the fleet carrier is going the way of the battleship. Oversized and inefficient compared to assault carriers which most Navies are now using.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    230. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Barny · · Score: 1

      Oh yes, those ships can hold over 15000 TEU, but have no way to shuffle them around once their loaded, I calculated only for the top row (given that some of the rows wouldn't be stacked fully), this gives you an "alpha strike" ship, a smaller cargo ship with its own crane could sustain more missiles over time but would need to stager the launch by throwing spent containers overboard and exposing fresh ones to the air :)

      --
      ...
      /me sighs
    231. Re:Taking out capital ships? by mjwx · · Score: 1

      Lets see, the biggest ships, emma maersk, can have (if they load a little light) 506 40' containers with open top, these suckers look like the longer 80' type tho, and would likely need some extra room for the hinge system on the end.... lets say 126 launch containers with 4 cruise missiles each. I want to see the carrier battle group that can stop that many incoming missiles :)

      Lets see,
      Bulk carrier costs $145,000,000 US dollars (construction cost of Emma Maersk).
      Each missile costs, lets assume they are cheap at only 50,000 USD each (each Javelin round costs US 2 Million) multiplied by 504 = 25,200,000.
      Just in materials alone it will cost you 170 billion dollars.

      But you have that kind of cash, simply not being noticed by anyone spending it all on weapons is going to be a bit of a hassle. As another poster pointed out, Stinger and other MANPADs are far more of a threat but well established and supported terrorist organisations like Hamas and Hezbolla are still using WWII katyusha rockets. Getting something like a BM21 Grad is a stretch for them, so you're not really threatened by this, modern radar is more then capable of picking up the launch and trajectory of these missiles and counter measures are quite effective.

      At 170 Billion USD, you can afford some real military hardware, late model MIG and Sukhoi fighters equipped with Exocet or other anti ship missiles will be more effective, but many armies struggle to field these.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    232. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Barny · · Score: 1

      Your out by a factor of 1000 ;)

      --
      ...
      /me sighs
    233. Re:Taking out capital ships? by dougisfunny · · Score: 1

      Personally, I wouldn't put the system on my own ships. I'd put them on my target's ships. That way if they want to blow up the source, they're destroying their own resources.

      --
      This is not the funny you're looking for.
    234. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do you mention pushing a button in *Tehran*?

      Do you really want us to believe that Tehran will start a WMD pissing contest with a country that has Trident SSBN's?

      If America loses a capital ship (or mid-sized city) to a nuke, it will be the false flag work of Israel. Everybody and his dog knows that.

    235. Re:Taking out capital ships? by modecx · · Score: 1

      The bullets were never intended to fragment, such round are prohibited, that's why we use jacketed slugs.

      I don't know your level of experience in the matter--however, not to be blunt... You're wrong, on a few counts.

      The reason .223 / 5.56 NATO was ever an attractive solution was fragmentation. Without it, this ammo couldn't be satisfactory under any circumstance. I've read analysis after analysis, written by people with letters after their names, a few of whom were graduates of a war college. They all agree, 100%.

      As to this fragmenting feature being prohibited, this is also a myth. The relevant section of the Hauge convention: "The Contracting Parties agree to abstain from the use of bullets which expand or flatten easily in the human body, such as bullets with a hard envelope which does not entirely cover the core, or is pierced with incisions." We're not really a party to it, but we stupidly go along with it anyway, for NATO commonality purposes.

      evidence: Even for 7.62mm OTM (open tip match) bullets, which go one step further, and actually do have an opening in the tip of the jacket, was approved by the Army JAG for combat use.

      Your green tip ammo, however, fits the above description to a T, but the fact is: at short range and high velocity, it will often yaw (tumble) and proceed to fragment in soft tissue, creating a much larger wound than otherwise possible for the caliber. I've shot pigs with M193 (55gr copper tip), and the destruction can be pretty surprising, and the bits of bullet can be tough to track down. Without fragmentation as a primary wounding mechanism, 5.56 NATO would be next to useless... The Russian version of this design philosophy (5.45x39) even has a void at the tip which helps the bullet to yaw, making it fragment more readily.

      Thirdly, the penetrator in your issued green tip ammo (M855) is steel, not tungsten. If you don't believe me, take a magnet to it. Every other NATO member calls it SS109, and yeah it's everywhere. It was designed for future wars (with real armies), where the brass assumed the enemy would be wearing armor. The problem is, it sacrifices a lot of fragmenting ability to be an armor penetrator.

      That's the reason for Mk 262, 77gr OTM ammo. Even though it actually shoots a bit slower, it extends the fragmentation envelope considerably, especially compared to M855 from M4 length rifles. It really should be in greater circulation. It's a better bullet for the war we're in, and it's crazy accurate. I understand the special forces guys love it.

      Third with proper shot selection, the M4 is just as accurate as the M-16, some would say even more so as it's stock length can be adjusted to the user

      You won't find me argue against this point. You're right. I shoot long distance matches, and barrel length alone really doesn't have much to do with accuracy. Actually, short barrels are intrinsically stiffer, and can actually have better physical repeatability, all else being the same. If a rifleman can anticipate the greater bullet drop caused by reduced velocity, he should shoot just as well.

      --
      Constitutional rights may be respected, repealed, or modified; but they must never be ignored.
    236. Re:Taking out capital ships? by stub667 · · Score: 1

      Fred Reed was discussing this the other day on http://www.fredoneverything.net/DeadCarriers.shtml - he lists four cheap methods to take out modern carriers and argues that the US navy is pretty much obsolete in the modern world.

    237. Re:Taking out capital ships? by mjwx · · Score: 1

      Trillions then?

      Simple point is, technology like this exists already. 1 no one is willing to sell to nobodies, you don't get it unless you can be trusted. 2. Many standing armies with a nations economy supporting them cannot afford to purchase and operate such equipment. How many nations do you think operate cruise missiles (50, maybe 60) let alone can produce them locally.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    238. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

      March 23 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. Navy, after nearly six years of warnings from Pentagon testers, still lacks a plan for defending aircraft carriers against a supersonic Russian-built missile, according to current and former officials and Defense Department documents.

      The missile, known in the West as the ``Sizzler,'' has been deployed by China and may be purchased by Iran.

      ``This is a carrier-destroying weapon,'' said Orville Hanson, who evaluated weapons systems for 38 years with the Navy. ``That's its purpose.''

      http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601070&sid=a5LkaU0wj714&refer=home
      The missile cruises at 5 m above the sea, can go quickly from subsonic to supersonic and can perform various evasive maneuvers. When you think about it, it is quite easier to design a missile system than an anti-missile one. I am not leaving in an alternate universe : I read the Russian comments on laser-based antimissiles and on patriot anti-missiles and it is very clear that one of the selling points of the latest Russian missiles is that they can bypass these systems. One of the reasons why the starwars project was deemed useless was the ability by Russians to design a missile that would go to ballistic mode (hence, stop engines) at the very beginning of their cruises, making them quite harder to detonate through lasers (lasers usually detonate the propelling fuel, the warhead is too protected to reach)

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    239. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Xest · · Score: 1

      "You realize that's a little hard to enforce when a country is having the shit bombed out of it, right?"

      Er, no?

      Why did even the media with a historic anti-Israeli bias even state this if it wasn't the case? They wanted to report on the situation freely.

      It's easy to control the media in a war zone because otherwise the media risks getting shot- the media will pretty much always stick with soldiers of whatever side they're reporting on for this reason- to ensure they don't get treated as combatants or spies when they're reporting right from the middle of what would otherwise be enemy territory.

      When journalists have the choice of trying to go it alone but likely getting shot by a side that would gladly do so if it risked them reporting an inconvenient truth, or sticking with soldiers from that side who can take them through safe routes, who know where likely airstrike targets are (i.e. active missile launchers) but limits their reporting, they're going to take that option because being able to report something is better than getting shot.

      In contrast, whilst the Israelis certainly kept some things quiet (e.g. the location of their troops) it was quite clear even from the generally anti-Israeli media that the Israelis gave them a lot more freedom to report.

      Anti-Israeli sentiment is fair enough, and more warranted than ever nowadays with Israel's current government and continued settlement building, but anti-Israeli sentiment for the sake of it, and where it's simply not valid because issues of access were mentioned by unbiased media, from reporters on the ground, is just plain outright retarded ignorance and malice. If you're going to hate Israel fair enough, I'd be inclined to join you with it's current government, but I'm not going to try and pretend that Hezbollah didn't strongly control the media in 2006 whilst Israel did, because that'd be just wrong.

      As an illustration of my point, in Israel's 2008-2009 incursion into Gaza, Israel strongly controlled the media's access and made sure the media kept to their units, why? precisely because it was widely acknowledged that allowing the press freedom in the 2006 war caused a lot more harm to them in terms of propaganda than Hezbollah's strong control of the media caused to Hezbollah. So feel free to criticise Israeli control of the media in the 2008-2009 Gaza incursion- because it's exactly the same kind of control and manipulation Hezbollah used in 2006, the manipulation you're suggesting never even existed.

      Israeli hate without understanding or merit is stupid, at least get a clue about the situation and hate them for what they deserve to be hated for before mouthing off, hate them for the things they do do wrong. Don't hate them when they do allow an open press though as they did in 2006, why? Because it's exactly what Hezbollah was gunning for- and congratulations, you're one of the silly fools who fell for it and convinced Israel to go down that same route in 2008-2009. You're part of the damned problem.

      Hate them for illegal settlement building, hate them for the times they do intenationally kill civilians, hate them for their oppression of minority groups in their own country, hate them for not properly investigating or simply covering up incidents that were unacceptable, hate them for not being part of the NPT and their covert nuclear weapons program. Hate them for all these things and more, just don't hate them because they allowed an open press and the other guys didn't, don't hate them because Hamas tells you Israel just bombed a civilian building and that there were no militants in it, because all that does is encourage a closed press, and encourages Hamas to hide militants in civilian buildings and areas putting civilians at risk even more.

    240. Re:Taking out capital ships? by professionalfurryele · · Score: 1

      I'm assuming serious civilian casualties are something people want to avoid more than an occupation that is almost certainly imminent anyway by a relatively benign power. Everything you have said is both true, and assumes winning the war rather than doing what is in the best interest of the invaded country as a whole is the priority.

      That said I feel I should point out that blatant use of civilians and civilian infrastructure is used for propaganda purposes by both sides and goes some way to legitimising the removal of the existing civil authority in a nation or region.

      Your other objections to this weapons system are also well thought out, especially the one about launching a first strike against the US being a really bad idea. This is clearly a preemptive weapon. It seems that many parts of the world who oppose the US believe a little too much of their own propaganda. The US military has been on a tight leash for a long time now. It could have 'won' any of the wars it has been involved in if tolerance for casualties (both American and enemy civilian) were high enough.

      All I see using this weapon as it is intended doing is getting a larger portion of ones own population and infrastructure blown up.

    241. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Firehawk · · Score: 1

      The thing is, if you use a nuclear warhead, the cruise missile does not have to impact the aircraft carrier to sink it. Detonation within 100m may be sufficient and will probably take out a large part of the carrier group too.

    242. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Firehawk · · Score: 1

      Well, if not a terrorist group, a rogue nation could buy several container ships, load them with 126 of these systems on each ship and drive each ship within 300km of a carrier group. Fire simultaneously from all ships and take out all carriers at the same time.

      I'll bet it costs a whole lot less to buy and arm a ship with 126 of these systems than to build a whole aircraft carrier and the aircraft it carries.

      Now that's asymmetric warfare.

    243. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      A good shot below the waterline would do it

      No it wouldn't. Aircraft Carriers are warships and designed with compartmentalization to isolate damage and flooding. All things being equal, a single hit below the waterline would probably not be enough to sink a CVN.

      (or fuel tanks or munitions stores)

      That's possible, though munitions are stored deep within the ship and Aircraft Carriers have enough firefighting capacity to rival a small city. Understand that I'm not saying it's impossible to sink one -- only that it's a lot harder than the armchair admirals seem to think.

      The hard part is getting the weapon there un-harassed. First you have to get in range undetected. launch the weapons (preferably undetected) and hope that it is not intercepted and successfully strikes the target.

      You left out the first part: finding the carrier. The most important part of naval warfare is finding your enemy before he finds you. This is easier said than done, even with modern technology such as satellites and radar. Satellites are limited by orbital mechanics and can be jammed or decoyed. Radar has to have enough power to hit the target and return to it's transmitter and will thus reveal your location long before it detects the enemy.

      With modern guidance jammers and countermeasures (flares/phalanx) the last bit is the most difficult part.

      Phalanx actually isn't that modern. It's being slowly replaced by the rolling airframe missile. Those are only point defenses too. You still need to get your weapons past the fighters from the carrier and the dozens of SAMs carried by the Aegis escorts.

      But with drones and VTOL aircraft becoming common the fleet carrier is going the way of the battleship

      Says who? The British and French are both building a new class of fleet carriers. The Brits in particular have a lot of experience with VTOL aircraft and even fought a war with them. They have apparently decided that they need the capability offered by a fleet carrier. Look at the last war fought from Aircraft Carriers -- if the British had a real fleet carrier with the ability to operate AWACS aircraft the Argentine Air Force would never have gotten close enough to use the Exocets that caused the Royal Navy so much grief.

      Oversized and inefficient compared to assault carriers which most Navies are now using.

      Efficiency includes economy of scale. If you want the capability to operate 60-100 aircraft it's going to be cheaper to build a fleet carrier than to build several smaller carriers. Most Navies don't use them because they are hugely expensive, not because they think they are going the way of the battleship.

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    244. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      What do you suppose the American response to the use of nuclear weapons and the loss of thousands of sailors would be?

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    245. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

      When was the last time America fought openly an army equipped with state-of-the-art Russian equipment ?

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    246. Re:Taking out capital ships? by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 1

      it is very clear that one of the selling points of the latest Russian missiles is that they can bypass these systems

      No, it is very clear that one of the selling points is that they *claim* to bypass those systems. *Can* is definitely not part of the picture. They have *never* been tested in the real world.

      The US claims not. These claims too have *never* been tested in the real world.

      Marketing vs marketing with no real world experience to back up either one. At best, you could put a bit more faith in the US marketing since its tests are slightly more open to the world than the Russians', but that's pushing it to the limit. Why do you believe one over the other? Do you believe every piece of marketing drivel you see?

    247. Re:Taking out capital ships? by dotancohen · · Score: 1

      I know, it is a complicated issue. But the point to remember is that Liberia takes on a responsibility when it allows ships to fly her flag. It is the head of the responsibility chain, to be sure.

      > Its like arguing that since a california plate car ran you
      > over, you gotta sue the Californian DMV.

      Well, actually, I would approach the Californian DMV requesting them investigate the issue provided that I had the plate number. However, the difference here is that the perpetrator is not representing California, in contrast to flags of convenience which _are_ considered representation.

      --
      It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
    248. Re:Taking out capital ships? by mjwx · · Score: 1

      No it wouldn't. Aircraft Carriers are warships and designed with compartmentalization to isolate damage and flooding. All things being equal, a single hit below the waterline would probably not be enough to sink a CVN.

      As did the titanic. Even with compartmentalisation you severely change the buoyancy of the vessel to make the carriers weight work against it. A large enough it would put enough stress on the keel of the ship, the last thing a ship needs is a massive redistribution of weight below the water line. This is under good sea conditions.

      You left out the first part: finding the carrier. The most important part of naval warfare is finding your enemy before he finds you. This is easier said than done, even with modern technology such as satellites and radar.

      Which was my point about being undetected. If you start actively scanning you'll light up light up like a Christmas tree. Gaining a passive lock is quite difficult under the best of conditions.

      Says who? The British and French are both building a new class of fleet carriers. The Brits in particular have a lot of experience with VTOL aircraft and even fought a war with them

      The British are building SVTOL carriers, similar to their current Invincible class, you are of course referring to the forthcoming Queen-Elizabeth class. These are a lot smaller then current Nimitz class fleet carriers (QE class - 65,000 tonnes, Nimitz - 100,000 tonnes). France and the US are the only ones actually building fleet carriers and the French one is significantly smaller then the Gerald R Ford class (75,000 tonnes vs 100,000 tonnes). Most nations are looking at deploying S/VTOL carriers, Australia already has three under way (Canberra Class). As drone and VTOL tech increases it becomes more efficient to field smaller carriers with fewer crew, better defences and greater speed. Drones (UCAV's) will do for the carrier what the missile did for the battleship. In the end only the US fielded battleships (Iowa class) and they were only used as oversized missile cruisers (as in they did the exact same job as missile cruisers of the time). My prediction is the submarine carrier will make a comeback as a drone carrier as they don't need to be larger then existing US/Russian boomers. Plus with drones, recovery can become an optional extra.

      Efficiency includes economy of scale. If you want the capability to operate 60-100 aircraft it's going to be cheaper to build a fleet carrier than to build several smaller carriers

      Efficiency included economy of scale. If you want the capacity to operate 16 or 18 heavy guns it's going to be cheaper to built a battleship then several smaller cruisers.

      We've heard this one before. Compared to the efficiency of an F35 equipped carrier, an FA18 equipped carrier is enormously expensive whilst providing no significant advantages. Once UCAV technology improves these will be even cheaper and provide the same impact.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    249. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The USS Cole was in port though, so that wasn't much of an attack other than discovering the security was weak and then shooting a fish in a barrel. More of an intelligence failure than something which would be a direct threat to a ship that's underway.

      Still I wouldn't put it past Russia or China to come up with a cruise-missile-torpedo. (Anybody else that could do it would likely be a U.S. ally or not having the need for it.) Such a weapon would fly low enough to be difficult to target with SAM defences, but deploying a chute and becoming an underwater threat before entering effective CIWS range. Yet considering how big a torpedo itself has to be, this would seriously limit the range of the cruise missile half of the package.

      The other threat is nuclear cruise missiles where you have to get it in the ballpark rather than a direct hit.

      Either way though, hitting a U.S. capital ship is an invitation for some serious retaliation. (From what I remember, they're considered a piece of portable U.S. Territory.) Something you wouldn't do unless you don't care about the consequences.

      And speaking of "shipping container" weapons, doesn't anyone remember the NLOS-LS? So Russia isn't completely alone in developing the concept. But supposedly the project was killed. (I wouldn't be too surprised if it's still going on black budget though.)

    250. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      As did the titanic.

      Using a design that was bad even by the standards of the day. Not really a valid comparison.

      A large enough it would put enough stress on the keel of the ship

      A large enough hit will sink anything. I've only maintained that they are harder to kill than most people think, not that they are impossible to kill. Mission kills (can't operate aircraft) are more likely in any event.

      The British are building SVTOL carriers, similar to their current Invincible class, you are of course referring to the forthcoming Queen-Elizabeth class. These are a lot smaller then current Nimitz class fleet carriers (QE class - 65,000 tonnes, Nimitz - 100,000 tonnes)

      Regardless, they are much more capable ships than their predecessors. The British have the most recent experience with sea-air battles and opted to build something closer to what the US Navy fields rather than the glorified ASW carriers they used to have.

      France and the US are the only ones actually building fleet carriers and the French one is significantly smaller then the Gerald R Ford class (75,000 tonnes vs 100,000 tonnes).

      The French don't have the same global commitments that the United States does, do they?

      In the end only the US fielded battleships (Iowa class) and they were only used as oversized missile cruisers (as in they did the exact same job as missile cruisers of the time).

      They were also used as artillery platforms. They could deliver explosives on target cheaper than any other platform we had, including aircraft. Besides, in the end, the US was the only country that retained much of a Navy. The British gave up their power projection capability and nearly got beaten by a third world country. The Russians had a sizable Navy but built it with a different goal (sea denial) in mind than Western Powers (sea control). The French have always maintained some blue water capability, though what they do with it is beyond me. My only memory of a French Aircraft Carrier was the one that played red shirt in a Tom Clancy novel ;)

      My prediction is the submarine carrier will make a comeback as a drone carrier as they don't need to be larger then existing US/Russian boomers. Plus with drones, recovery can become an optional extra.

      Interesting idea, though a submarine with drones would be useless in the sea control mission. It might make an interesting strike platform but we already have submarine launched single use drones for that. They are called cruise missiles or (god help us) SLBMs.

      Compared to the efficiency of an F35 equipped carrier, an FA18 equipped carrier is enormously expensive whilst providing no significant advantages.

      Let's talk about that when the F-35 has been in squadron service for a few years and we know how well it works. I hope the mission availability rate is better than the other 5th generation fighters that have entered service....

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    251. Re:Taking out capital ships? by Kattspya · · Score: 1

      Oh no, terrorists shooting at warships. That would be horrible, so horrible you can't even call them terrorists any more.

    252. Re:Taking out capital ships? by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      That's the deal the geneva conventions give you. You get to be neutral, as a civilian. You don't have to, but if you're not neutral, you've given up any and all protection.

      But there are, of course, conditions :

      Any neutral party has to fight any action by BOTH warring parties (and if this is not possible, they are supposed to immediately evacuate ANY location used by either side, in return, those sides are supposed to give the civilians time to evacuate. Anyone who remains behind, willingly or not, is fair game). Those parties, in return, promise not to attack the neutral civilians. Of course, if the enemy is firing from within your building, the other party is perfectly at liberty to return fire, no matter how many civilians are hit.

      And let's not kid ourselves here, the very large majority of "civilians" in southern lebanon are not neutral civilians, but combatants in disguise.

      Here's how the geneva convention warfare is supposed to work (also known as "canon warfare"). 2 parties seriously disagree about something, and decide to fight it out.

      At this point, both parties dispatch a messenger to the other party, handing over a direct and very clear document declaring war (as Israel had delivered to the Lebanese parliament, where Hezbollah has loads of representatives. Hezbollah, of course, violated the agreement and attacked without warning).

      Then a line is drawn near the border. Civilians are informed and given ample time to evacuate the area (and any who fail to evacuate for any reason become fair game). The two parties send in armies to those locations and fight it out.

      Of course, you'd be entirely correct that if Hezbollah or Iran did this, they'd be blown up before you can say "islam is a lie". Which is, of course, how the war should have gone in the first place.

      After defeat, the losing party is supposed to accept orders from the winning party. Including the order to totally disarm, and let the winning party install any force it wants to.

      Again, both parties send a declaration to eachother that's unambiguous (a cease-fire).

      That's Geneva convention warfare. If this scheme is violated there are consequences, according to the conventions. Specifically if both sides don't fight in the open, all protections for the civilians on their side are forfeited.

      So yes, blowing up an apartment building because there are enemy fighters inside is perfectly allowed, even if there are also children inside.

      The only people with a choice in the matter are Hezbollah. If they fight in the open, in an empty space, no civilians will be hurt. If Hezbollah chooses to fight like a coward in the night, they, and their families and friends, and all civilians in the area, are fair game.

      And, btw, Israel DID keep to the Geneva convention's rules in the war. Tell me, did Hezbollah do all that's possible to avoid hitting Israeli civilians ?

      As I said, I wonder why it's always Jews that have to endure getting shot at. Why does every "peace-lover" cheer for the party shooting at the weak ? Unless, of course, you're a lowly coward.

  3. The world is being run by a pack of baboons by Joce640k · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Is this a response to yesterday's story about the USA's dick-waving about building new missiles that can reach anywhere on Earth...?

    --
    No sig today...
    1. Re:The world is being run by a pack of baboons by mxh83 · · Score: 1

      yep

    2. Re:The world is being run by a pack of baboons by dragisha · · Score: 1

      Exactly my thought.... Arms race is, well, race... And nobody won it to date.

      Let's hope nobody will.

      --
      http://opencm3.net, http://www.nongnu.org/gm2/
    3. Re:The world is being run by a pack of baboons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is this a response to yesterday's story about the USA's dick-waving about building new missiles that can reach anywhere on Earth...?

      No, it is the weekly story to keep the fear of the Soviets alive, so the people who have never been outside the US can stick to their monochromatic world view.

      Every country was brought up with a different view of history. To understand the Russians and their actions, may I suggest listening to a (longer) speech or interview of e.g. Putin. They are neither daemons nor saints (but hey, neither are we).

    4. Re:The world is being run by a pack of baboons by sco08y · · Score: 1

      Yes, last night a guy from the company was reading /. and his boss got angry and drew up plans to put cruise missiles in conexs.

  4. Makes total sense for certain uses by wvmarle · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Actually when I read this earlier in today's news paper I thought it makes total sense from a military/strategic point of view. And I was actually wondering why no-one else had thought of this before. Or maybe they are just not advertising it openly.

    When it comes to transportation and handling of the equipment, a shipping container is great as it is standardised and fits easily on vessels, trains, trucks, and can be handled with standard lifting equipment.

    The down side of course is the disappearance of the civil/military divide, which of course has already happened in many conflicts.

    1. Re:Makes total sense for certain uses by AndGodSed · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well if you take into account that part of winning a war is limiting your adversaries access to resources this makes perfect sense. If you go to war with the US you are pretty sure that they will try and dominate the skies, and with their numerical advantage in most conflicts this will soon be the case.

      Now you are limited to shipping, and if you can arm your merchants you have a way of potentially protecting your lifelines. In WWII this was what kept Britain alive, being able to protect their merchants against attacks by Germany.

    2. Re:Makes total sense for certain uses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      mh. there are a lot of disadvantages to in deploying this kind of masquerade stuff

      first and foremost, the truck and train example will rely on your roads and rails to be in working condition, civil vehicles are not suitable for heavy off road like military launchers truck. your infrastructure will be hit long before any serious military engagement with tanks and stuff.

      second, the little chance you had of keeping naval trading for food and medical supply alive will be lost due of enemy targeting now both your militar and civil ships, just to be sure.

      third, having them deployed on non military grade equipement will leave you very exposed to electronic warfare. to rely on an external satellite guidance system would have be a good idea in the '70, but now almost every country have / can purchase the ability of shot down satellites and to jam satellite communications

      We're still preparing our military with the conception of WWII style warfare. This won't work, as it didn't worked preparing to WWII assuming WWI like engagements (the Maginot line for example)

    3. Re:Makes total sense for certain uses by vikingpower · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Exactly. Churchill, after the war, once admitted that the only thing that could have had the Germans winning the war would have been more investments in submarines, thus destroying more of the allied fleets. He ( Churchill ) said that is was the only possibility that had kept him out of his sleep during the war.

      --
      Religous speak to God. Insane are spoken to by God. When all shut up, one can finally hear Shostakovich in peace
    4. Re:Makes total sense for certain uses by vikingpower · · Score: 1

      You are wrong. Sweden and Switzerland use a similar concepts with their strategic reserve of fighters and bombers, concealing them in overgrown bunkers. The planes take off from... ordinary asphalted roads.

      --
      Religous speak to God. Insane are spoken to by God. When all shut up, one can finally hear Shostakovich in peace
    5. Re:Makes total sense for certain uses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      both of which saw a lot of engagement in world war II, indeed proving that their strategy do work...

      only not.

    6. Re:Makes total sense for certain uses by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Furthermore you're assuming countries like Iran would even be interested in protecting their civilian population in the first place (they certainly displayed NO concern whatsoever for Lebanese lives in 2006, using them as human shields).

      Furthermore if Iran started a war because their conventional resources are running out, they could make the case that the only way to protect their civilian population is to win the war (this is why some people say Iran is at least as likely to attack Saudi Arabia as it is to attack Israel). In most wars, if the attacking party would have done nothing, that would have had results as bad as losing the war they started (historically most wars were started to conquer resources that were economically necessary).

      And then there's the "issue" that this is a war crime. Camouflaging military equipment as civilian. But wait, how many Iranians are in jail for doing just that in 2006 ? How many muslims are in jail for that ? Oh wait ... none. The more liberal media don't even mind the use of human shields anymore.

      Of course, the only way to adapt to that attitude is to start firing on civilians as a matter of policy.

    7. Re:Makes total sense for certain uses by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      a shipping container is great as it is standardised and fits easily on vessels, trains, trucks, and can be handled with standard lifting equipment.

      Hide the nuke inside a vending machine, then install the machine at the Superbowl venue.

      Nah. That's too silly even for Hollywood.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    8. Re:Makes total sense for certain uses by M8e · · Score: 1

      The only winning move is not to play.
      Sweden won.

    9. Re:Makes total sense for certain uses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That had caused him to lose some sleep. That and the Alcohol induced hangovers.

    10. Re:Makes total sense for certain uses by Shin-LaC · · Score: 1

      The down side of course is the disappearance of the civil/military divide, which of course has already happened in many conflicts.

      Which is why deploying this on merchant vessels is probably a violation of international law, and amounts essentially to terrorism or war crimes.

    11. Re:Makes total sense for certain uses by wvmarle · · Score: 1

      That is not something a state that wishes to defend itself against a much bigger and more powerful foe (e.g. Iran or N. Korea vs the US) will care about much.

      After all, in war, priority 1 is to survive and (hopefully) defeat the opponent.

    12. Re:Makes total sense for certain uses by muckracer · · Score: 1

      > Churchill, after the war, once admitted that the only thing that could have had the Germans winning the war would have been more investments in submarines, thus destroying more of the allied fleets.

      Well that and certainly taking the capabilities of RADAR a lot more serious, as in developing/using their own as well as developing counter-measures against the Allies'. It got to the point where the U-Boats stuck out as much as a snorkel or scope and got hit from the air or destroyers. That's what reduced the U-Boat fleet rather quickly, turning them from successful Wolf Packs to basically guaranteed iron graves for 3 out of 4 sailors.

    13. Re:Makes total sense for certain uses by khakipuce · · Score: 1

      People seem to love to dream up ever more convoluted ways for terrorists to attack. The reality is that the simpler the approach, the more likely the success. We keep being told about these bogie men with missiles and nuclear material, what we see in reality is a guy with an ass full of TNT or a mobile phone triggered bomb.

      When you have people willing to die for the cause why go for anything more? I say it's vapourware and the next N terrorist attacks will be suicide bombings and hijackings. They have got the airports disrupted to a ridiculous degree, why give up on hat now?

      --
      Art is the mathematics of emotion
    14. Re:Makes total sense for certain uses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and sell resources to both sides

    15. Re:Makes total sense for certain uses by wvmarle · · Score: 1

      A commercial shipping container is allowed to hold about 28 ton of cargo. The container itself weighs about 4 ton. That's 32 ton. No problem for a normal container trailer. I can imagine that four cruise missiles can stay within that weight.

      Furthermore railroads may be more vulnerable than roads, other than the bridges they still need very well aimed bombs to really destroy. Roads are easily repaired, a couple hours of work and you can pass again. Not at 120 km/hr maybe but that's not needed.

    16. Re:Makes total sense for certain uses by cbreak · · Score: 1

      I wonder how this would do in the fight against Piracy. It'd probably escalate the situation near the coast of somalia quite a bit though.

    17. Re:Makes total sense for certain uses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      when I read this earlier in today's news paper

      They still print those?

    18. Re:Makes total sense for certain uses by mjwalshe · · Score: 1

      the UK used containers ships as impovised escort cariers during the falklands and teher have been susgestions that having modular containers with radar, PD and other milatery bits of kit could be kept in stock to allow the conversion of civilian ships in time of need.

  5. Nice panic attack by houghi · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Mentioning terrorists, Iran and Venezuela. Dude, they missed mentioning children that could buy it over the Internet.

    From a pure technical geek point of view, this is a great idea. I am sure that many US weapon makers now will start doing the same thing. Perhaps with a different marketing where they say it is a weapon that can be easily transported to any area where it is needed without the need of specialized transport vehicles, thus reducing the price.

    --
    Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    1. Re:Nice panic attack by daem0n1x · · Score: 1

      Mentioning terrorists, Iran and Venezuela. Dude, they missed mentioning children that could buy it over the Internet.

      People have to be afraid of some baddies, even fictitious ones, to forget about the economy. It has worked since the dawn of times, why change now? When the US considers a small and poor country like Cuba to be such a huge threat, what would you expect?

    2. Re:Nice panic attack by alanw · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I am sure that many US weapon makers now will start doing the same thing.

      Coincidentally, this comes on the same day that it is reported that the US Army is cancelling its mini cruise missile in a box project:

      http://www.theregister.co.uk/2010/04/27/nlos_ls_chopped/

    3. Re:Nice panic attack by Daisys_Uncle · · Score: 1

      "Now available for Home Defense."

    4. Re:Nice panic attack by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      Actually during 99.99% of history that fear was more than just a little justified. Just because you live in both a geographical area and time where that isn't true anymore doesn't make telling people about "baddies" a conspiracy, it merely makes you a narrow-minded egoist.

    5. Re:Nice panic attack by wvmarle · · Score: 1

      From seeing them on TV, it seems that a Patriot missile battery is not that big. Shouldn't be too hard to adopt to such a packing.

    6. Re:Nice panic attack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      it merely makes you a narrow-minded egoist.

      Or French.

    7. Re:Nice panic attack by buback · · Score: 1

      I bet tomorrow he'll post a story about cruise missiles that can be disguised as jet engines and attached to commercial airplanes.

      Just think of what Iran, North Korea, or terrorists could do if the got their hands on one of those!

    8. Re:Nice panic attack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And who do you think is making that transport equipment. Maybe the same company making the missile?

    9. Re:Nice panic attack by daem0n1x · · Score: 1

      makes you a narrow-minded egoist.

      What?

  6. Simple resolution by allcoolnameswheretak · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There is a simple resolution to this new weapon: countries known to be in the market for it will have their civilian merchant fleet classified as legitimate military targets.

    1. Re:Simple resolution by dnix · · Score: 1

      You are right, capitalism in weapon production impose strong market regulation! Anyway, when you read on NYT, why are only Russian's weapons called "deadly"? Is the new missiles that can reach anywhere on Earth built in US a "great achievement"?

    2. Re:Simple resolution by Jerrei · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Blowing up innocent people, that'll teach those damn terrorists!

    3. Re:Simple resolution by Pvt_Ryan · · Score: 1

      Because the US missile just delievers a small flag that has the word "BANG" written in large colourful letters.

    4. Re:Simple resolution by confused+one · · Score: 1

      Because there's a clear journalistic bias. A bias that sells papers.

      Reality, of course, is American weapons are quite good at very deadly.

    5. Re:Simple resolution by YeeHaW_Jelte · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yeah, that's about as reasonable as classifying every inhabitant of a country that disguises soldiers as civilians as legitimate military targets.

      Way to go, Rambo! Keep shooting those goodwill bullets!

      Oh, and by the way, if you're an American ... even your own generals now realize that half of winning the war is in winning the trust of people, not shooting them...

      --

      ---
      "The chances of a demonic possession spreading are remote -- relax."
    6. Re:Simple resolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How will that help when the missile is deployed on a Panama flagged freighter owned by a Singaporean holding company, leased to another company on the Cayman Islands? National merchant fleets are a thing of the past.

    7. Re:Simple resolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what stops say iraq ships sailing under say french flag?

    8. Re:Simple resolution by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      The real question is "up to what point do we really have a choice" ? There is a breaking point.

      E.g. WWII was considered by the united states sufficient reason to suspend civil liberties, and treat the Japanese on American soil as enemies. I doubt anyone seriously disagreed with that tactic back then.

    9. Re:Simple resolution by 1s44c · · Score: 1

      There is a simple resolution to this new weapon: countries known to be in the market for it will have their civilian merchant fleet classified as legitimate military targets.

      The American way used to be 'don't tread on me'.

      It became 'blow the hell out of everything'.

    10. Re:Simple resolution by 1s44c · · Score: 1

      The real question is "up to what point do we really have a choice" ? There is a breaking point.

      E.g. WWII was considered by the united states sufficient reason to suspend civil liberties, and treat the Japanese on American soil as enemies. I doubt anyone seriously disagreed with that tactic back then.

      Maybe some Japanese descended Americans would have disagreed.

    11. Re:Simple resolution by 1s44c · · Score: 1

      what stops say iraq ships sailing under say french flag?

      There is an easy way to tell genuine french ships. They surrender instantly.

      Just kidding.

    12. Re:Simple resolution by Calinous · · Score: 1

      Iran is in the market for this. Should all their vessels be classified as legitimate military targets?

    13. Re:Simple resolution by Issarlk · · Score: 1

      Isn't that a bit like the jews in germany? Parked in camps because they were enemies of the fatherland. But no problem, it's only bad when the others do it.

    14. Re:Simple resolution by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

      Put yourself is the shoes of a Iraqi business man, who want to produce and sell goods. Are you going to shoot him down and control him like an animal, just because some idiot that in a remote way has some similarities, is a dick?

      This would be just like the TSA uses the same “logic”, to justify searching everyone of us.
      And just like TCPA shutting down everyone with a specific graphics card, when one was able to use it to crack DRM.
      The logic is, that because one of you could be a criminal, we will fuck up the lives of everyone of you.

      Can I assume you have a penis?
      Then I will now classify you as a rapist.

      Same logic.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
  7. viral? by mrthoughtful · · Score: 2, Interesting

    How sure is anyone that this isn't some viral for a computer game?
    The graphics are all cg - even the local russians say it's just a concept.
    The company doesn't even have press liaison.

    --
    This comment was written with the intention to opt out of advertising.
    1. Re:viral? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The sounds and the feeling on the video was like from Red Alert.

      Also it does not show any specifications of the weapon either, such as length, height, weight... Which one would think are interesting details even though one could measure it by eyes from the video "hey it fits to the back of truck", but I don't think I'd buy that weapon based on that video.

    2. Re:viral? by sciencewatcher · · Score: 1

      The Israeli intelligence community has stated it's viewpoint. http://www.debka.com/article/8742/ They don't want the Russians to sell this weapon on the market. Whatever your thoughts on the Israeli intelligence community, it is always good to read and understand their opinion. (And usually it's best to incorporate their opinion into your own, that is, if you enjoy your freedoms in the Western hemisphere.)

    3. Re:viral? by L4t3r4lu5 · · Score: 1

      I hope they got permission from Walt Disney to use the Pirates of the Caribbean soundtrack in their advertisement.

      Saying that, though, if the tech is real I don't think Walt Disney will complain much.

      --
      Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
    4. Re:viral? by Antiocheian · · Score: 1

      I don't think Walt Disney would force the issue

    5. Re:viral? by qwerty8ytrewq · · Score: 1

      I look forward to cruise missiles disguised as replica wooden pirate ships, or a real version of the satanic mickey mouse from Southpark wooping some ass. Maybe Disney made the vid, 'cause they are getting into the international arms business to protect their copyrights.

      --
      Waiting for the other shoe to...
    6. Re:viral? by tru3ntropy · · Score: 1

      Yea for sure; isnt that the theme for C&C Generals? seems very EAesque

      --
      In Google we trust.
    7. Re:viral? by stupid_is · · Score: 1

      [pedant]I assume you're referring to the "Born Free" snippet at the start of the Youtube clip. Shame it didn't appear in PotC, but was instead in Madagascar - by Dreamworks - so copyright is probably owned by Paramount although the origins are in 1966[/pedant].

      I agree that they probably didn't ask, though :-)

      --
      -- Intelligence is soluble in alcohol
    8. Re:viral? by Laurence0 · · Score: 1

      No, given that he said the PotC theme, I think he's referring to the PotC theme. Which plays about 4 minutes in (off the top of my head) as the missiles are launched and as they fly to their targets.

    9. Re:viral? by stupid_is · · Score: 1

      ah - my bad. Guess I didn't pay all that much attention to PotC

      --
      -- Intelligence is soluble in alcohol
    10. Re:viral? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The very last soundtrack is from Command & Conquer Generals, too.

    11. Re:viral? by thijsh · · Score: 1

      My gut instinct tells me Kane is behind this, or was it Yuri? Looks like a weapon used by a supervillain or terrorists anyway.

  8. Depends on the guidance system, I guess by Bearhouse · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Unsophisticated missiles are not THAT hard to get a hold of already, ranging from Palestinian homebrews to enhanced Scuds.
    But they don't have a great success rate, especially against military targets, and notably naval ones.
    Exocets, on the other hand, do have a good success rate, and can be launched from improvised platforms, as proven by the Argentines during the Falklands conflict.
    Whilst a major asset such as carrier is normally well-protected by a screen of other ships, it could be very vulnerable when in confined areas, such as the Straits of Hormuz...
    Would the Russian Government be happy to hand-out weapons that could just as easily be used against them? Maybe not.
    It's perhaps more likely that the Iranians will develop increasingly sophisticated weapons themselves. They're already quite well advanced...

    1. Re:Depends on the guidance system, I guess by mhajicek · · Score: 1

      Would the Russian Government be happy to hand-out weapons that could just as easily be used against them?

      Hey, the US does it all the time.

    2. Re:Depends on the guidance system, I guess by sznupi · · Score: 1

      Though Russia is bound to benefit if the global marine traffic would be paralysed - out of all the "big ones" they depend the least on it, and can serve as a transport route between China and EU.

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
  9. this is news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    the Soviets had mobile *ICBMS* for decades, namely the RT-2UTTH Topol M. No fancy container, but really, with an ICBM who gives a shit?

  10. I don't believe this is new by pantherace · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I seem to recall at least one proposal for the 'arsenal ships' aka ships with lots of missiles towed off the coast, to have been made from converting container ships, after someone looked at the costs and decided purpose built ships were too expensive, before the idea was killed. The idea became to be able to use commercial ships for relatively little cost.

    A few reasons it was killed (at least as any kind of surface ship):
    Put a WHOLE bunch of really expensive munitions on a slow target. With minimal defenses. Defending them requires purpose built navy ships. Meaning that the savings of proposing that, just evaporated.
    Even the inefficiencies of Aircraft carriers, are a lot less than using a cruise missile for each target.
    Modern naval ships don't have much in the way of armor, compounding the problem of defense.
    By the time you fit it with defense to protect the cargo, you might as well go ahead and build a more conventional warship (with extra VLS)

    There is one example where the concept more or less did happen though, in the refitted SSBNs to SSGNs, with lots of Tomahawk missiles. They don't suffer from having to have lots of defense of a surface target, and have advantages in stealth.

    1. Re:I don't believe this is new by stephenpeters · · Score: 1

      Why bother defending the launch ship? If you buy a container ship near the end of it's life and fill it with ISO containers with a couple of missile containers on top you can easily get close enough to a target without looking suspicious. Once you have fired all the missiles at a target it doesn't matter if someone sinks the expendable container ship. If you can afford to buy a modern missile system the cost of an old expendable container ship should not pose any real problems. You even get plausible deniability as a bonus.

  11. Anonymous coward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A natural response to USA developing weapons that can reach any point on Earth is a weapon that can reach USA from anywhere on Earth. Container missile looks like a good candidate for such job.

  12. Janes is slipping by SlayerofGods · · Score: 5, Informative

    "The idea that you can hide a missile system in a box and drive it around without anyone knowing is pretty new," said Hewson, who is editor of Jane's Air-Launched Weapons.

    "Nobody's ever done that before."
    Most missiles on ships are.
    Sure there are some that aren't but most of those are land based where conditions are a little more friendly.
    Sure making it look like a shiping conatiner maybe new, but missiles in boxes is hardly cutting edge stuff.

    --

    Technology, the cause of and solution to all of life's problems.
    1. Re:Janes is slipping by Robert+Heinich · · Score: 1

      Back in the early sixties, there was similar concept using using rail cars. In fact, we had them as toys: http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=220553322344&ih=012&category=4146&ssPageName=WDVW&rd=1

    2. Re:Janes is slipping by jafac · · Score: 1

      Uh, yeah. Reagan's "big idea" was the MX ballistic missile system, which was going to prevent the soviets from "winning" in a full-out nuclear exchange, by hiding our launchers in railway boxcars.

      They didn't even pretend at secrecy. It was a great big "please, nuke all our railroads too!" sign painted across America. At a time when the soviets clearly had the surplus capacity to do it.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    3. Re:Janes is slipping by IonOtter · · Score: 1

      Actually, I was going to go a bit farther back than that, but yours works too.

      --
      [End Of Line]
  13. Where do I invest? by commlinx · · Score: 1

    Looks like pretty cool tech. Guessing from the promo video they will make a killing in Second Life. TFA doesn't say how much in Linden Dollars though?

  14. lol the video by locopuyo · · Score: 1

    lol at the super lengthy youtube video to go along with it. Also it's just more ways for terrorist type countries/organizations to put civilians in the line of fire.

    1. Re:lol the video by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean more excuses for US soldiers to slaughter random civilians ;)

  15. Cruise Missiles Aren't That Hard To Build by MichaelCrawford · · Score: 3, Interesting
    If you're not too specific about the target, say you just want to hit somewhere in the middle of a large city, it's not too hard to deliver a thousand pounds of high explosives a distance of a few hundred miles.

    It was done with 1940s technology: the V-1 Buzz Bomb.

    Do you know how the V-1 knew it was time to dive down at its target? It had a small propeller at the front, that would spin from the onrushing air. After a certain number of rotations, the engine would be cut off, and it would plummet to the ground to explode.

    --
    Request your free CD of my piano music.
    1. Re:Cruise Missiles Aren't That Hard To Build by qwerty8ytrewq · · Score: 1

      I think they just let them run out of fuel too. Random hits is a classic terror tactic.

      --
      Waiting for the other shoe to...
  16. Oblig. by ahixon · · Score: 0

    In Soviet Russia, shipping container hides in Russian wea-- oh, wait...

  17. Nice headline, but not the main issue by captainpanic · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This has the potential to disrupt trade worldwide. If you can't trust any random container ship anymore (and there are many of those)... then trade will slowly grind to a halt. Remember that a very significant part of all trade is by container.

    That's a much bigger problem to the world than the possibility that one boat owned by the USA is sunk.

    This means that you can even have a weapon on a ship that is owned by a company from a friendly country (if they aren't careful and don't know the contents of the container).

    I will invest in container scanners immediately...

    1. Re:Nice headline, but not the main issue by Thanshin · · Score: 1

      I will invest in container scanners immediately...

      I'll be investing on automated container reception and delivery wharves.

    2. Re:Nice headline, but not the main issue by auric_dude · · Score: 3, Informative

      The department of Home Land Security is already on top of this one via the Container Security Initiative Ports http://www.dhs.gov/files/programs/gc_1165872287564.shtm monitoring.

    3. Re:Nice headline, but not the main issue by krou · · Score: 1

      Agreed. As if we need to give military forces any more reason to target civilian infrastructure, shipping, railways, trains, trucks etc. Madness. Certain countries have long justified attacks on civilians and villages by claiming that that's where terrorists are located and are firing their weapons from; how is using this weapon any different to the condemned strategies of these terrorists? This is just another nail in the coffin of the Geneva Conventions.

      --
      'If Christ had tweeted the sermon on the mount, it might have lasted until nightfall.' - John Perry Barlow
    4. Re:Nice headline, but not the main issue by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      How does that help ? These containers are not meant to explode upon unloading. They are meant to launch missiles. God forbid they're capable of carrying nuclear payloads (if the commercial is realistic in the rocket's sizes, it seems to me the missile is certainly big enough for that). If this is actually used by anyone, America can no longer allow any trading ship within 500 miles (or whatever the range) of any American shore. And America will be forced to use immediate lethal force against any container ship that violates this.

    5. Re:Nice headline, but not the main issue by SharpFang · · Score: 1

      They will also have to destroy any cargo truck within 500 miles of Mexico border. And the attackers can bring this right to the middle of USA, like Chicago easily. All they need is to fill the empty space in the container with marijuana.

      --
      45 5F E1 04 22 CA 29 C4 93 3F 95 05 2B 79 2A B2
    6. Re:Nice headline, but not the main issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Correct...the MAIN issue is that this weapon has advanced artificial intelligence because according to the headline...this Russian weapon can be walking down the street, minding its own business, when suddenly...it spots a shipping container. This weapon somehow knows what a shipping container looks like, can open it up, jump in, move stuff around to leave a space big enough for it, then crawl in and hide inside.
      anyway, that's what I thought when I read the headline.

    7. Re:Nice headline, but not the main issue by wvmarle · · Score: 1

      In case of war, as we have seen in the past, merchant ships are not immune. Even today merchant ships are targeted: we call this "economic sanctions". Supplies to some countries (e.g. N. Korea) are controlled: rice can go, cars and wine not. Areas like the Gaza strip are even more locked down. Merchant ships trying to enter Gaza without permission from Israel run the risk of attack.

      And didn't the US enter the European part of WW2 thanks to the sinking of a US owned merchant vessel by German torpedoes?

      One of the ways to defeat a foe is to try and starve him: cut off their supplies. Make sure they have nothing to eat and they will have to surrender, or die from starvation.

      On the other hand I'm sure merchant ships have been used a lot in warfare, as trojan horse kind of strategy. A fishing vessel full of armed soldiers. A bulk carrier fitted with torpedoes. I am sure it all has been done already.

      By the way, besides kitting out a container with cruise missiles: how do you think most weapons are traded? My best guess would be in shipping containers.

    8. Re:Nice headline, but not the main issue by Dun+Malg · · Score: 1

      This means that you can even have a weapon on a ship that is owned by a company from a friendly country (if they aren't careful and don't know the contents of the container).

      No it doesn't. How do they ensure the container gets loaded on top so it can open and fire? How does the container missile acquire the location of the carrier? How does it know when to fire?

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    9. Re:Nice headline, but not the main issue by bytesex · · Score: 1

      Or you go the slightly less dramatic route and say: countries will only allow container-ships whose cargo has been completely cleared by the sending party (whom you trust) and has had its itinerary checked throughout its journey. Which is relatively easy, even given today's standards of technology.

      --
      Religion is what happens when nature strikes and groupthink goes wrong.
    10. Re:Nice headline, but not the main issue by Dantoo · · Score: 1

      The US entered the European part of WW2 because Hitler declared war upon the USA.

      You might be thinking of the sinking of the Lusitania in WW1. Even then it wasn't the straw that broke the camel's back as the incident happened in May 1915 and the USA entered that war nearly 2 years later in April 1917.

    11. Re:Nice headline, but not the main issue by Mal-2 · · Score: 1

      This is fine for containers loaded and unloaded on their watch. It does nothing for containers already on board or picked up after leaving the port with the scanning equipment -- and you know that is exactly how weapons are going to get on board. Don't try to get them past security in the U.S., as that is costly at best and disastrous at worst. Load them in Nassau or Monrovia (Liberia, not California) or Havana.

      Mal-2

      --
      How is the Riemann zeta function like Trump rallies? Both have an endless number of trivial zeros.
    12. Re:Nice headline, but not the main issue by serbanp · · Score: 1

      And didn't the US enter the European part of WW2 thanks to the sinking of a US owned merchant vessel by German torpedoes?

      Ummm, that would be WW1, the WW2 story rhymes with Pearl Harbor...

    13. Re:Nice headline, but not the main issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Personally, I'd trust shipping MORE if it carried one of those. Who would I trust my stuff to? A ship that can defend itself, or a ship that can't?

  18. M.A.S.K. is the IP rights holder to this tech... by DontScotty · · Score: 1

    M.A.S.K. (Mobile Armored Strike Kommand)

    Thunderhawk - Chevy Camaro G3 and Fighter Jet Plane
    Rhindo - Semi Tractor with Missile Launching Capacity
    Gator - Jeep CJ7 with included detachable battle-boat
    Condor - Motorcycle that can switch to single occupant helicopter weapons platform
    Hurricane - A 1957 Chevy which turns into a six-wheeled attack tank
    Piranha - Motorcycle with submarine sidecar

    Without these weapon systems, we could NEVER have expected container mounted missile systems.

    Kenner should sue!

    (oh, and live action footage of vehicles transforming into battle mode can be seen via liveleak at http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=0dd_1187202294 )

  19. aircraft carriers have been death traps for a whil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Aircraft carriers have been floating death traps for a while already, see these links:

    In 2004, Paul Van Riper trashes US fleet in a simulation using zergrush tactics (lots of small crappy boats and planes). Navy brass decide that was cheating and refloat their fleet thus ignoring the weaknesses revealed by the war game.
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A28161-2002Aug16

    This link seems to be down, anyone can find the article (don't have time atm)? IIRC Chinese sub in 2006 off the coast of japan surfaces undetected within torpedo range of a US carrier during a war game. "Gotchya!"
    http://washingtontimes.com/national/20061113-121539-3317r.htm

    More war-game humiliation as another chinese sub in 2007 surfaces within torpedo range of a US carrier within torp range.
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/worldnews.html?in_article_id =492804&in_page_id=1811

    Chinese subs turn back US fleet for thanksgiving. Good on 'em, it's their water!
    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21939749/

  20. Nostalgic video by patrikas · · Score: 1

    Brought me back to the Battlefield 1942 days.. especially soundtrack

  21. This is nothing. Think of the Syrians. by MichaelCrawford · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Syria has ballistic missiles that can reach anywhere in Israel, that are armed with VX nerve gas. While the Syrians don't have nuclear bombs. a mist of VX at a moderate altitude over an Israeli city might as well be.

    I never, ever read about this in the press, nor do I hear anyone talk about it. But it's not any kind of secret - I found it on some US government disarmament website. My guess is that no one talks about it for fear of making things worse.

    While they (mostly) don't admit it, the Israelis are known to have a few hundred nuclear weapons. No doubt they have hydrogen bombs. While they don't openly test, there was what was thought to be a nuclear test in the ocean off of South Africa a while back. Even if they don't test, Israel has no shortage of smart people, or computers capable of accurate numerical modeling.

    Do you know the song Ninety Nine Red Balloons? The original German was Neun und Neunzig Luft Balon (SP?). I understand it was inspired by a wayward bundle of helium balloons that was mistaken by the Soviets as a missile launch.

    Some people say I'm paranoid. Such people just aren't paying attention.

    --
    Request your free CD of my piano music.
  22. A missile in a shipping container.... by DerekLyons · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ...is like a cellphone without a charger. It's pretty much useless by itself. You still need the sensors to locate the carrier, which isn't trivial. Especially since carriers don't tend to let just anybody linger in their vicinity. (And I bet 'satellite guided' means nothing more sinister than GPS. Useful for guidance, useless for targeting.)

    Even handwaving those into existence, you still need to deal with the carriers defenses. Even if you manage to get one or two through the defenses (a tall order), they aren't going to destroy the carrier short of carrying nuclear weapons. The best you can hope for is to send it back to the yards for a bit of surgery. Depending on where it hits, you might not even slow down flight operations.

    If you watch the video linked in the summary, you'll note they downplay the massive cloud of toxic exhaust that will be produced with each launch - something few merchies will be rigged to handle.

    1. Re:A missile in a shipping container.... by TheDarkMaster · · Score: 1

      Put all the sensors and required hardware on the container too, and have fun! Self-contained unit.

      --
      Religion: The greatest weapon of mass destruction of all time
    2. Re:A missile in a shipping container.... by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Sinking it? Hell, hitting it would already be more than is required.

      What's the goal? To make the US shit their collective pants? Just fire one in the general direction, it will make CNN headlines for the next weeks and how this was possible. How could they have such weapons? How could they get it within 100 miles of our precious carrier?

      Just act as if you could possibly cause damage to any US warship and rely on the media to blow it out of proportion.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    3. Re:A missile in a shipping container.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's the goal? To make the US shit their collective pants? Just fire one in the general direction, it will make CNN headlines for the next weeks and how this was possible. How could they have such weapons? How could they get it within 100 miles of our precious carrier?

      Right. More than likely it will make the nation responsible (or, the nation harbouring the group who was responsible) turn into a flat plane of smoking glass (with a double heaping helping of fallout). Yeah, manage to pop a carrier and I could see a tac-nuke being the answer (or at least a B-61 "dial-a-yield").

      And then all the humanitarians will complain about the collateral damage while secretly rejoicing that a US warship was hit by such a weapon.

    4. Re:A missile in a shipping container.... by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      Uh, you do realize that a sea search radar is limited to the horizon when locating an enemy ship? Unless it is airborne, the radar horizon isn't going to get you the carriers, at best it might find an outside picket.

      The only way to locate a carrier would be by airborne radar, or satellite (often with radar as well). A powerful sea-search radar on a plane will DEFINITELY get the attention of the US military, and will likely put the carrier group on alert and get your plane a fighter escort really fast. Satellites can only give up-to-date intel when they are overhead, and most nations that have them already have cruise missiles.

      If you don't know where the target ship is, you can't hit it with a cruise missile, satellite guided or otherwise. You could fire it at a random strip of ocean and hope to get lucky - it would turn on its radar seeker and kill the first poor merchant ship it came upon. Once you fire a missile now all your own merchant ships are targets, and they'd be taken out fairly trivailly.

    5. Re:A missile in a shipping container.... by sznupi · · Score: 1

      ...The only way to locate a carrier would be by airborne radar, or satellite (often with radar as well)...

      Kids these days, forgetting about fisherman in small boats...

      Also, it probably wouldn't be that trivial to determine which container ship did the attack - empty missile container can be fairly easily thrown into the sea, together with few surrounding ones on which there might be an obvious trace of the launch. Alternativelly the crew might be unaware about the special cargo of one container (and the ship is chosen mostly at random, based only on its shipping route)

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    6. Re:A missile in a shipping container.... by seanonymous · · Score: 1

      Please. Targeting is a piece of cake:

      http://www.boatingsf.com/ais_map.php

      And terrorists seem to be less likely to target the military than they are to target civilians. (The end goal of organized terrorism is to push the government to become more restrictive, to the point that the citizens begin to turn against their government. It's worked in South America in the past. So by targeting civilians, the government is forced to clamp down by the very folks who will later decry the police state.)

      Rather than an aircraft carrier, imagine a cruise missile targeting a full oil tanker in one of our more populous bays.

      But, if you have a person who's ready to give up their own life, as the current crop of terrorists seems to have, you don't really need to waste your money on expensive and complicated electronics.

    7. Re:A missile in a shipping container.... by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      Please. Targeting is a piece of cake: http://www.boatingsf.com/ais_map.php

      Thank you for the laugh. I haven't read anything nearly as funny all day.

    8. Re:A missile in a shipping container.... by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      Do that, and the moment you radiate you'll stop looking like an innocent container vessel to the sensors of the warships you are trying to attack - you'll have the electronic signature of a warship.

      That's going to draw attention of the kind said container vessel doesn't want and is incapable of handling.

    9. Re:A missile in a shipping container.... by TheDarkMaster · · Score: 1

      Yep. Who say I need a powerfull radar? Damn, all is needed is anyone with a GPS to "mark" the position of the target, and send this data to some ship with the launcher-container. And this is only one of many possible (and simple) ideas.

      --
      Religion: The greatest weapon of mass destruction of all time
    10. Re:A missile in a shipping container.... by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      All of these things require getting somebody within visual or radar range of the target. I doubt that small boats are allowed within visual or radar range of carriers.

      At best you'd get one shot, and then a war with the US. If the US were actually in a shooting war it would simply declare a huge exclusion zone and sink anything inside of it that wasn't under US escort (merchant shipping would be friendly-flag only, with full military coordination).

      The countries that could even hold out for a little against a US onslaught already have superior weapons systems, and this won't shift the balance of power for those countries that can't.

    11. Re:A missile in a shipping container.... by TheDarkMaster · · Score: 1

      As I say before, is only one from many possible ideas. You may not even need someone with a GPS, if you manage to put aboard one beacon device when the carrier is on the port (or one of their aircraft). And note you can put active tracking (radar, IR, pattern recognition, etc) on the missile itself, then you just need to put the missile in the right direction and let him track the target as this is within reach.

      --
      Religion: The greatest weapon of mass destruction of all time
    12. Re:A missile in a shipping container.... by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      Actually, you pretty-much HAVE to have a tracking sensor on the missile itself if you want to hit anything.

      However, if you fire off a missile in a random direction you're going to blow up some ship at random at best - most likely a tanker. Also, radar is subject to jamming, and you bet that if somebody spots a radar emitter travelling at mach 3 they're going to jam it! IR or visual is only useful if you have a very good idea of where the target is - it can't search a large area. Even radar on a missile will only spot something in a cone maybe a few miles across, which isn't much even in the Persian Gulf.

      Keep in mind that a cruise missile is exactly the kind of threat that US naval defenses were designed to counter. The only twist here is sneaking one onto a merchant ship.

    13. Re:A missile in a shipping container.... by sznupi · · Score: 1

      When you approach the issue only as "maximizing chances" (and with sufficiently desperate / determined people) it isn't necessarily so clear anymore.

      Also, I don't really think carrier battlegroups clear the seas from any small, barely seawrothy vessels they encounter... And yeah, it was my impression that the discussion is from the point of view of small, "one shot" action. But even after it you can't expect the sea to be clear, even in exclusion zone (plus imagine the headlines about indiscriminately shooting at poor fishermen from 3rd world countries); or in times when drug lords use semi-submersibles. Dozen or so spotters, equipped with GSM (also, I'm sure the old ways of navigation aren't completelly forgotten) and radio, waiting for sightings of potential targets; helping the missiles get its lucky shot.

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    14. Re:A missile in a shipping container.... by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but who wants to take one shot at a US carrier? If you're going to start a war you better make sure you can finish it! Most 3rd world dictators don't share advanced weapons systems with terrorists for the same reason. I think that until these become as cheap and ubiquitous as RPGs that they'll be outside the reach of terrorists.

      A guy on a fishing boat who can chart his location within a mile with a satellite radio would be sufficient intel to launch a cruise missile attack. Of course the missile is still subject to countermeasures, just like a saturation missile attack from a bunch of Tu-22s in 1989 (which is the whole reason Aegis was invented).

      After the war starts, the exclusion zone would be sufficient to keep fishing boats away most likely, and even the launch platform (these missiles only go a few hundred miles, so just keep container ships that far away and you're fine - or at least you have a lot more warning).

      I'd forget about submersibles. The only reason fishing boats could get close would be because nobody wants to mess with them - not because they're stealthy. A submersible is automatically suspicious and there is no way anything not invented by a fairly major power is going to sneak in close to a carrier. US ASW defenses are intended to defeat very quiet diesel boats made by the old USSR. In a war situation anything underwater would be treated as a warship so if it isn't supposed to be there it won't stay there for long.

    15. Re:A missile in a shipping container.... by sznupi · · Score: 1

      "One shot" not as in "one missile" but a barrage of them of course (however many containers those people can get their hands on - yes, it will be harder for non-state entities...but it's not safe to assume they can't have it, eventually); again, maximizing chances, nothing more.

      Even if we can get a lock on location of some of the spotters (it doesn't need to be satellite radio btw; doesn't change things much of course), by that time it might be already too late.

      I think you don't approach "fishing boats" in sufficiently low-tech way (look what Somali pirates are using now). If you have a bunch of sufficiently determined people, they can literally set sail in something wooden, very small, barely seaworthy; with enough supplies to wait passivelly for their lucky encounter (and pretend to be lost / shipwrecked when discovered). Simirarly you think too high tech, IMHO, with semi-submersibles - basically just very small surface vessels hiding most of their hull below the waves. Heck, I wouldn't be terribly surprised if somebody gets the idea of making them out of wood, also with literal sail for approach. Certainly stealthy.
      Essentially, look at them as low-tech equivalent of our present & upcoming unmanned sea vessels; just with sufficiently desperate or brainwashed people taking place of almost all the tech.

      Sure, it doesn't give them anywhere near certainty of success. Might be enough of a threat though; one of the worst things is underestimating those.

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    16. Re:A missile in a shipping container.... by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      Sure.

      Here is an interesting question: How many missiles should one fire to maximize your chance of a hit?

      With one missile you maximize your chances of the missile getting pretty close to the target before they even realize they're under attack.

      With a barrage you increase the chance that your attack will be spotted further out and therefore subject your barrage to a larger counter-defense, but you increase the probability of at least one missile making it through.

      More isn't necessarily better. Before an alarm is sounded ships might have their air search radars off for stealth, or might have weapons masked (many weapons systems do not have a 360 degree field of fire due to obstructions - although I suspect that vertical launch systems may not have this flaw). If somebody spots a missile, then every ship will go to full speed, angle for maximum defensive posture, fire countermeasures, etc. A single missile just might sneak in close enough that nobody can react in time.

      In any case, I do agree that it only makes sense to develop countermeasures against the kinds of scenarios you envision. It would be foolish to simply ignore these threats.

  23. This isn't news, its olds... by anarche · · Score: 4, Interesting

    In 1941 a gunship "disguised" as a merchant ship sunk the HMAS Sydney http://www.naa.gov.au/about-us/publications/fact-sheets/fs111.aspx

    Sure this one's a missile, but anyone who thought merchant ships weren't a threat needs to read history.

    --
    Wait! Whats a sig?
    1. Re:This isn't news, its olds... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > In 1941 a gunship "disguised" as a merchant ship sunk the HMAS Sydney

      HMAS Sydney (6K ton gross, 8x6in guns, 23km range) vs Kormoran (8K ton gross, 6x6in guns, 17 km range) at close range (1-2km) without using 5 km advantage of its guns, surprise attack destroyed Sydney's bridge and tower. Both ships damaged beyond repair. Sydney crew was unlucky and does not survive in their escape boats. Germans were more lucky.

      USS Gerald R. Ford (100K ton, 75 aircraft and lots of escorts) vs what?

  24. Nice... by vikingpower · · Score: 1

    ...for Israel, and other small nations fighting several neighbors at once. Israel could fire these from an innocent-looking container carrier near Cyprus, and hit Damascus. I had a look at the video. Well done. Would make perfect sense for small countries to possess.

    --
    Religous speak to God. Insane are spoken to by God. When all shut up, one can finally hear Shostakovich in peace
  25. Yes, but... by vikingpower · · Score: 0

    ...does it blend ?

    --
    Religous speak to God. Insane are spoken to by God. When all shut up, one can finally hear Shostakovich in peace
    1. Re:Yes, but... by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Indirectly. Everything treated with the device looks like it has been blended.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  26. The US Army just cancelled a similar project by DarenN · · Score: 1

    The US Army justcancelled a similar project although their version was rather smaller than a shipping container, because in testing it didn't meet some of the requirements (i believe it was the IR seeking mode that was problematic) and because it would have cost ~$200k per missile (it costs ~$500k at the moment).

    Apparently the technology was 90% ready ,though.

    Not sure I like the idea of this. There are too many crazies with access to the kind of money that makes this viable

    --
    Rational thought is the only true freedom
  27. Stuff isnt that hard by random+string+of+num · · Score: 0

    "proliferation of cruise missiles to anyone who will pay for them" these things can be made in back of the garage as this guy tried to prove http://www.interestingprojects.com/cruisemissile/diary.shtml I think rogue states/ terrorists could do the same, given they have funding ect.

  28. Cruise Missile by RuBLed · · Score: 3, Funny

    But this one takes about 2 weeks to go around Alaska, stopping by the scenic routes along the way.

  29. More than that... by OpenSourced · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Quite independently of whether that weapon is vaporware or not, the fact remains that advances in military hardware will end up percolating to the general public, if said public has enough money. What some years away were classified chips nowadays are available off-the-shelf. Guidance software, once leaked, is easy to copy. A disgruntled scientist is all that is needed to transfer loads of tech. Everybody keeps getting better at making things that fly. Look at the advance of the Chinese weaponry in the last years. They simply throw enough money at it, and they got mostly all the tech they needed. In some years, everybody and its dog will have enough firepower to down an aircraft carrier. I've seen posts saying that they should be able to block most missiles. Well, that's all right, except when you are faced with a hundred of them at the same time.

    In a similar note, I'm not altogether sure that the recent move to the "non-nuclear ICBM" is a smart one. People are scared of using nuclear weapons, which is a sound attitude. That leads to treaties of non proliferation and generic agreement on not allowing the aforesaid proliferation. But that doesn't apply to other explosives, even if you are equally dead by a bullet than by a H-bomb. So what is now a cutting-edge technology (nnICBMs), will in ten years perhaps be available to mostly anybody in the world, and there is no non-proliferation treaty to pursue anybody for it.

    --
    Rome taught me patience and assiduous application to detail. Virtues which temper the boldness of great, general views.
    1. Re:More than that... by SharpFang · · Score: 1

      A disgruntled scientist is all that is needed to transfer loads of tech.

      Actually, a dud missile is all that is needed. A plane falls, or the missile fails to explode - and the enemy has a complete (albeit faulty) guidance system in their hands.

      --
      45 5F E1 04 22 CA 29 C4 93 3F 95 05 2B 79 2A B2
    2. Re:More than that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the fact remains that advances in military hardware will end up percolating to the general public

      I hear all the time /.ers saying that citizens should have the ability to fight its own government. For what I've learn reading /., isn't that the whole purpose of the 2nd amendment?

    3. Re:More than that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you think that it is any coincidence that we're reading about this container sized anti-ship missile a day or two after the non-nuclear ICBM?

      Come on... this is just big boys in government buildings unzipping their pants and showing how big theirs is...

  30. Re:aircraft carriers have been death traps for a w by u38cg · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If I was the US Navy, I'd let my opponents think they were better than they are too. Though since the US hasn't fought any meaningful naval engagements lately, it's difficult to tell.

    --
    [FUCK BETA]
  31. Re:This is nothing. Think of the Syrians. by Nathrael · · Score: 1

    a mist of VX at a moderate altitude over an Israeli city might as well be.

    I'd say it'd be even worse than a nuclear bomb. Weaponized VX can, if the wind direction is right, can theoretically "cleanse" a small country of any advanced life forms without those pesky side effects such as irradiation preventing a later conquest. Sure, nukes are great bunker busters and their symbolic effect is not to be understated - but if you want to go for true mass destruction, nerve gas is much more effective.

    --
    A good education is a bit like a STD - it makes you unsuitable for a lot of jobs and gives you a desire to spread it.
  32. Privateers! Letters of Marque and Reprisal! by MichaelCrawford · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It's in the US Constitution and everything: the US Congress has the authority to order civilian merchant ships to do battle.

    --
    Request your free CD of my piano music.
    1. Re:Privateers! Letters of Marque and Reprisal! by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

      *whoosh*. The ship that sank the Sydney was in the German navy, with sailors on board. A disguised naval vessel is hardly the same as a civilian with guns on board. Whatever, people see what they want to see.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
  33. Why should US be only one with cruise missiles? by gig · · Score: 1

    If you are an American and this scares you, then good. War can't be one-sided forever.

    1. Re:Why should US be only one with cruise missiles? by Saint+Stephen · · Score: 1

      Good, I hope you don't mind us killing the fuck out of you, since you're into it and all that.

      This would work. Once.

    2. Re:Why should US be only one with cruise missiles? by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      And then what? The US will step in, eliminate a more or less stable government and replace it with anarchy?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    3. Re:Why should US be only one with cruise missiles? by east+coast · · Score: 1

      You have distorted view of reality if you think the US is the only nation that builds cruise missles.

      --
      Dedicated Cthulhu Cultist since 4523 BC.
    4. Re:Why should US be only one with cruise missiles? by radtea · · Score: 1

      This would work. Once.

      It only has to work once. The Nineteen Nitwits from Saudi Arabia trained in Afghanistan and crashed into the twin towers, causing the US to invade Peru, or some other random country with four letters in its name that was totally unrelated to the 9/11 attacks and no threat to America.

      If I hated the US I'd love these weapons, as Americans can clearly be provoked into completely irrational and self-destructive action almost trivially. A weapons system like this, used once, would be practically ideal. Americans would close their ports, for a start, which would ruin their economy. Then they would invade Peru or someplace like it, adding the huge deadweight loss of war on top of the other drags on their economy.

      That's a lot of destruction for a single missile.

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
    5. Re:Why should US be only one with cruise missiles? by Saint+Stephen · · Score: 1

      Well, for a start, the terrorists pick random people to kill, the most convenient targets, so it's only fair to do the same in retaliation. If one group gets to live in total chaos, don't go crying if more chaos follows, it makes you sound like a pussy.

      Secondly, we killed way more Arabs than died on 9/11. So we more than made up for it.

      So, if someone wants to cause a huge tragedy, go for it, we'll try to stop you. If we fail, we'll wail a little while, and then get some payback. In the end we'll win.

      Because we rock :-)

    6. Re:Why should US be only one with cruise missiles? by radtea · · Score: 1

      Since you clearly believe in "an eye for an eye" you must think the US "deserves" pretty much all the random death it can get, as the US has randomly bombed people all over the place for years.

      The inevitable end of that logic is a world in which everyone hates the US and has a moral right to randomly bomb them. Why do you hate America so much?

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
  34. The music by psnyder · · Score: 4, Funny

    The choice of music is hilarious!

    "Born Free" during the opening beach scene.
    "Pirates of the Caribbean" during the missile launch.
    And even "Command and Conquer"'s victory music at the very end of the clip.

    At least we know the RIAA/MPAA can send take down notices to get this "arms deal commercial" removed =P

    1. Re:The music by Opportunist · · Score: 2, Funny

      (read with Russian accent)

      Thank you for taking down our video. In response, we will take down your business. Sincerely, your friendly local arms dealer.

      What? You fight with your weapons, we fight with ours.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    2. Re:The music by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also notice that all the "enemy" forces are American equipment. M1 Tanks, F-18 fighters, etc. Uh.....

    3. Re:The music by Boldoran · · Score: 1

      I thought I was alone in almost falling out of my chair laughing. But then it dawned to me that some of the guys that decide to buy these things might actually be psyched by this music like the 12 year old boys that they mentally are.

  35. WiC, anyone? by kav2k · · Score: 1

    Anyone else thinking of World in Conflict after reading the summary?..

  36. Let's just kill everyone first, then we win by h00manist · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Seriously, the arms race combined with galloping technology progress is just the same as a death wish for everyone. There is no chance in hell of controlling it. Increasing miniaturization, lowering costs, easier manufacturing, simpler distribution. Soon, smaller and smaller fiefs of power with more and more intrigues among them, in addition to nations. Corporations, traffickers, pirates, guerrillas, terrorists, private security companies, crazies, military and politicians, anyone hungry for muscle power. I forgot to mention increasing power and capabilities, escalating the complexity of logistics and possibilities for smaller, easier to plan, quicker and deadlier attacks. The advancement of knowledge and progress required communication, trade, and trust. A high tech arms race, such as is now starting, will kill it. China, Japan, Europe, South America, everyone is building up weapons. If we want to continue evolving, and living, we better start talking negotiations. Contrary to wacky political manipulating statements, stockpiling weapons won't work forever, because history evolves, nothing stays the way it is, the future is not predictable, especially today.

    --
    Build your own energy sources from scratch. http://otherpower.com/
    1. Re:Let's just kill everyone first, then we win by sillybilly · · Score: 1

      One solution from a nuclear catastrophy is to run into outer space, and develop living capsules that withstand space radiation, something that might work down on Earth too in case of a nuclear holocaust. It's kind of sad that da Man is resorting to this, himself providing the packages to whoever wants them, because, even after 50 odd years from discovery, there still haven't been any terrorists who created one, no matter how hard da Man tried to create one by psychological manipulation. The fact is that common people with any kind of decency and common sense, like Stanislav Petrov, will not start a nuclear event, almost no matter how effortfully manipulated. It might be different if it had no effect on them, but the cost of a war on themselves, their families and kids is suicidal. This may not be the case for da Man, who might have his bunkers ready for his own family, and wants to "compete" with other people on "faster" grounds than simply slow choking them with lack of money or wars with conventional weapons. Smart enough people who can make one are unwilling to get manipulated into making one, so now Da Man's resorting to the dumb ones, who believe in things like afterlife, and 77 virgins. Da Man's been too bored and itching for some nuclear event, however everyone else's job is to stay calm, and if anything, work together on living in outer space and proliferating technology that enables living in radiation resistant capsules efficiently and cheaply, so such things are available as somewhat of an insurance against a nuclear war, to everyone, not just the very rich. The doctrine of mutually assured destruction does help in averting initiation of war, but somehow it does not seem like 100% guarantee to me.

      Movie westerns have many episodes of standoffs without pulling the revolver, maintaining that balance of mutually assured destruction, but such standoffs last maybe a few minutes. In many cases, eventually, someone reaches for the gun, and then often both actors get shot, by each other, and mutually destructed. Sometimes one is quicker than the other, and shoots the gun out of the other one's hands, and nobody dies. But that kind of skill is rare. Have a western where nobody dies from gunshots, and there is no blood, because the heroes are so good and so quick, they keep shooting the guns out of other people's hands. It may all come down to fistfighting then, and manual choking, since, if one without a gun in his hand gets suicidal, and runs up against the one who still has the gun, there are two choices: shoot while he's running at you, or fist fight him when he gets there. Sometimes violence cannot be averted no matter how strong the reasoning. In such cases the really heroic way to avert violence is for the hero to run away faster, so the guy who just had the gun shot out of his hands, can't catch up with him. It's not very "manly", but it works, very simply, and effectively. So all you need is western heroes who are both highly skilled quick shooters, and very fast runners. Or have the fastest horses. And to top it all off, they are vegetarian. Not very "manly," I know, but at least as a western humorous parody it might work.

    2. Re:Let's just kill everyone first, then we win by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Yeah, because we all know diplomacy works with raving lunatics like Stalin, Hitler, Pol Pot, Kim Jong Il, Ahmedinejad...

      I supposed the U.N. could have just sat down and had a cup of tea with the bad guys to stop genocides in Darfur, Rwanda, Tibet.

    3. Re:Let's just kill everyone first, then we win by radtea · · Score: 1

      Seriously, the arms race combined with galloping technology progress is just the same as a death wish for everyone.

      I wish I could mod you "sane".

      The summary says, "This is a scary new development..." and that pretty much sums up the whole story. "New! Scary! Be afraid! Be 'orange' afraid!"

      The development of new weapons is driven by the fear of old weapons, and of other people's new weapons. Look down the page a bit and you'll find a story on a US weapons systemt that is designed to blow up and kill people anywhere on Earth an hour after launch from the continental US.

      Now apply the Law of Common Humanity ("THEY are just like US") and conclude that people like the Russians are thinking about weapons like this because people like the Americans are thinking about weapons like that.

      Anti-American idiots will then say it's all the US's fault, as if this endless cycle somehow magically starts with the US, but it doesn't: it starts with most people being cowards, and therefore reaching for the least effective, least efficient solution to any problem (violence and the military) because it is also the one that makes them feel safe.

      Only when people have the courage to renounce the deadweight loss of new weapons developments will the world have a chance for peace. That said, it's worth noting in passing that solution to the problem of foreign invasion is not pacifism but something that someone once called "a well-ordered militia..."

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
    4. Re:Let's just kill everyone first, then we win by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed with the first part, disagreement on the second. Any progression of knowledge at all can make highly dangerous technologies appear in unexpected ways, and then refinement of that technology can make it available to individuals. You can't stop people from researching everything.
       
      Take biotech for example. How difficult would it be for somebody to create a species of mosquito that has all the known insecticide resistances and which has tetrodotoxin genes active alongside its salivary gland protein genes? At the moment it would be possible but still very difficult. It would take a large and well equipped company to be able to do it with any reasonable chance of success.
       
      How difficult will it be in ten years?
       
      Threats like this are absolutely impossible to protect against systematically long in advance except by, as one of the other replies above said, putting some of your population into space to isolate them from the danger.

    5. Re:Let's just kill everyone first, then we win by eclectro · · Score: 1

      we better start talking negotiations.

      Because it's a good idea to negotiate with terrorists and extortionists?

      --
      Take the cheese to sickbay, the doctor should see it as soon as possible - B'Elanna Torres, "Learning Curve"
    6. Re:Let's just kill everyone first, then we win by fredrated · · Score: 1

      The funny thing is, your enemies will always be people disagreeable to you, and if you refuse to negotiate with those disagreeable, you will never negotiate and will always be at war. Is this the state you prefer?

    7. Re:Let's just kill everyone first, then we win by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When weapons are stock-piled as they are, then people will use them. Period.

    8. Re:Let's just kill everyone first, then we win by Syberz · · Score: 1

      Stockpiling weapons only works if you can actually use them. The US has massive amounts of weapons yet the war in Iraq and Afghanistan are still ongoing. Why? Guerilla warfare and the new rules of war.

      In WWII both Axis and Allies disregarded civilian casualties and carpet bombed multiple cities in order to win. Today you accidentally shoot 2-3 civies you're court martialed. What good is a missile if your ennemy is hiding amongst civilians which prevents you from using it?

      --
      ~Syberz
    9. Re:Let's just kill everyone first, then we win by LilGuy · · Score: 1

      A book I just started reading about the need to demolish the CIA and rebuild it from the ground up is based on this premise. The fact that the US has the most capable technical intelligence isn't enough to foresee the myriads of new ways smaller and smaller groups can affront devastating attacks. Interesting stuff and quite scary if you believe it to be true.

      --

      You're nothing; like me.
    10. Re:Let's just kill everyone first, then we win by hitmark · · Score: 1

      well, USA and russia are perhaps the two biggest produces of military hardware. And one way to keep getting the purchase orders is by scaring the people in suits into thinking "the other side" have some new wonder weapon that cant be countered with whats in stock right now. End result, it keeps factories going, corporations going, people in uniform feed and payed.

      heck, its a very old problem. Romans had a big problem with their armies, as the soldiers where so used to war that they may well go on to assault roman cities if said armies where ever disbanded. How many working for blackwater and similar are ex-military in some way or other?

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    11. Re:Let's just kill everyone first, then we win by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Danegeld.

    12. Re:Let's just kill everyone first, then we win by jafac · · Score: 1

      Yeah - start talking negotiations. Then your enemy develops technology for more effectively coming out ahead in negotiations.

      The fact is - it is a FEATURE of all life, including human life, to compete for supremacy.
      Yes - humans do also cooperate with eachother. Until there's nothing more to be gained. Then they compete. And you are correct. Human competition is such that, ultimately, a fatal (for the species) mis-step is inevitable - that appears pretty blindingly obvious. Even if we kill all of THEM before they kill all of US; we'll eventually squabble amongst ourselves. (aren't we already?).

      Sorry to bust your bubble. I'd also like things to not be this way.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    13. Re:Let's just kill everyone first, then we win by h00manist · · Score: 1

      http://www.iraqbodycount.org/ - Documented civilian deaths from violence - 95,989 to 104,706. How many court martials would that be?

      --
      Build your own energy sources from scratch. http://otherpower.com/
    14. Re:Let's just kill everyone first, then we win by Syberz · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the info.

      I noticed an error in my original post though: Amend the word "accidentally" to "purposefully" and my comment still stands.

      If you purposefully shoot a civilian while knowing that it is a civilian and not an ennemy combatant then you're court-martialled. If you say that you thought it was an ennemy then that's alright, it was an honest mistake /TongueInCheek

      --
      ~Syberz
  37. War = lies. by h00manist · · Score: 1

    You are right, capitalism in weapon production impose strong market regulation! Anyway, when you read on NYT, why are only Russian's weapons called "deadly"? Is the new missiles that can reach anywhere on Earth built in US a "great achievement"?

    Standard public brainwashing, all sides always do this. The other side builds death and destruction, your side builds peace maintenance, courage and strength. And stops evil. Bla bla bla to make young soldiers want to kill and die. And, gotta make the public hate and fear the other side so they keep collaborating to war, otherwise they won't be into it.

    --
    Build your own energy sources from scratch. http://otherpower.com/
  38. Cold War Symbology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anyone notice how the tanks look like US made M1A2 tanks?

    Anyone notice how the 'good' country was red, and the 'evil' country was blue?

    Good to see Russians still think we are at war.

  39. Not only that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...they also snagged some of the theme music from C&c generals if I'm not entirely mistaken. In fact the whole concept might as well have been taken from whatever sequel to the latest C&c game EA is working on at the moment. I smell a viral advert for a new RTS game.

    1. Re:Not only that... by Bradmont · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure the music is from Pirates of the Caribbean (hint, hint...)

  40. Carriers are dead in the water by jollyreaper · · Score: 1

    Their time has passed; the only reason why we don't know it yet is because we haven't had the war that will settle the matter. If WWII didn't occur we'd still be under the misapprehension that the battleship is the queen of the seas. You don't tend to see the abandonment of a series of tactics and technology that have been successful in the past until they have led to utter ruin in a modern war. It took the tank to finally settle the question of cavalry's supremacy and it still took two world wars to drive that point home. The Italians made mounted charges against the Soviets. Whoops. According to the records, the stories of Polish mounted charges against the Wermacht were propaganda.

    --
    Kwisatz Haderach
    Sell the spice to CHOAM
    This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
    1. Re:Carriers are dead in the water by Rich0 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I'm not convinced that the day of the carrier has passed.

      What has replaced them?

      A carrier gives you the opportunity to have air superiority over a given location. So does an airfield. Both can be destroyed. So, are you essentially arguing that air power is obsolete, except maybe for aircraft with short-field capability that can run on moving improvised bases?

      Carriers give major powers an ability to wage conventional war, and this is a capability that is in high demand. Without them, what are your options? ICBMs?

      For the most part most theoretical attacks against carrier battle groups tend to be manipulations of the conventions of the seas, like arming merchant ships. That just makes it sound like what is really obsolete is the concept of freedom of navigation on the high seas. Perhaps the next logical step is to just have nations set up inspection stations outside every port and make ships check in before being able to go out to sea?

    2. Re:Carriers are dead in the water by sznupi · · Score: 1

      Though I suppose one should distinguish between wars when one side has decisive advantage and wars between roughly comparable powers. In the latter case...yeah, it's easy to imagine that the carrier is obsolete. By what? Perhaps ICBMs when talking about all-out war, but also cruise missiles (launched from subs, smaller surface vessels, bombers or mobile ground platforms) together with modern AA defenses and mentioned by you STOL aircraft, both of which can effectivelly deal with "projecting power" from small carrier-based airforce. That US carriers never had to stand the trial of Tu-95, Tu-22M3 and Tu-160 doesn't mean they are not highly vulnerable to it...

      For a long time now all "conventional war" they deal with was against adversaries with with virtually nonexistent navy, anti-ship airforce or long range coastal defences.

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    3. Re:Carriers are dead in the water by sznupi · · Score: 1

      Yes, a propaganda; though it wasn't so simple. Polish cavalry in 1939 did fight also against German mechanised forces, with some successes here and there (not bad considering all the disproportions) - after all, they were highly mobile units equipped also in some anti-armor weaponry...

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
  41. Whose Arms Race ? by Mr+Europe · · Score: 2, Interesting

    When ever a new type of weapon is developed outside USA it's "a scary new development in the global arms race" but really WHO is the biggest weapon developer with a huge margin ?

    You've seen it in the news: when a US company is developing, let's say, a new material, the first possible solution is for military. Like there wasn't any other problems than security in our world.

    USA has a supremacy in military power. Today's security related threads USA is facing can not be solved with developing new weapons.

    1. Re:Whose Arms Race ? by BJ_Covert_Action · · Score: 1

      Today's security related threads USA is facing can not be solved with developing new weapons.

      I know! Imagine the nerdrage that it would generate to bomb slashdot to prevent more security related threads from being posted. Although....it might not hurt if kdawson was involved in the collateral damage. =P

    2. Re:Whose Arms Race ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the biggest threat to US security is peace and free trade, so yes weapons development can counter that.

    3. Re:Whose Arms Race ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but really WHO is the biggest weapon developer with a huge margin

      Wow, I never knew that the World Health Organization makes weapons!

  42. The Day of the CVGB has Passed by Philotomy · · Score: 1

    The carrier battle group is obsolete, the Navy just doesn't wan't to admit it.

  43. US had a missile in a box project by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    funny that this appears just as the US is cancelling their own version (abeit a clearly more technological one)
    http://www.theregister.co.uk/2010/04/27/nlos_ls_chopped/

  44. Repeat after me CIWS shall not fail.... by BlackBloq · · Score: 1

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nY6nm-6eCzM
    http://www.fas.org/man/dod-101/sys/ship/weaps/mk-15.htm

    Yea stick that in yer turban and smoke it!

  45. Re:in soviet russia by ByOhTek · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    my condolences.

    --
    Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
  46. could simulate a mass attack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ok heres an example of how bad this could be implemented.

    The English channel is one of the busiest shipping lanes in the world.
    So some rogue country buys a shed load of these and plants them on numerous cargo ships (without the captain even knowing they exist on his boat).
    Say one cargo rack on each ship.

    Then at a pre-set time launch the lot at say England.

    there you go England wiped out and no time to counter attack or even defend (due to lack of range / time).
    It would also look like a mass attack and since close range would be hard to track and locate where from.

    This could be used in a very bad way.

    I always thought that some clever monkey will end up making a truly horrifying weapon with bits of existing tech already out there.
    This is one example.

  47. Not baboons, snakes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This isn't an "arms race". This is a spending race. If you consider the architects of government expansion as simple imbeciles, you're falling right into their trap. The truth, about most of government, is far more sinister.

    There's a reason why every year government costs more, borrows more, and spends more, and it certainly isn't because government is getting better. At the top of the power pyramid, it doesn't matter where the money goes. What matters is that it passes through your hands, giving you a chance to exploit it for personal gain.

  48. In soviet russia... by Robert+Zenz · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    ...that mother would have sex with you!

  49. Club-K by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They should have called it Special K.

  50. Welcome to Russia by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 1

    Selling WMD systems to the highest bidder? A-OK! Reporting on government-backed cronyism and brown-shirted neo-nazis? Sleep with the fishes.

    1. Re:Welcome to Russia by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      And that's different to the US in what way? Oh, right, the whistleblower only gets fired, not shot.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  51. Metal Gear by TheNinjaroach · · Score: 1

    Metal Gear, anyone?

    --
    I went to eat some animal crackers and the box said, "Do not eat if seal is broken." I opened the box and sure enough..
  52. why would there be only one missile? by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

    you could fit several in a container, and container ships could carry thousands.

    Also. Why even bother hitting a carrier when you can bypass the military at will and have weaponry delivered to his door? Hell, if i was developing a tech like this, it would only go on sale once I already had big enough nukes sitting at all of the strategic targets.

    3 minute warning? What is the ping time to China?

    --
    Deleted
  53. Not Fair! by emazzuca · · Score: 2, Funny

    Only the US can Sell weapons to other countries!

  54. New US weapon hides in a portable toilet by auric_dude · · Score: 1
  55. So... Dolf Lungren or Sylvester Stallone, then? by macraig · · Score: 1

    That was my first thought when I read the title... Rambo In A Box. With breather holes and an old liter Coke bottle to piss in, of course.

  56. Carriers aren't the real target by Shivetya · · Score: 1

    maybe to sell it some mid level bureaucrat but the target truly threatened is any major port. Think about it, get your rockets delivered to enemies home turf and activate them when wanted. Practically no warning as downtown is just a few miles away. It opens a whole slew of targets all within reach.

    After all, who is going to watch for the enemy to launch cruises missiles from within your own borders?

    Russia needs money and they need street cred. They will shoot themselves in the foot if needed

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
    1. Re:Carriers aren't the real target by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      you would be better off disguising some auto loading artillery as containers for an attack on something as immobile as a city. artillery is cheap and shells are really cheap

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
  57. Some clarifications from an American naval officer by Dails · · Score: 5, Informative

    A few good points have been made (but need a few editions), and some dumb points have been made. Let's run through them:

    1. The SS-N-22 is a hush-hush subject because it basically reduces our carriers to floating targets
    Not the case. Details about the SS-N-22 (commonly called the Sunburn) are unclassified. Every ship in the US navy has tactics to defeat it, though obviously some classes of ships are better at it than others. Actually, the missile in the video behaves nothing like a Sunburn; it appears to have satellite guidance, Over the Horizon (OTH) targeting capability, and a terminal sprint vehicle. Thus, it's closer to an advanced Sizzler missile (SS-N-27) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS-N-27 than a Sunburn.

    2. Somebody mentioned Exocet missiles and their relative effectiveness. Exocet missiles, to the US navy, are kids' stuff. My ship (an Arleigh Burke-class destroyer) is basically armed to the teeth and can shoot one own without so much as a second thought, but even ships built with self-defense as a third priority are in no real danger. Exocet was a threat when they made the movie Top Gun, but not today.

    3. Someone mentioned targeting requirements. This is a good point. If a ship expects to use this in an anti-ship role, it will either have onboard radars for detection and missile control (US is the only navy that has a radar which does both), or receive targeting information from another ship/sub/satellite. In any of these cases, the targeted ship can detect the radar, and any missile control radar it detects is considered a hostile act under international law and triggers the captain's right of self defense (read: he can shoot at you if you point missile control radar at his ship). Also, any merchant ship leaving port with a bunch of innocent container boxes PLUS high-powered missile control radar is, to say the least, suspicious.

    4. Several people mentioned the Phalanx Close In Weapon System (CIWS, pronounced See-Whiz). This is the last resort for most classes of ships. It can only shoot out a few miles, but it's very effective when it does fire. If this system is firing, by the way, then the missile has somehow made it past your three to four other layers of defense, not even counting soft kill options like jamming whatever active radar or semi-active/passive sensor is guiding the missile.

    5. A few people mentioned the ethical issue of arming merchant ships. This is always considered in warplans, from low to very high scale. Bottom line is that it's a dumb idea that will get you one free shot and then cost you your whole merchant fleet.

    6. Ignoring all of that, no matter how effective any weapon system is, at least in a shipboard environment, you only get one free shot. After that free shot it becomes a hot war scenario and every ship captain will change from "ask first, ask again, check three times and only fire when fired upon" to "ask once and if you think he's hostile, shoot." It can even go further to "Check to see if your'e sure he's a friend, and if you can't tell, shoot." At that point the name of the game is ship detection, not missile technology.

    This weapon system doesn't revolutionize warfare at all. Business as usual.

  58. Hides vs. can be hidden by clone53421 · · Score: 1

    Am I the only one who thinks the headline ought to read “Can Be Hidden”?

    ZOMG passive tense, somebody gag me quick...

    --
    Alexander Peter Kristopeit bought his basement from his mommy for one dollar.
  59. Re:This is nothing. Think of the Syrians. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The original German was Neun und Neunzig Luft Balon (SP?).

    Neunundneunzig Luftballons. We obviously *do* like our compound words.

  60. USA did it in 60/70s by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      this is nothing new - USA already has done it, by placing it into the RAILROAD CARTS , and they were NUCLEAR missiles.

    http://www.fas.org/nuke/guide/usa/icbm/lgm-118.htm
    "nder the rail garrison concept, the remaining Peacekeeper missiles would be placed on trains stationed at various U.S. Air Force installations. The 25 trains, each carrying two missiles, would deploy off-base and onto the national railroad network during periods of international tension to improve survivability. "

      Yeaph, only terrorist hide military under civilian targets.

  61. Wow. Just maybe it might be time to listen to them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Crazy idea, I know, but some "terrorists" as we in the west insist on calling them, have a point.

    Terrorism is not just the weapon of the cowardly. It is the weapon of the very weak against the very strong.

    Ah, who am I kidding? The mere thought of any weak nation standing up to America would be enough to see the little guy nuked off the planet.

  62. Somalian pirates by Captain+Jameson · · Score: 1

    are alternately quaking in their boots or filling out order forms.

  63. Re:Some clarifications from an American naval offi by Inda · · Score: 0, Troll

    "Check to see if your'e sure he's a friend, and if you can't tell, shoot."

    God bless America! Yee-haw!

    --
    This post contains benzene, nitrosamines, formaldehyde and hydrogen cyanide.
  64. Terrrible Idea by TooMad · · Score: 1

    For war, this is why a medical vehicle cannot be armed, it makes them a target, or more of one. From their advert I assume the idea is for an inferior force to have some sort of recourse versus a superior one. Well guess what this superior force has this thing called intelligence. They know you have shipping containers loaded with cruise missiles. They have one problem how can they tell a shipping container loaded with benign goods from one loaded with your lethal missiles? They can't. The solution is simple shipping containers now become priority targets, all of them. What the heck I am at war with you so either I blow up goods and hurt your economy or I blow up military assets sounds like win-win. On the other hand a terrorist would probably think these are a great idea. Nobody is truly at war with them and intelligence against such groups is spotty it is probably a coin flip to get one of these containers through so simply send two or more of them and one should get through.

  65. You forget two important points.. by gillbates · · Score: 1
    1. The idea of a cruise missile is that you don't have to be anywhere near the carrier battle group - as in, out of fighter range. Look at the range of an F-18 sometime - getting 1000 miles out on a CAP is really pushing it. A missile with a 2000 mile range (just hypothetically speaking) would put the cargo ship well out of the carrier groups defenses
    2. The US has developed cruise missiles with the ability to evade radar, and it is very likely Russia could do the same, if it hasn't done so already. Against such a missile, the radar-tracked Phalanx would be of little use.
    --
    The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
  66. Republicans... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    have the advantage now. Blue states beware.

    1. Re:Republicans... by boneclinkz · · Score: 0

      "Berkeley was decimated early this morning by TEA Party cruise missiles. The weapons were concealed inside the fat asses of the rally attendees."

  67. Re:Janes is slipping ... He must be very young by arthurpaliden · · Score: 1

    This is really old news. Just start checking back issues of Popular Science/Mechanics. I am sure it was there in the 70s or 80s with the advent of container shipping.

  68. bullshit strawman by Tom · · Score: 1

    Yeah, yeah, terrorists! Be afraid! Terrorist! Think of the children! And the terrorist, the evil terrorist, everywhere. Did we mention terrorists?

    Think about it. Is this a terror weapon? Can't you think of at least half a dozen more interesting terror things to put into a shipping container? I know I can.

    So that's the strawman. What's it really about? The US control of the sea and air, I think. The russians were driven out of Afghanistan in good parts by the Stinger missile.

    Iran can be accessed by sea through the Strait of Hormuz. You can't maintain a 50 miles no-other-vessels zone around your aircraft carrier there. But then, Iran already has Sunburn missiles and could sink a US carrier anytime it wants. Why would it want another option? Because the Sunburns are nukes, and with the escalated conflict around Iran's nuclear program, using them would likely mean a US first strike.

    Lots and lots of other countries would just love to give the US a shot across the bow. I think there'll be tons of buyers for this thing. The american ability to project its forces rests largely on the carrier groups. Anything that can take out a carrier is a great thing to have if you believe you could be next in the War On Anyone We Don't Like (aka Terrorists).

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    1. Re:bullshit strawman by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      There are numerous inaccuracies in your posting. The first is that US aircraft carriers are vulnerable to Sunburn antiship missiles. This seems quite unlikely given the rollout of the SeaRAM anti-missle system and the known effectiveness of Aegis systems.

      http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/tilted-weaponry/30202-sea-ram-enables-improved-reach-out-touch-somebody-capability.html

      http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/966345/posts

      And that assumes that the carrier even gets in range before the potential ASM launch sites are annihilated.

  69. Any merchant vessel? by jonadab · · Score: 1

    > a devastating new cruise missile system that can be
    > hidden inside a shipping container, giving any merchant
    > vessel the capability to wipe out an aircraft carrier.

    Any merchant vessel, or just any merchant vessel whose operators can afford to keep cruise missiles around? How much do they project it will cost them per unit to mass produce these babies?

    (Also, an aircraft carrier is a fairly unlikely target for a typical merchant, all else being equal. There's no money in taking out an aircraft carrier, and plenty of risk. Not to say there couldn't be privateers, but it seems unlikely to be the dominant use to which such a weapon would be put.)

    --
    Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
  70. Welcome Kmart shopppers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Changed to Rmart

  71. Copyright anyone? by Hutz · · Score: 1

    Why do I doubt that this russian company paid for the rights to use all the music starting with "Born Free" and ending with "Pirates of the Caribbean"? We can just put RIAA on them -- next thing you know these guys will be bankrupt and out of business.

    My only fear is that RIAA might end up owning cruise missiles.

  72. Nonsense by b4upoo · · Score: 1

    A missile tracking in on an aircraft carrier will meet defensive systems instantly. The military is constantly on guard for such attacks. The greater hazard would be to commercial aircraft or buildings or even ships such as oil tankers.
                  It would be sort of nice if your own defense department created a grade B missile that was very cheap to make and use. After all a gifted fellow has hand built this type of missile very cheaply and that is what we really need. Unless a missile is carrying a nuclear device or something far more destructive than conventional explosives the band for the buck when delivered does not justify using the device.

  73. Re:Some clarifications from an American naval offi by KlausBreuer · · Score: 0

    I'm afraid that I cannot quite agree with you:

    > The SS-N-22 is a hush-hush subject because it basically reduces our carriers to floating targets. Not the case.

    Sorry - but carriers already *are* floating targets. I remember quite clearly the fleet showing up at Lybia quite a few years ago. The carriers had aircraft which were used exclusively to protect - the carriers. And bombing was done by aircraft which flew straight from the the US via the UK.
    I'm also thinking of that nasty little book in the 80s (I do apologize for not remembering the title right now) which took a long, hard look at the US and USSR weapon efficiency; the last combined NATO maneuver in the north sea showed all (all!) carriers being (simulated to be) sunk on the very first day.
    An aircraft carrier these days is a major waste of space, and primarily used for top-class idio^H^H^H^Hpeople to brag^H^H^H^Hprotect our freedom.

    > Exocet was a threat when they made the movie Top Gun, but not today.

    Really. I'm sure all ships will be able to easily shoot these things down. After all, the anti-missile tests went smashingly well, right? Right?

    > In any of these cases, the targeted ship can detect the radar...

    Ah, I see. Of course, you certainly need super-special radar to detect a target, right? Normal shipping radar is certainly not sufficient, right? And we cannot possibly hook up a new system to an existing radar - would be too cheap to build...

    > A few people mentioned the ethical issue of arming merchant ships

    Yes, that's a dumb idea. And seeing that our rules are idiots and morons, this has happened in practically every war since Egypt was founded...

    >will change from "ask first, ask again, check three times and only fire when fired upon" to "ask once and if you think he's hostile, shoot." It can even go further to "Check to see if your'e sure he's a friend, and if you can't tell, shoot."

    Which already is more or less how civilians are treated by the US Army in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    --
    Free PC version of ChipWits at http://www.breueronline.de/klaus/chipwits/
  74. That video game is sick. by hellop2 · · Score: 1

    Is that Arma 2?

    --
    How many more years will slashdot have an off-by-one error on your Score in your profile?
  75. Need to pay my NRA dues by egcagrac0 · · Score: 1

    Personally, I will need at least 4 of these for hunting and personal defense.

  76. Abolish regulations and we'll be fine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem itself stems from big government and heavy regulations on nuclear, bio and mass murder weapons.
    If we just abolish all international treaties and regulations, we will see the free market sort it out for themselves.
    Why would you want to regulate so that less jobs are produced. A massive WWIII would make unemployment a non-problem for the non-foreseeable future!

  77. Re:Some clarifications from an American naval offi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Really. I'm sure all ships will be able to easily shoot these things down. After all, the anti-missile tests went smashingly well, right? Right?

    Apparently you're uniformed, anti-US, or outright stupid. As you're a European I'll vote "anti-US".

    Don't confuse the land-based ABM debacles with the SM-3 and the like.

  78. Re:Some clarifications from an American naval offi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Regardless, I'm still asking Santa for one this year -- it really miffs my mom when I give her a Christmas list with only covert Russian made weapons systems on it.

  79. World in Conflict? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hmm... Container ships... from Russia... Does this remind anyone else of Massive Entertainment's World in Conflict?

  80. Re:aircraft carriers have been death traps for a w by boneclinkz · · Score: 0

    God damn you hidebound Admirals, if the carriers are no longer viable, retire them and turn them into luxury cruise ships. Think of how many pools and hot tubs you could stuff on to the flight deck.

  81. Capital ships aren't the target anyway by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I want to see the terrorist group who is even slightly interested in attacking military ships. In the entire history of the world, I bet no person has ever changed their vote to be more sympathetic to someone else's cause, due to that someone-else attacking a military target. Attacking the military doesn't demoralize or make its civilian backers ask themselves hard questions. All it does is wake up the military.

    Any terrorist who buys one of these, is going to use it to sink a luxury liner or a freighter full of Toyotas.

    People say "Cole" but think about it: if those people attacked the Cole, were they really terrorists? Or were they just guerillas?

    Imagine if the 9/11 plot had only attacked the Pentagon. Would they have successfully turned the government against its citizens, without the emotional impact of TWC? Or would America told its government, "sucks your building got damaged, but if any of your congresscritters vote for this 'patriot' act, you're going to be out of work next year"? If the Pentagon had been the only target, then it wouldn't have been a terrorist attack. Same for ship-to-ship missiles: terrorists just aren't going to attack carriers. You have to attack something else, for anyone to call you a terrorist. Where are your innocent civilian victims? Where's the mindless fear?

  82. Re:This is nothing. Think of the Syrians. by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

    Israel doesn't need to test them. Most everyone belives they have them and that is good enough.

  83. Re:Some clarifications from an American naval offi by KlausBreuer · · Score: 2, Insightful

    >Apparently you're uniformed, anti-US, or outright stupid. As you're a European I'll vote "anti-US".

    Nope. While I find the US political activity (= warfare) idiotic, I consider the EU politicians to be just as moronic, so I'm not anti-US per se. After all, I did live there for a couple of years, and the people themselves are usually rather friendly.

    Seeing that I have excellent genes (50% of my extended family are doctors, the others scientists, with merely one manager) and a high-level job, I dare to believe that my intelligence is at least average - certainly not "outright stupid" ;)

    Uninformed, however, is always a possibility.
    I see your only argument here is against me saying that anti-missile tests usually failed. You claim that this is not the case with SM-3s, which have a hit-probability of around 80%. Now this 80% is the best test record from the marine - which is known for faking quite a few tests, and simplifying a lot of other tests.
    I'd think that a no-warnings test would have a hit percentage of around 50% - pretty darn good for taking down a missile, but certainly not enough (even 80% would be too low). Missiles are rather cheap, compared to aircraft carriers...

    If I misunderstood you, I do apologize. Your message seems a little, hm, off-the-cuff, and I am more used to argue with people giving me useful data.

    --
    Free PC version of ChipWits at http://www.breueronline.de/klaus/chipwits/
  84. Awesome! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I simply have GOT to get me one of these! Where do I sign?

  85. Engineer is credit to team! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bomb cart will not push self!

  86. Containers are pretty big... by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 1

    I'm reasonably sure you could fit a viable nuclear bomb in one, or a group of lesbian terrorist dwarves with stinger missiles, ready to down patriarchical planes for peace. So explain to me again how this is news?

    --
    Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
  87. Re:This is nothing. Think of the Syrians. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's not oversell the effectiveness of missile-delivered VX. You'd need railcars full of the stuff to blanket a city-sized area with a lethal dose (e.g. 50+ tons per square kilometer). The amount of VX you can put on a missile can maybe kill a few blocks and certainly panic the rest of the city, but it's nowhere near nuke-like in its lethal radius.

  88. Re:This is nothing. Think of the Syrians. by smellsofbikes · · Score: 1

    While they (mostly) don't admit it, the Israelis are known to have a few hundred nuclear weapons. No doubt they have hydrogen bombs. While they don't openly test, there was what was thought to be a nuclear test in the ocean off of South Africa a while back. Even if they don't test, Israel has no shortage of smart people, or computers capable of accurate numerical modeling.

    The Vela Incident on the Prince Edward Islands (the other ones) probably was a misfunction in a satellite that looked for nuclear tests, because a lot of people spent a lot of time looking for fallout or radioactivity and didn't find much. But if it was an actual test, it's more likely it was a South African device rather than one of Israel's. Israel appears to have had access to US weapon design information, so they can probably do a good job without needing tests -- and really, all they need is to appear to have nukes.

    --
    Nostalgia's not what it used to be.
  89. Re:Some clarifications from an American naval offi by rickb928 · · Score: 1

    You just made me think of something. While jamming of various kinds is effective, as GPS-guided weapons proliferate, then GPS jamming becomes critical. It wouldn't be too hard to jam GPS within at least a 30km radius, and jamming GPS over 200km would be challenging but possible.

    And we could devise jammers that allow *us* to continue to use GPS, but deny useful GPS to enemy weapons for at least a little while.

    You do need to accomodate the problem of an incoming missle having gotten good coordinates, a good GPS lock, and established a confident course to target. Carriers don't maneuver fast enough to foil that, and it would not be impossible to correct for course and speed. If the incoming missle is nuclear armed, well, the CEP need only be 2km? Sounds doable. So you need to jam GPS very early, maybe even before launch.

    The answers here include denying the enemy accurate (within 8km at least) position data for the asset, be it a carrier or a task group, possibly altering GPS data to divert the missile, or defending against it with the more conventional shoot-down options.

    Or maybe denying it terminal data, so hopefully it missed and flys by. Wow. GPS pull-off. That's interesting ECM. I got to patent that. What a cool way to drive geocachers crazy.

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
  90. Re:This is nothing. Think of the Syrians. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're believing stuff about WMDs that another country allegedly has, reading about it on a US government website ?!? Funny!

  91. Re:Some clarifications from an American naval offi by khallow · · Score: 1

    The thing that bothers me here is that if one anti-ship missile gets through, it can sink a carrier with a moderately lucky hit. These defense systems depend on no missiles getting through.

    I agree that the current covert missile system mentioned in the article isn't significant. A carrier group won't allow a merchant ship to get close enough to a carrier for such a missile to matter and the carrier can maneuver around any suspicious ships. And how is the merchant ship going to find out where the carrier is? The only real vulnerability is in mobility restricted waters, like harbors. There, you have cheaper ways to sneak up anti-ship missiles (eg, hide an Exocet in the trunk of a car).

    What I think will be carrier-killers (I'd actually say carrier group-killers) are drone swarms. I doubt a carrier group with near future technology could fend off a coordinated swarm of thousands of drones, each equipped with fire power sufficient to take out a ship or two.

  92. Re:Some clarifications from an American naval offi by Rich0 · · Score: 2, Informative

    I'm also thinking of that nasty little book in the 80s (I do apologize for not remembering the title right now) which took a long, hard look at the US and USSR weapon efficiency; the last combined NATO maneuver in the north sea showed all (all!) carriers being (simulated to be) sunk on the very first day.

    Well, you're talking about a war between equals in that case. The US carriers would obviously be vulnerable to the USSR back in the 80s, just like every other US or USSR capability of the day. All you're suggesting is that it is uncertain who would win WWIII, and I think most US military planners would agree with that. The only matchup that really comes close to US-vs-USSR today would be US-vs-the-world, and why would anybody want to even try that?

    An aircraft carrier these days is a major waste of space, and primarily used for top-class idio^H^H^H^Hpeople to brag^H^H^H^Hprotect our freedom.

    Carriers get lots of use today. Clearly you don't agree with how they're used, and many would agree with you. However, from a military perspective they clearly do get things done. Even if the only thing they were good at was bombing 3rd world nations without the consent of adjacent countries, that would be a capability that has some value.

    Ah, I see. Of course, you certainly need super-special radar to detect a target, right? Normal shipping radar is certainly not sufficient, right? And we cannot possibly hook up a new system to an existing radar - would be too cheap to build...

    Ordinary shipping radar is fine for locating a ship, if you can get in range (carrier groups of course wouldn't let you do that). In reality you'd need airborne or submarine radar to actually get close enough to spot a capital ship that is screened. Both of those would be considered threatening. You also need communications between the detection platform and the launch platform. Fire control radar isn't needed for a GPS-guided missile, although a working GPS system is (which of course the US and allies would disable in an actual shooting war). Inertial guidance actually works pretty well if you know the relative position of the launch platform and the target (which actually isn't easy to do without GPS if the target is located by a different platform).

    Which already is more or less how civilians are treated by the US Army in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    That's pretty-much how civilians have been treated by every army in every war in history. That's why the term "martial law" doesn't generally engender warm fuzzy feelings. To the army there is your squad, your chain of command, and everybody else...

    I'm not the biggest fan of every US policy in the last decade, but if you're concerned about dead civilians then that's something you think about BEFORE you go to war. The US army by any standard is at least as caring about non-combatants as any I'm aware of in history.

  93. Re:aircraft carriers have been death traps for a w by Lakitu · · Score: 1

    A broken link and a link to a planted news story for politics (a diesel submarine sneaking up on a carrier group?)

    Your last link is commented "Chinese subs turn back US fleet". Yes, if by "subs", you mean "Chicom bureaucrats". They were going to dock and refuel in Hong Kong for Thanksgiving, and were refused entry as part of the ongoing "we can push you around too you know" temper tantrums thrown by the Chinese government.

    yeah, those aircraft carriers are death traps.

  94. Re:This is nothing. Think of the Syrians. by rufey · · Score: 1

    Do you know the song Ninety Nine Red Balloons? The original German was Neun und Neunzig Luft Balon (SP?). I understand it was inspired by a wayward bundle of helium balloons that was mistaken by the Soviets as a missile launch.

    Not quite, but close. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/99_Luftballons

    One of Nena's band members saw balloons floating away at a Rolling Stones concert in the Allied sector of Berlin and thought about what would happen if/when they crossed into the airspace over the Soviet sector.

  95. Red Alert 2 by PGGreens · · Score: 1

    The commercial at 3:00 : Am I the only one who thought of Red Alert 2? Sadly, the answer is probably yes.

  96. Vaporware for the Military by EriktheGreen · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm sure it's a nice conversation starter for the military types around here, but note that even this nearly information free news article is vague on the status of this "in the concept stage" weapon system. Sure, they're marketing it, but that's how corporations raise money and make themselves look worth investing in, or attract attention to their other products, or just try to stave off the bank closing them down.

    Essentially this article looks like some marketer dreamed up a cool-sounding product, convinced management to make a sales video, and used it to generate some interest in his/her company. Then a clueless reporter grabbed it, looked up potential effects of "cruise missiles", combined it with an out of context quote from someone at Jane's for expert effect, and spewed it out onto the net with a healthy dose of fear mongering about how it could be sold to terrorists.

    Let's review...There's no evidence that such a weapon exists other than marketing drivel. There's no evidence that the company claiming to produce it has the capability to do so. If they do produce it, odds are good it won't meet the "looks good on paper but hard to actually do" marketing goals and be a viable threat to anyone. Once it exists, the Russians are not likely to allow it to be sold any more than most other non US countries with Naval forces.

    So, this article should only generate interest if you A) Accept the premise that a relatively unknown company in Russia can suddenly produce an advanced weapon system like this B) Accept that once produced, the weapon will somehow be more of a threat than existing weapon systems, many of which are probably more advanced and C) Are ignorant enough to think that because the Russian government is not made of Americans that they'll sell weapons which could potentially threaten them to terrorist groups just so they can make the small amount of cash that would provide (a few million dollars... most terrorists aren't rich, although OBL is) and in exchange for which they earn the enmity and political consequences of supplying terrorists.

    It's specifically targeted at sloppy thinking westerners who have a stereotypical view of other world countries. How plausible would the article be if it talked about a smaller American company in eg. California producing the same product? You'd automatically think that terrorists wouldn't get it because the US Military would buy it, or the US Government would prevent export of it, or you'd choose not to believe the hype about it.. after all, with billions of dollars more in funding larger companies haven't produced a missile system superior to existing Exocet and Harpoon series weapons. Yet if the mythical company is placed in Russia, suddenly people swallow this completely... because everyone knows Russians are genius weapon designers who are all desperately poor and willing to sell their products to everyone regardless of who they threaten, with the support and assistance of the corrupt Russian government, right?

    This is NOT NEWS. It's barely even marketing material.

    But enjoy the testosterone pumped discussion of weapons and ships.

    1. Re:Vaporware for the Military by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      did you stop typing yet?

  97. Stark Industries? by kheldan · · Score: 1

    Nice video. Especially liked the Pirates of the Carribbean music they chose, very appropriate.
    Nice concept, too. Aside from the obvious fear-mongering about how terrorists could acquire these, how about such a thing blurring the line between military targets and civilian targets? By design, these can hide amongst otherwise innocuous-looking non-combatives -- if your leadership doesn't really care much for putting non-combatants at risk -- and the general public wouldn't even know they were standing right next to a mobile missile-launching platform. Could be nasty.

    --
    Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
  98. No one cares about the Chinese C802? by wwphx · · Score: 1

    Asymmetrical warfare is tough, and when you have a country like China churning out C-802's, you can have some very unpleasant situations. Apparently it's been operational for over 20 years. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C-802

    --
    When you sympathize with stupidity, you start thinking like an idiot.
  99. Geneva Convention? by nyargh · · Score: 1

    Does anyone else see the problem of hiding these weapons amongst civilians? This will just get more non-combatants killed, and likely over nothing.

    If there were any sort of longshoreman or shipping union with any sense of self preservation, they would refuse to handle this cargo.

  100. Boarding US destroyers by zenopus · · Score: 1

    And you are assuming they did not intend to get caught. In a western prison they get regular meals...

  101. I call bullshit on the "terrorist 'threat'". by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

    Those countries have as little interest in crazy people bombing their ships & co, as we have.
    But that does’t make good propaganda, does it?

    Why does this “article” make one feel the urge to exclaim “Sieg Heil America!“? ;)
    I wonder how this article would have read, if it were written by a peace-loving Iraqi, about a US weapon system...

    Can we just stop the “us vs. them” mentality? That’s so 60s. And we know what that resulted in... Hippies! ;)
    If you want an “us vs. them“, then how about a “us (the people) vs. them (the crazy evil people, whether they are official [“governments”] or unofficial [“terrorists”] small groups)”!

    --
    Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
  102. Re:Some clarifications from an American naval offi by jeff4747 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I remember quite clearly the fleet showing up at Lybia quite a few years ago. The carriers had aircraft which were used exclusively to protect - the carriers. And bombing was done by aircraft which flew straight from the the US via the UK.

    The fact that F-111s were used against Libya doesn't mean naval aircraft would have proven ineffective. What it does prove is F-111s carry a lot more bombs a much longer distance than carrier aircraft, which isn't exactly earth-shattering.

    I'm also thinking of that nasty little book in the 80s (I do apologize for not remembering the title right now) which took a long, hard look at the US and USSR weapon efficiency; the last combined NATO maneuver in the north sea showed all (all!) carriers being (simulated to be) sunk on the very first day.

    Because all R&D and military planning stopped in the 80's.

    Really. I'm sure all ships will be able to easily shoot these things down.

    You, and TFA, were specifically talking about CVNs and their surrounding battle group, not all ships. A fishing vessel indeed has no chance, but that's not what you were just talking about.

    After all, the anti-missile tests went smashingly well, right? Right?

    Intercepting an ICBM (~Mach 20) is a tad more difficult than intercepting even the fastest anti-ship missile (~Mach 4). There's all sorts of tests where that was done successfully, but since that's not as embarrassing as you'd like.

    Normal shipping radar is certainly not sufficient, right?

    Not if you want to kill a carrier. The range on normal shipping radar isn't terribly long, since you only need it for navigation. You are not going to get your disguised cargo vessel that close to a carrier.

  103. Why is this a surprise to anyone? by BillDaCatt · · Score: 1

    I find it far more shocking that this is something new! I thought of this several years ago and I figured this kind of hardware was already relatively widespread. Isn't 'hiding in plain sight' a proven military strategy? And if this is truly the first instance of a rig like this then our military engineers need to play with Transformers© toys a little more often.

  104. Commercially Made Weapons for terrorists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What the fuck man

    I'm amazed at how many ways we can kill each other.

  105. Nuclear cruise missiles by sjbe · · Score: 1

    I really hope a single cruise missile can't take out an aircraft carrier...

    This has been possible for ages since there have been nuclear cruise missiles. I believe there are some conventional missiles that can do the job as well.

    They or their escorts should have the defenses to evade or destroy most missile types.

    Carrier battle groups as I understand it have lots of missile defense systems. There are questions regarding their ongoing viability but such debates (sensibly) exist for many weapons systems. Unless some major military power gets into a shooting war with another major military power (US, Russia, China, India, France, Britain, etc) we are unlikely to find out the answer to how vulnerable carriers are to cruise missiles.

  106. Modified version of existing launch system. by Animats · · Score: 1

    This is a modified version of the Iskander launcher. It's normally mounted on a military truck chassis, but the container version works the same way. No big deal there. Mounting the thing on a civilian truck chassis makes sense; you can shoot and scoot, and be somewhere else when the counterfire arrives. THe rail and ship versions aren't as useful.

    The cruise missile is the important part. This launcher is set up for an unusually small-diameter missile. It's not clear if that missile is in production, or if it has enough range to be useful. There was supposedly a presentation about that missile at DIMDEX-2010, an arms show in Doha last month. But it's not clear what it's capabilities are.

    Cruise missiles, after all, have been around since the V-1 "buzz bomb" of WWII. It's surprising that they haven't been used more.

    1. Re:Modified version of existing launch system. by Animats · · Score: 1

      After watching the video, it's clear that the damage from a hit is way overstated. This is a very small missile, yet it's shown taking out an entire tank platoon with an area strike. Not going to happen against armor.

  107. one misile taking out a CAV? by mjwalshe · · Score: 1

    You might make a nasty hole IF! It got through the screen of point defence ships that normally surround a CVA and the last ditch phalanx systems. However, Carriers are big beasts and its very unlikely that a single cruise missile would take out a carrier and one would hope that the lessons from the Falkland’s had been learnt and that non flammable wiring is used.

    They don’t say how you would acquire the target do it in visual range and you have presumably now given both misiles and your position away and will be getting a return visit from any number of nasty munitions.

    Attempting to do a BVR engagement what do you use to acquire the target and feed the solution to the ship that’s carrying the cruise misiles? Painting a Carrier with radar is going to set all sorts of alarm bells ringing and will get you a HARM Missile.

    Also The Russians don’t sell all the good toys to their “friends” Sadam only got Customer T72’s

  108. nice 1 Russia by Latinhypercube · · Score: 0

    Russia, as always, leading the way at destroying life to make a buck. Next they will be hiding mines in kids toys.

  109. This is nothing. Think of the Israelis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Israel has enough nuclear warheads to wipe out the entire middle east. You sir, are a fucking retard.

  110. three words.... by soulhakr · · Score: 1

    Metal Gear Solid

  111. Re:Some clarifications from an American naval offi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The aircraft carriers can take care of themselves, this isn't the first threat they've faced & it won't be the last.

    I'd be a bit more concerned that with a 200 mile range, a transiting container ship 50 miles off shore can take its pick of major installations on either the east or west coast.

  112. Re:Some clarifications from an American naval offi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm sure US navy (by far the most powerful in the world) is capable of demonstrating in drill how to destroy any number of incoming missiles. Problem comes when intelligence fails to give advance warning of the potential attack. There is no constant readiness to react to this kind of advanced threats, so it all boils down to the way ordinary humans (soldiers) react to the unexpected situation. In those situations there are no certain outcomes.

    The clearest example was in 9/11 where second airplane hit about hour after the first one. US Air Force would be capable of taking down or disable an regular airliner, but in the unexpected situation that capability was not used.

  113. wow - contains can transport hardware! by darkeye · · Score: 1

    like how is this news? containers are capable of transporting physical hardware, including military hardware.

    how would have thought of that?

  114. What a lack of imagination by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Those cargo containers on cargo ships are standard sizes usually.

    What this means is that any train, or semi truck in the world that can haul a cargo container can haul these.

    If they make them sufficiently sealed and disguised, there is no way you can detect them short of opening every one of them and unloading and fake cargo to another container.

    I'd say it is the perfect way to keep a large stockpile lying around, and moving about a country without ever letting your enemies know where all of them are.

    Imagine, a terrorist org managing to get 1 of these into the continental US and onto a semi truck. then driven almost anywhere, and fired at a completely unsuspecting target. Our defenses aren't everywhere.

  115. US Armed Forces Reputation by Kupfernigk · · Score: 1

    I guess this is a very junior officer, and that more senior ones know very much better.

    --
    From scarped cliff or quarried stone she cries "A thousand types are gone, I care for nothing, no not one."
  116. Carriers are obsolete anyway. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anyone who still thinks that big ships and carrier groups are a good idea is still living in the Cold War. The arrogance of of the military-industrial complex has forced Western nations to spend billions of dollars on completely useless and obsolete weapons.

    For decades, a small missile boat has been capable of taking out the biggest carrier and escorts. There is no defense against ballistic missiles - which are entirely guided by the laws of physics for their final approach as large chunks of metal traveling at several times the speed of sound. Systems like Goalkeeper are completely useless defending against anything but the most trivial of missiles.

    The only terrible thing about this weapon is that it shows how much money we've wasted on carriers - and that hundreds of sailors will die before the military understands that they have obsolete weapons.

  117. The answer to this.. by MaerD · · Score: 1

    The answer to this will simply be a tactic used in the first and second world war: Unrestricted submarine warfare. If you are a "commercial" ship in an open conflict zone, you will end up sunk before you can become a threat.

    --
    I put on my robe and wizard hat..
  118. First-strike protection by mbessey · · Score: 1

    >Of course, it does give us some protection should we decide to use nukes first

    And that is exactly the objection the USSR had (and now the Russians have) against missile-defense systems. It would take a hellaciously-expensive system to take out all of the Russian stockpile if it were launched at one time, but after a US first-strike, there would be a lot fewer missiles left, and it'd be relatively easy to pick off the retaliatory strike.

    Once the US has built a system that protects it from retaliation, it becomes much easier for someone in Washington to contemplate using nukes on the Russians.

  119. Ban on military robots by Max_W · · Score: 1

    Such a rocket is sort of a robot. I can envision a robot-fish, which reaches a shore and explodes right on the city beach.

    Using robots as a weapon should be banned or limited by agreements.

  120. Re:Some clarifications from an American naval offi by Dails · · Score: 1

    And even that's not perfectly effective, what with several other countries developing their own GPS systems:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GLONASS
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beidou_navigation_system

    There are other ways to deal with that, but all those tactics are classified.

  121. Re:TMI by Dails · · Score: 1

    This is all unclassified information. It shouldn't bother you, unless you think google sinks ships.

    Which it doesn't.

  122. Re:Some clarifications from an American naval offi by DrFalkyn · · Score: 1

    5. A few people mentioned the ethical issue of arming merchant ships. This is always considered in warplans, from low to very high scale. Bottom line is that it's a dumb idea that will get you one free shot and then cost you your whole merchant fleet.

    That only applies if your enemy is not going to target your merchant fleet, which it often will. As other posters have mentioned, the British did this all the time in WWI and WWII. They were called Q ships and were fairly effective against the German Uboats

  123. China's already testing "carrier-killer" missile by Anonymous+Bullard · · Score: 1

    While the US and Soviet-Russia agreed not to develop ASBMs (remember MAD?), the Chinese "communist" regime has been at for over a decade and recently they've been confident enough in their long-range supersonic "carrier-killer" that it's been showcased in the regime's jingoistic TV programming as destroying an Aegis-equipped enemy.

    Wired has a feature on this game-changing Chinese ASBM titled China Testing Ballistic Missile 'Carrier-Killer'. There's a link to a delightful youtube cartoon featuring these new Chinese ASBMs wiping out unsuspecting big-noses' aircraft carrier...

    To those claiming that the CCP regime doesn't harbour imperialistic ambitions, just ask Tibetans, Uighurs, Mongols, the Zhuang, the countless already-assimilated peoples and pretty much all neighbours of this current "greater China" who've made acquintance with advancing PLA troops...

    --

    Should invading one's peaceful neighbours be opposed, or rewarded with trade deals?

  124. Re:Some clarifications from an American naval offi by rickb928 · · Score: 1

    My methods would also jam them effectively.

    With a little engineering, a pull-off for other systems would not be too hard to implement. The specs have to be somewhat public to manufacture receivers, so there are no secrets. And with competing GPS, we can just shut them down in theater and use our own.

    Now how to prevent jamming by others. Ah. My methods are not terribly sophisticated. Remember, commercial GPS doesn't even like to be indoors. It doesn't take much to defeat it.

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
  125. Re:This is nothing. Think of the Syrians. by CyprusBlue113 · · Score: 1

    Comparing nerve weapons and nuclear weapons is apples and oranges for specificity. Nerve weapons target the population specifically, nuclear weapons are really big bombs, mostly good for decimation, but not killing the population, sure they do it well enough, but the majority of the damage is structural, and the radiation is mostly an unwanted side effect, not a directly desired effect except to make a statement.

    With VX you can walk in and plant your flag in the middle of a still functional manufacturing district or city, with nuclear weapons, sure you burned the hell out of the populace that survived, but the power is in the big ruin you've just turned the local 5-50 mile radius into and you just cant wait to see their reactions when their city is a crater.

    --
    a handful of selfish greedy people are no match for millions of selfish, greedy people -u4ya
  126. Popup by FishTankX · · Score: 1

    I'd be entertained to find out if waterproof versions of this container with a variable buoyancy air bladder could be dumped out at sea, then as soon as the enemy boats get close, BAM, pop up and fire. Sort of like a new kind of mine, only it carries cruise missiles.

  127. Re:Some clarifications from an American naval offi by Dails · · Score: 1

    Well, let's discuss.

    The carriers had aircraft which were used exclusively to protect - the carriers. And bombing was done by aircraft which flew straight from the the US via the UK.

    This doesn't make sense. Carriers showed up, launched all their aircraft to protect themselves, then let long range bombers do all the work? Why even send the carriers? You should read into the Libya conflict some more. Carriers accompllished a lot that long range bombers could not, the easiest example being that carriers are moving airstrips that can move around airspace restrictions.

    the anti-missile tests went smashingly well, right? Right?

    What tests are you talking about? Cite your source so I know what you mean.

    we cannot possibly hook up a new system to an existing radar

    Sure you can. Lots of weapon systems do this. Their cheap to build, easy to use, and simple to install. They're also trivial in terms of defending against them. People don't use commercial navigation radar for fire control because it's not designed for that. A Wikipedia-level understanding of PRF, beamwidth, and net cycle time should show you why radars are either cheap OR good for fire control, not both.

    our rules are idiots and morons, this has happened in practically every war since Egypt was founded...

    That's the nature of war. As I said, it's taken into account in warplans. Military planners are very careful to learn from history. Usually.

    Which already is more or less how civilians are treated by the US Army in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    Whether you know it or not, this is a separate issue, and probably a troll/anti-US shot. I'll leave it alone.

  128. Why's Clone libelling others here? Geek Angst! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    See subject above, and see how Clone tried to libel others here on this website via his signature and was proven wrong here http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1632188&cid=31999288 .

    Funny how that shut clone53421, eh?

    Clone53421 is nothing more than a little out of work bum who can't get a job because he wastes his life on slashdot here libelling others (which is why he won't get a job, because his kind do this rampantly, and this is why suits against them are not worth it - nothing to be had in suing a "ne'er do well" like Clone53421 is why).

    Why is Clone libelling apk? Ok:

    ----

    Mozilla Firefox DOM Node Moving Use-After-Free Vulnerability:

    http://secunia.com/advisories/39175/

    Release Date 2010-04-02
    Last Update 2010-04-06

    ----

    Clone lost his behind in a debate with apk on FireFox http://news.slashdot.org/story/10/03/23/0415208/Germany-Warns-Against-Using-Firefox (when Germany warned vs. its usage, as they had for IE previous to that) here, regarding FireFox 3.6, which then forced a reissue of FireFox 3.6.2 (not 2.6.2 as Clone erroneously noted it there as also), but during the timeframe of that debate (03/23/2010 - 04/05/2010)?

    LOL: FireFox turned up YET ANOTHER SECURITY BUG in their DOM during that debate's timeframe (see between dashed lines above), which forced an issuance of FireFox 3.6.3 on 04/06/2010!

    Also, when that news of a NEW FIREFOX BUG came out?

    Well - Slashdot's moderators "strangely closed that thread on Germany early" (NOT) in less than 2 weeks...

    This libel of apk only showed Clone's poor defense of FireFox (inclusive of citing very old 3-5 versions out of date data on Opera bugs no less, version 9.52 & 10.52 just released today no less in final form) as erroneous, and that Clone is a sore loser.

    Clone, face it: Opera's FASTER than FireFox in HTML parse & process work, plus javascript work too, and Opera shows less bugs over time than FireFox does, consistently no less... whether or not you can handle that or not, doesn't matter - you LOSE, as per usual.

    Still - They're ALL pretty good browsers though, but this "little tidbit" from a "hacker-cracker/security researcher" MAY "shed a bit of light on the subject" of which browser to use (Because Opera's the overall FASTEST currently & especially on the MOST USED OS PLATFORM THERE IS ON PCs/Servers in Windows, & consistently over time, @ HTML parse work, & again has re-seized its crown in Javascript processing speeds as well, vs. FireFox currently (which typically, Opera led FF there as well over time MOST of the time too)):

    ----

    http://www.theregister.co.uk/2010/03/25/pwn2own_2010_day_one/

    "The problem Microsoft has is they have a big market share, said Vreugdenhil, the hacker who attacked IE. "I use Opera, but that's basically because it has a tiny market share and as far as I know, nobody is really interested in creating a drive-by download for opera. The web at the moment is pretty scary, actually."

    ----

    Nuff said, on the subject of which browser even the "hacker/cracker/security researcher types" use, & why (security-by-obscurity, @ THE VERY LEAST).

    All the libelling of others online will not help you, once people see how you react in your "geek angst" when you lose poorly due to bogus libelling of others on this website, which makes you appear in your true nature of being a libellous online scumbag weasel.

  129. GPS based for enemy's? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The US has the ability to shut off GPS use for all but the military rendering this misle useless.

  130. Paranoid and delusional. by mjwx · · Score: 1

    Some people say I'm paranoid. Such people just aren't paying attention.

    You sir, are both.

    War is an extension of politics, no-one would even dare using gas these days as everyone would turn on them. Not like Saddam, if the Syrians used gas everyone would invade and no one would say a word. The Russians and the Americans would both run in hammer and tongs without a second thought. The Chinese would stay completely silent and Europe would even join in. Using gas against another country is suicide.

    Secondly gas degrades. The active components of some chemical weapons can degrade in less then a few weeks. Most last a few months to a few years. Sarin has a shelf life of 18 months if there are no impurities in the manufacturing process. Not to mention that they are incredibly hard to manufacture and quality varies wildly.

    This is to say, if they have chemical weapons at all. They might say they do to stave off invasion, especially after Saddam said the opposite (and was right, no unlisted chemical weapons were found) and was invaded.

    --
    Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
  131. Re:This is nothing. Think of the Syrians. by alabandit · · Score: 1

    hi I am a south african - these nuclear test off south africa... how far back. I could see something like this missing the evening news. the official stance is that we have dis armed all nuclear weapons. (which is only relevant in comparison to how long it takes to replaces them...) thanks man

    --
    "You are still innocent until proven guilty. What's changed is what they do to innocent people." by notnAP (846325)
  132. google doesn't sink warships? by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    give them a few years, they will ;-P

    besides, the way the chinese focus on hacking google, it seems the chinese think google sinks something!

    but even without that red herring, there's all you navy thinkers should be thinking about, china:

    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/24/world/asia/24navy.html

    american navy, prepare: zheng he has come to sink you

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zheng_He

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  133. Good write-up on the subject by durval · · Score: 1
    --
    Best Regards,
    Durval Menezes.
    I have never met a computer that didn't like me.