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Missile Defense's Real Enemy: Math

An anonymous reader writes "Since the 1960s until the present day, missile defense has been a hot topic. Ronald Reagan popularized the concept with his 'Star Wars' multi-billion dollar plan to use lasers and various technologies to destroy incoming Soviet warheads. Today, America has a sizable sea-based system, dubbed AEGIS, that has been deployed to defend against rogue states missiles, both conventional and nuclear. However, there is one thing missile defense can't beat: simple math. 'Think about it — could we someday see a scenario where American forces at sea with a fixed amount of defensive countermeasures face an enemy with large numbers of cruise and ballistic weapons that have the potential to simply overwhelm them? Could a potential adversary fire off older weapons that are not as accurate (PDF), causing a defensive response that exhausts all available missile interceptors so more advanced weapons with better accuracy can deliver the crushing blow? Simply put: does math win?'"

589 comments

  1. americans world math avg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    32nd

    ya that might be a problem OH LOOK how many is that in the sky....

    1. Re: americans world math avg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      yes, because donkey.

    2. Re:americans world math avg by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Won't be a problem as long as America outspends the rest of the world 4 to 1 on military budget.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  2. Simply put... No. by beelsebob · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Of course there's an element of "the country with the largest army wins" (for a given definition of win), but the idea that these systems are stupid enough to shoot down missiles that aren't going to hit targets is laughable.

    1. Re:Simply put... No. by SuricouRaven · · Score: 5, Informative

      Israel's defense system has a simple solution. It's programmed with a map showing which areas are populated, and which expendable. On detecting an incoming rocket*, it estimates the impact site and only fires an interceptor if it is heading for somewhere populated.

      *The ones Israel is being showered with at the moment are numerous, but very cheap and simple - barely even guided, just enough to hit the right city, sometimes.

    2. Re:Simply put... No. by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      So then make sure they will hit targets.
      You can save money by only making every Nth have a warhead instead of a brick. So long as the mass is the same the interceptor system cannot tell them apart.

    3. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Seriously. Israel's "Iron Dome" system already calculates the trajectory of an incoming missile so that it doesn't waste interceptors on something that's just going to hit a vacant lot in the desert.

      2/10 trolling, Soulskill.

    4. Re:Simply put... No. by DarkOx · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Right but its not as if those older less accurate weapons are not accurate enough to resulted in an estimated impact zone that is not "expendable". At the end of the day you have to have more interceptors than I have missiles. I can barrage you with cheap munitions that are designed to just rain down over a general area, like you know a city, with just some basic magnetic guidance to keep it on a strait course. Sure maybe these things don't fly fast enough and have no hope of evading your interceptors; but they do consume them. Once your out of expensive weapons I can bring out my good ones to use on your high value targets.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    5. Re:Simply put... No. by ByOhTek · · Score: 2

      Your asterisked issue is the whole point.

      Set a missile to appear that it will land someplace harmless, and once it's over land, alter it's course. Costal cities are probably safe, but anything too far inland is will make a nice target, save the costal shots for the end of the barrage.

      The author has a point. Although it's only damage mitigation, rather than prevention at that point, a mainland missile defense system would probably be a good backup.

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    6. Re:Simply put... No. by craigminah · · Score: 1

      You think the Iron Dome measures mass or volume? Is it even possible to accurately measure mass of a body in flight froma distance?

    7. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can calculate/guess at the trajectory when the missiles do not have a guidance system. For ones that do, they could change their flight path and it would be much hard to predict where they are intending to go.

    8. Re:Simply put... No. by Artraze · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Indeed. This is an incredibly stupid article and the implication that this is some inherit law of math is outrageous... Somehow the missile defense installations have a fixed amount of resources but the enemy doesn't? Come on!

      One of the most basic rules of warfare is this: a strategy if a winner if it costs them more than it costs you. A missile defense is still a valuable tool if interceptors cost less than what they're intercepting regardless of whether or not what they're intercepting would do any damage because the enemy still had to build the thing. And from the same perspective if an enemy is going to build a missile why not just put a ton of TNT on it and point it in the general direction of a city? Even without guidance (which would add meaningful cost, unlike the TNT) a city is a big enough target that it presents a credible threat anyways and so needs to be intercepted.

      Arg, this is just ridiculous!

    9. Re:Simply put... No. by SJHillman · · Score: 1

      It's also been shown that Israel's defense system would not scale well to large countries, such as the United States. It's a start, but still a long way from a solution.

    10. Re:Simply put... No. by Nutria · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Set a missile to appear that it will land someplace harmless, and once it's over land, alter it's course.

      Then it's not a cheap, mass produced expendable missile anymore.

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    11. Re:Simply put... No. by Jawnn · · Score: 1

      Of course there's an element of "the country with the largest army wins" (for a given definition of win), but the idea that these systems are stupid enough to shoot down missiles that aren't going to hit targets is laughable.

      Not at all. The "will it hit it's target" question is not one that can be easily answered in enough cases that the math does not matter. All I have to do is get close and I look like enough of a threat to draw a response. It's possible that defensive systems could collect enough information (flight profile, radar signature, exhaust temp) from a possible threat to make guess on whether or not it's worth shooting at, but that's a losing game in the end. All the adversary has to do is make his crowd pleasers look enough like the decoys.

    12. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Gyros are WWII tech and timers are cheap ever since quartz.

    13. Re:Simply put... No. by war4peace · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I would honestly be more worried about conflict escalation ladder here. If an enemy launches 10K small missiles that have the potential to kill 100K citizens, the US might escalate the conflict and fight back by launching 50 nuclear warheads which would kill 50M enemy citizens, and so on and so forth, until nobody's left to tell the tale.

      --
      ...gis sdrawkcab (usually not responding to ACs; don't bother posting as AC)
    14. Re:Simply put... No. by coldsalmon · · Score: 2

      Exactly: this applies to any military engagement, no matter what the technology. See, for example, Napoleon and Hitler's invasions of Russia.

    15. Re:Simply put... No. by khallow · · Score: 2

      Such gimmicks cut into the capability and reliability of the missile and make it cost more. One of the things to remember about a working defense system is that the strategies for overwhelming the system are costly and complicated in themselves. Currently, those costs are less than building a working system capable of withstanding that degree of overwhelming. That's the "math" of which the article speaks.

      But it's worth considering that the tactical advantage might not stay there. For example, it may turn out that in a few decades a relatively cheap laser system can provide substantial defense against a number of missiles and decoys. In that case, the game changes.

    16. Re:Simply put... No. by ByOhTek · · Score: 2

      It's less cheap, but it can still be fairly cheap.

      Alt, you could have a bunch of cheap mass produced missiles that appear like the nicer missiles until the nicer missiles change directions and the cheap missiles don't. Increase the design cost a few bucks with placing weights at the right spots to give it a sufficiently similar flight profile until guidance systems turn on, maybe some cheap electronics to appear like it's running telemetry systems (not bother with the processing/nav bits, just radar pulses like everyone else, maybe a cheap GPR)...

      The electronics and weights will still be cheap compared to the cost of things like fuel, and machining of the hull parts, I suspect. So your really cheap missiles are now slightly less cheap, and act as decoys so your nice missiles don't get shot down.

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    17. Re:Simply put... No. by Chrontius · · Score: 1

      Occasionally, not guided at all. I think the Quassim rockets are entirely aimed by hand, unguided, and don't need to be. As long as the rocket lands within 20 miles of a target region...

    18. Re:Simply put... No. by Dahamma · · Score: 2

      Set a missile to appear that it will land someplace harmless, and once it's over land, alter it's course. Costal cities are probably safe, but anything too far inland is will make a nice target, save the costal shots for the end of the barrage.

      I'd argue the reverse there. Any missile with enough range to hit inland cities is not going to be that cheap.

    19. Re:Simply put... No. by X0563511 · · Score: 2

      Missiles with that capability are expensive and heavy.

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    20. Re:Simply put... No. by Joce640k · · Score: 1

      the idea that these systems are stupid enough to shoot down missiles that aren't going to hit targets is laughable.

      For ballistic missiles, sure.

      If it's got an engine though, you have no idea where they're headed.

      --
      No sig today...
    21. Re:Simply put... No. by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      It doesn't have to be a current implementation like Iron Dome...

      Maybe it could measure radiation. While I'd imagine nuclear warheads are somewhat shielded they must give off some radiation. If scientists/engineers can build a comprehensive missile defense system and experiments to detect single cosmic rays, neutrinos, etc it's not too far fetched to imagine a detector that can figure out the biggest threats this way.

      Actually, I'm wondering if a system could be designed to detect the mass of ballistic objects based on minute changes in velocity from bouncing particles off of them? Or how about a gravitational wave detector? (hey, we are talking "Star Wars Defense" here... ;)

    22. Re:Simply put... No. by Dins · · Score: 4, Insightful

      At the end of the day you have to have more interceptors than I have missiles.

      Not if my interceptors are laser or other energy weapon based. Think Missile Command (loved that game at the time...) Sure we may be a ways away from that now, or I should say as far as the *public* knows we may be a ways away from that, but we'll get there...

    23. Re:Simply put... No. by 0123456 · · Score: 0

      Then it's not a cheap, mass produced expendable missile anymore.

      Because adding a GPS, an ARM chip and some steerable fins makes it really, really expensive.

    24. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You nailed it.

      Not a great illustration, but here goes. In the second world war, Britain gained air superiority over Europe. The only way Germany could continue to attack the UK was with cruise missiles (V1), these could be intercepted or shot down, not every time but it was an additional burden on the defensive forces to mount this tactical defence.

      When Germany began launching the V2 there was no tactical defence, all Britain could do was go after the factories that were building these things with what amounted to a Strategic defence.

      Germany may have prevailed if they could have built enough, but the UK put more aircraft over the target. relatively cheap aircraft won the day over an expensive weapons system.

      The numbers matter. Weight of numbers really matters.

    25. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I remember this article about naval wargame simulations

      http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/12/washington/12navy.html?_r=0
      The opposing force (simulated Iranian/Iraqi hybrid) used small speed boats to devastate the American forces.

      A missile defence system can be overwhelmed similarly by cheap systems. There is a new drone era that will herald cheap air warfare and using a $12M missile to shoot down a $150k drone isn't a good use of resources, especially when you've only got 100 missiles vs 500 drones.

    26. Re:Simply put... No. by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      One of the most basic rules of warfare is this: a strategy if a winner if it costs them more than it costs you.

      Or if you have more available resources to spend than they do. That's how the Cold War was won. Or "won", I suppose, as the US may just take longer to die from crippling debt...

    27. Re:Simply put... No. by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      The US Military is Huge. A single US carrier group has more military might then most countries. So it would take huge resources to overpower a Carrier group, can they win... Sure, but that battle will cost them a lot, then the US will fight back, with our collective numbers.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    28. Re:Simply put... No. by Nutria · · Score: 1

      Because adding a GPS, an ARM chip and some steerable fins makes it really, really expensive.

      If it's soooooo simple, I'm sure there's a arse-load of countries that would love to buy your dirt-cheap programmable missiles.

      OTOH, something tells me it's not that simple. Otherwise, some cleaver Russian would have already done it.

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    29. Re:Simply put... No. by 0123456 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I remember reading a possibly apocryphal tale about different attitudes to deploying decoys on nuclear missiles in the Cold War; supposedly the US military went to a great deal of trouble building decoys that looked like nuclear warheads, whereas the British saved a lot of money by making the warheads look like decoys.

      Make your smart missiles look like dumb missiles until they're too close to engage, and the job is done.

    30. Re:Simply put... No. by dywolf · · Score: 1

      Ballistic missles do not change course.
      Hence the "ballistic".

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    31. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      An interceptor should cost more than an attacking missile, anyway I agree that the matter is probably more complex the scenario of a fairly big army against another one.

    32. Re:Simply put... No. by default+luser · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I can barrage you with cheap munitions that are designed to just rain down over a general area, like you know a city, with just some basic magnetic guidance to keep it on a strait course.

      Once your out of expensive weapons I can bring out my good ones to use on your high value targets.

      Okay, this is how this scenario really works:

      Assuming you have enough "cheap" munitions in a coordinated attack designed to overwhelm interception defenses, the attacker would require several strongpoints with lots of weapons (no way you could ransomly distribute that level of coordinated attack with enough munitions to overwhelm defenses).

      The defender would have a firing solution on every strongpoint in seconds, and would lob off artillery and/or their own rockets and/or air strikes. Your coordinated attack designed to overwhelm defenses is cut-short by a conventional counterstrike before it has the time to do so.

      The reason they build desenses like these to handle a cerain number of projectiles is because coordinated attackers make for easy targets. You typically see rebels taking pot-shots in smaller numbers where they can quickly disappear, and enemies in the next country over have known-quantities of ballistic missiles.

      --

      Man is the animal that laughs.
      And occasionally whores for Karma.

    33. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, they cost between $500,000 USD and 1.5 million USD and are called cruise missiles.

    34. Re:Simply put... No. by dywolf · · Score: 5, Insightful

      For a ballistic missle, yes. That's why its a ballistic missle.
      They arent steered. They are aimed. They go where pointed and no where else.

      Once again, certain individuals prove they are speaking without knowledge of the subject at hand.
      The author also proves lack of knowledge by talking about ballistic missile threats to ships at sea. That is essentially a non-issue.

      Guided missiles are a whole nother beast to start with, for which we already have close in defense systems, and even then that's only a last resort. The best way to stop a guided munition is to never let it get launched in the first place. IE, take out hte plane or ship that tries to launch it. The number of attackers required to overwhelm the close in defense systems in such a scenario is so large that it is simply, again, a non-issue. They would never get the chance to even launch in such numbers.

      The entire article and half the poeople posting are completely clueless.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    35. Re:Simply put... No. by plover · · Score: 1

      It doesn't require an engine for guidance control. Aerodynamic changes (fins) would allow a flying missile to re-target itself.

      --
      John
    36. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know real war is not like a video game. Coming up with an answer to a new threat is not as easy as clicking a research button. So the adversary cannot just make his decoys look like the real thing 5 minutes after the other side comes up with a way to distinguish them. It can take months or years to re-develop the missiles. And the other side is always advancing as well. Then there is espionage on top of all this.

      Should the British have thrown up there arms and said "oh well" when the Nazi's started hitting them with missiles. I mean Hitler could have just overwhelmed their ability to intercept the missiles with planes. Right?

      Point defense is a worthy technology to pursue, but in any conflict with an enemy who has similar research, development, and manufacturing resources there is never going to be a time when one side is able to overwhelmingly technologically out advance the other. At no time will one side be completely safe from the others attacks. Or in other words, war is a bloody affair and people will be dieing on both sides.

    37. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To the computer it looks like the hundreds of cheap mass produced missiles you just launched, though.

    38. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What defines as a "target"? 1, 10, 1000, 1m people? 1, 10, 1000, 1m dollars in property damage with no loss of life?

      When do you adjust from finding not 1 person as an acceptable loss and start only worrying about if its 10, 100, or 1000's?

    39. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.gizmodo.com.au/2012/08/to-turn-dumb-warheads-into-smart-missiles-just-add-lasers/
      >The APKWS is designed to make the $US10,000 Hydra do more than a conventional 70mm rocket can without costing taxpayers $US70,000 a pop, as Hellfires do.

      http://www.interestingprojects.com/cruisemissile/
      A DIY Cruise Missile Watch me build one for under $5,000
      >In 2003, Bruce Simpson shook the US and NZ Governments when he claimed he could build a simple but effective cruise missile for under US$5,000.

    40. Re:Simply put... No. by ColdWetDog · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Nuke it from orbit, it's the only way to be sure.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    41. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's still fairly cheap, and if your constantly firing the cheaper missiles then what dose the system do? It doesn't know which are cheap and can be ignored or which need to be removed.

      It could go for the ones that are aiming closest but it wouldn't stop the ones that can change course. Alternatively it could send missiles to just follow them all and if one changes course, destroy it.

      But that still enough batches of cheap missiles and it will be overwhelmed. It also has the problem that the cheap missiles could just change direction (not guided just go in different directions), then what dose it do, it can't follow them all without being overwhelmed?

      Israel's one works only because it's dealing with very basic missiles, anything much better and it could be overwhelmed.

    42. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's what nukes were developed for. Make the destruction so bad no one would dare attack us and those who do will be glowing in the end.

    43. Re:Simply put... No. by loufoque · · Score: 2

      How long until missiles are mirror-coated?

    44. Re:Simply put... No. by dywolf · · Score: 2

      Wrong. There are two types of missile to defend against: guided and ballistic.

      Of those, the only one you need to ask "will it hit its target", ie, where its even a question, is ballistic. And in the case of ballistic, it's an easy to solve question. The ballistic arc is nearly 100% predictable; it's basic physics, trivial physics. Your comments about Flight profile, radar signature, etc, all are meaningless. If you can get close enough to be a threat, you are a threat, and thus will be intercepted. There is no grey area. The incoming warhead either is or isnt. A decoy that "gets close enough" isnt a decoy (and if you launched a decoy that "Gets close enough" and carries no payload, the more fool you are).

      A guided missle on the other hand is actually even easier to intercept. It's not a ballistic trajectory, but it is flying far far slower. We have had defense against them (not typically called "missile defense") for decades now. However the best defense aginst guided missiles remains stopping them frm even launching in the first place, which is quite simple really because unlike ballistic missiles, they dont come from the opposite side of the planet. A plane or ship has to launch them, and getting enough launchers in place to theoretically overwhelm the defenses is a logistcal nightmare. Even assuming you did get enough into place, you've not created a huge target for us, easily detected, and rather than use the defenses we just wipe out hte launchers.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    45. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The entire article and half the poeople posting are completely clueless.

      Good to know we're keeping status quo.

    46. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then it's not a cheap, mass produced expendable missile anymore.

      Because adding a GPS, an ARM chip and some steerable fins makes it really, really expensive.

      + Instruments for determining where it's pointed and stabilizing flight.
      + Developing software for steering said fins.
      + Manufacturing such fins (and everything else) with such precision that the characteristics of each missile are sufficiently identical for the software to be able to steer more than just the prototype.
      + Redundancy systems for the inevitable breaks and errors in GPS reception which are even more frequent at high speeds. Not to mention handle intentional degradation of GPS accuracy when using the civilian signal (I am making the bold assumption that anybody intent on developing such a cheap missile would not get access to the military GPS signal).

      Yup, it seems really cheap.

    47. Re:Simply put... No. by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      I meant that if you changed the mass too much it might alter the flight path in a telling way.

    48. Re:Simply put... No. by dywolf · · Score: 1

      Iron Dome is a defense against ballistic munitions. Artillery shells and rockets and ballistic missiles (short range, SCUD type).
      As such, yes you can calculate the mass of any object on a ballistic path.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    49. Re:Simply put... No. by dywolf · · Score: 1

      The article is very stupid.

      Even more frustraiting is the large number of /. commentors on here who dont know the difference beween ballistic and guided missiles, nor the difference between a missile defense system and CIWS type defense system.

      They are conflating the terms and coming to all sorts of wrong conclusions.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    50. Re:Simply put... No. by vakuona · · Score: 2

      Has anyone tried to build a two stage ballistic missile? The first stage sort of gets in in range of the missile detection, and the second evades any interceptor by altering course mid-flight.

    51. Re:Simply put... No. by Jack9 · · Score: 1

      >> but the idea that these systems are stupid enough to shoot down missiles that aren't going to hit targets is laughable.

      > A guided missle on the other hand is actually even easier to intercept. It's not a ballistic trajectory, but it is flying far far slower.

      I wonder about hybrids? Ballistic high arc, then go guided (for any definition of guided)?

      --

      Often wrong but never in doubt.
      I am Jack9.
      Everyone knows me.
    52. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interceptors are just to lessen the damage from the enemies missile attacks. It's not like a military force with missile defense systems also doesn't have offensive missile systems too.

    53. Re:Simply put... No. by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      A missile defense system isn't really a force field designed to permanently shield something from any dangers. It's a tactic to buy time and increase the costs of entry. Terrorist groups are not going to get enough missiles to completely over whelm a system, their harassment will be largely just that, harassment.

      A nation attacking on the other hand could potentially overwhelm a system. However, the benefit of a missile defense is to buy time to appropriately respond to the attack. It may be that moving the civilian population or military assets around is all that is needed to protect the country while massing a devastation response. It largely removes first strike benefits making a modern pearl harbor next to impossible. Missiles and drones are not the only munitions in the arsenal.

    54. Re:Simply put... No. by Chris+Burke · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Assuming you have enough "cheap" munitions in a coordinated attack designed to overwhelm interception defenses, the attacker would require several strongpoints with lots of weapons (no way you could ransomly distribute that level of coordinated attack with enough munitions to overwhelm defenses).

      Yeah that's what the Navy thought when in their asymmetrical war games and the entire carrier group was (virtual) sunk.

      Assuming the enemy cannot possibly be coordinated enough to launch an attack without being concentrated in one convenient spot for counter-attack is the kind of arrogance that is going to get a lot of people killed in the early days of the next war.

      Remember, too, there's a difference between overwhelming a defense systems ability to track and down targets, and overwhelming its ability to stay supplied with ammo.

      The rebels take pot-shots in small numbers because they only have a small amount of material and never want to risk over-exposure or the chance of a decisive conflict (that's not what guerrilla warfare is about). However guerrilla tactics can display extremely high levels of coordination, and if adopted by a military force that can afford ballistic missiles then they could also afford to use overwhelming numbers of smaller portable weapons.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    55. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      When some of the yahoos in the ME claim they have 100,000 rockets to rain down on the enemy they never realize that they better have 100,000 launchers if they plan on using all their missiles. Modern counter strike capabilities turns fixed launchers into nothing but big targets after the first missile launched. Mobile platforms take longer to target and fire so the missile volume is reduced making interception easier. Missiles small enough to be moved and setup by a couple of people do not have either the destructive capabilities or accuracy of first line missiles used by the biggest armies in the world. And if some one does escalate to a ridiculous point and actually starts killing people the world will get to see the first tactical nuclear warheads in action.

    56. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah. It's not like it's rocket science or anything.

    57. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And this missile interception system was ALWAYS designed for low numbers of "rogue state" attack missiles.

      NOT strategic entire-theaterwide defense.

    58. Re:Simply put... No. by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      For a ballistic missle, yes. That's why its a ballistic missle.
      They arent steered. They are aimed. They go where pointed and no where else.

      Ah, it's the "it's named this ergo it works like this" method of reverse-engineering. "Ballistic" is only partially descriptive of how modern (which is relative) missiles work. They've been capable of guidance and steering for a long time -- one of the dirty secrets the ABM folks haven't been talking about much when displaying their "successes". It's not as much as a cruise missile, but it doesn't need to be.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    59. Re:Simply put... No. by DarkOx · · Score: 1

      I agree if you have to install the firing position in preparation for an attack absolutely. Its hard to imagine for Geo-graphic reasons such a strategy being deployed against targets on US soil.

      Around a disputed boarder region though like the West Bank? You might very well over the course of months or years install handfuls of dumb missiles at launch points around your side of the boarder. Enough of those points equipped with 10s of misses suddenly you have the capacity to put 100's in the air over a short period of time. Coordination of such an attack is not hard either for a state actor, its radio recievers and some "Raspberry pi like" machines listing for the "GO" signal.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    60. Re:Simply put... No. by asylumx · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Just a note: Nobody knows which of these approaches was more effective, since neither of the two countries have ever launched any of the described weapons.

    61. Re:Simply put... No. by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      This strategy is not without it's drawbacks. It assumes no immediate threat of counterattack and destroys any possibility of surprise. Launching an attack that you know will fail could end disastrously if the enemy knows anything about the location of your high tech resources.

      In the case of a nuclear attack, this strategy is DOA - just launch everything you have, old and new.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    62. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I would honestly be more worried about conflict escalation ladder here. If an enemy launches 10K small missiles that have the potential to kill 100K citizens, the US might escalate the conflict and fight back by launching 50 nuclear warheads which would kill 50M enemy citizens, and so on and so forth, until nobody's left to tell the tale.

      What do you mean escalate? Things escalate _to_ armed conflict. Once you're there you prepare for the worst.
      You might worry about drawing more countries into the fight, but not sending just the right amount of response to a threat like that - the gloves come off at that point and everyone either watches or jumps in.

    63. Re:Simply put... No. by MightyYar · · Score: 2

      A mirror works by absorbing photons and then re-emitting them. Any mirror substantial enough to protect a missile will be too heavy for a missile.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    64. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One of the most basic rules of warfare is this: a strategy if a winner if it costs them more than it costs you.

      Or if you have more available resources to spend than they do. That's how the Cold War was won. Or "won", I suppose, as the US may just take longer to die from crippling debt...

      The US has done a lot of deficit spending post-Cold-War.

    65. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The IDF's "system" is smoke and mirrors, honestly. The incoming terrorist rockets have never approached even 1% accuracy. If an enemy that routinely showers you with 3,000+ dumb rockets so inaccurate that only 1-2 ever get anywhere near their intended target before your "missile shield" can still maintain that hit/miss ratio, however dismal, then your "missile shield" is a giant fucking waste of money. Period.

      Saber rattling on both sides. Pretty soon, Israel will claim to have force fields and phasers, and the Palestinians will accuse them of using flame throwers on school children. Nothing ever changes.

    66. Re:Simply put... No. by pseudorand · · Score: 1

      But if the incomings are nukes and they destroy all the farmland then the population simply starves slowly over the coming years because they have no way to grow food. Sounds like an acceptable compromise to the average terrorist/freedom fighter.

    67. Re:Simply put... No. by Immerman · · Score: 1

      I think the underlying point is that a missile capable of hitting another missile in-flight is going to be considerably more expensive than a missile capable of hitting a land-bound target. If it costs you $1M to shoot down my $10k missile, then you need to have 100x as many resources as I to defend against my attack. And actually it's even worse than that since I can concentrate all my resources on a single attack, while you have to have defenses capable of repelling that concentrated attack *everywhere* that I *might* attack. The game is inherently stacked against the defender, and will only get worse as technology improves - your average smartphone likely already has all the imaging and processing power necessary drive a couple fin-deflection servos and convert a dirt-cheap dumb fire rocket into a crude guided missile. Maybe not enough improvement to significantly improve your chances of hitting a specific target, but enough to make it look like it has a far more sophisticated tracking system in the few seconds you have to intercept, and quite possibly enough to let it take a more-difficult-to-hit drunken path, or appear to be a dumb missile that's going to miss and then veer towards the target at the last second once it's to late for the interceptors to hit it. Current smart missiles are extremely expensive because they're designed to hit difficult targets, with other missiles being the most difficult of all, "Area harassment" smart missiles could likely be made dirt cheap if missile defense systems become commonplace.

      Of course something like a high-powered laser interception system could change the balance since your expensive hardware doesn't get destroyed with every interception attempt. The problem there is likely to be range (even a maser that doesn't suffer atmospheric attenuation will likely have have to contend with focal limits) and firing rate - even with a non-reusable detonation-based laser-pulse generator you'll still be limited in how fast you can fire without melting your own targeting system. Not to mention that highly reflective surfaces will likely be added to missiles about five minutes after the first effective laser-based missile shield hits the battlefield.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    68. Re:Simply put... No. by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      I wonder about hybrids? Ballistic high arc, then go guided (for any definition of guided)?

      A very good question! One which occurred to ballistic missile makers as soon as they realized 1) trajectories can very much not be predicted with 100% accuracy, and so your options are either make them bigger and bigger, or have a way to steer and 2) the possibility of anti-ballistic missile defenses.

      The GP thinks the issue is settled by looking at the dictionary definition of "ballistic."

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    69. Re:Simply put... No. by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

      Pretty obviously you would target anything that started deviating from a ballistic path. All you've done is made your missiles more expensive and more of a target than they were before, totally eliminating the original (bad) idea that you can overwhelm a missile defense system with numbers.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    70. Re:Simply put... No. by MightyYar · · Score: 0

      Ironically, the debt that will kill us is for social services, not our military.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    71. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you can run out of lasers too.

      chemical based lasers have a limited number of shots before you need to reload them. solid state lasers need their capacitors charged before they can fire again.

      The enemy can just fire missiles faster than the lasers can shoot them down.

    72. Re:Simply put... No. by CreatureComfort · · Score: 2

      Well then... we need to fix that right away!

      How 'bout they launch at each other to test it. Save the rest of the world a whole lot of bother.

      --
      "Unheard of means only it's undreamed of yet,
      Impossible means not yet done." ~~ Julia Ecklar
    73. Re:Simply put... No. by ljw1004 · · Score: 1

      Missile Command didn't use lasers or energy-weapons. In Missile Command, your interceptors exploded and you hoped that the blast radius was big enough to catch the incoming warheads. Here's a video of it:
      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xr7TXeNSlxg

    74. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shoot the archers not the arrows, plain and simple.

    75. Re:Simply put... No. by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

      It's not ironic at all. Social spending killed to USSR too. Money can't bring an end to social ills.

    76. Re:Simply put... No. by SirGarlon · · Score: 2

      The entire article and half the poeople posting are completely clueless.

      Probably true, but saying so doesn't make you credible ... or right. This is Slashdot. Lots of people call someone "clueless" without necessarily having a clue themselves. You'd get more people to read and think about your posts if you let the strength of your argument stand on its own.

      --
      [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
    77. Re:Simply put... No. by dywolf · · Score: 1

      No, it is settled and not because I looked up a word in a dictionary.
      Though, they arent called ballistic for the hell of it.

      But I am purposely keeping it simple because this is /. and still most of these people cant tell the difference between a ballistic munition and a guided one. But since you want to be an obtuse arse, ok:

      The first classes of ballistic missles went up and went down.

      The next stage of developement was the MIRV. The Multiple Independent Reentry Vehicle. One missile instead of having 1 big warhead actually carried several smaller warheads, each independently targeted. That is the answer to "problem" you brought up. After breaching the atmospehere the MIRV relases its individual warheads, and each orients on its own target.

      This is the only aiming/steering that modern ballistic ICBMs perform after launch, and its purpose is to give it a different incoming trajectory than just its launch would suggest or predict. This is a huge reason why defense against ballistic missles is tricky, and just observing the launch path isnt enough, though it does narrow the potential targets (the RV's cannot perform total 180's and reverse direction for example).

      However, once each RV reenters the atmosphere, that's it. It is back to being a purely ballistic path again. And again, anything on a ballistic path can be predicted with near total certainty.

      The key is, and will remain, reaction time. IE, speed of detection and observation. A MIRV gives you roughly half the available time an older single warhead ICBM gives for detection and plotting. That has always been the main advantage an ICBM brings to the table: speed. From launch to strike can take as little as 20 minutes, even for targets on the opposite of the Earth. That's the main reason that even if you can predict where it going to hit, it almost didnt matter before.

      But once detected, and observed, the math is and will remain, trivial.
      The only hard part has been designing systems able to detect, react, and intercept the incoming warhead fast enough.

      Like said. They dont call them ballistic for the hell of it.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    78. Re:Simply put... No. by john.r.strohm · · Score: 1

      There's something else about Iron Dome.

      As long as the Bad Guys are throwing unguided rockets, they're basically just a nuisance.

      The moment they start throwing guided missiles, they cease being a nuisance and graduate to being an actual threat. Israel historically has taken swift, decisive, and violent action against actual threats. (Recall the Six Days War.)

      For all their rhetoric, Iran really doesn't want to get into a hot shooting war with Israel.

    79. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And that is why the country willing to kill 50M innocent people is major hindrance to world peace. Any nations which have military plans of massive destructions of civilian areas and lives have lost any sense of human dignity, morales and ethics.

    80. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One of the most basic rules of warfare is this: a strategy if a winner if it costs them more than it costs you.

      If their $1,000 bomb causes $1,000,000 of damage to you if it is not intercepted, then it is perfectly reasonable to spend $10,000 on the interceptor. The cost of a singe human life is usually counted by actuaries as $5-7 million, so it is not unreasonable to spend a lot on the interceptor. Furthermore, if your country has $10 trillion to spend and the enemy has only $10 million, you can afford more expensive interceptors.

    81. Re:Simply put... No. by IAmR007 · · Score: 1

      GPS chips, at least those designed in the US, are required to not function above 18km altitude or 515m/s for specifically this reason. Otherwise, they are classed as a munition. It's possible to get unrestricted GPS chips from other countries, but you couldn't just strap on any old common GPS chip.

    82. Re:Simply put... No. by dcollins · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "What they were developed for" != "what they got used for". Initially nukes were used to actually level Hiroshima and Nagasaki (and Nazi Germany was in the crosshairs but they didn't last through the development cycle). Later came the whole MAD thing, semi-accidentally.

      Both history and technology usage are funny like that, mostly not according to any original plan.

      --
      We know where leadership by an anti-intellectual "strongman" who scapegoats minorities and likes boisterous rallies goes
    83. Re:Simply put... No. by M1FCJ · · Score: 1

      The expensive bit in a rocket is not the warhead.

    84. Re:Simply put... No. by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      Thanks. It is for that idiot to contemplate before shooting.

      Religious insanity is for the commoner, the yokel, the True Believer, the Useful Idiot, to get them behind various Dear Leaders.

      Dear Leaders are in it for the money and power, not because they drip with religious fervor. They will not shoot where a religious goober would.

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    85. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nukes were developed to defeat Hitler... Future deterrence is just a side-effect.

    86. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      there is some special artillery shells fitted with guidance fins that can do minimal mid-flight course corrections. heck here is a patent for one from the 80's

      it would be even easier to put such as system on a ballistic missile due to its larger size so i must assume they have them too

    87. Re:Simply put... No. by M1FCJ · · Score: 1

      Russians have been working on a hypersonic cruise missile for a long time, so do the US, both have failed. There are a number of supersonic cruise missiles and all stealth cruise missiles in US's inventory have been mostly retired. China, France, of all countries, India, have supersonic cruise missiles which are significantly harder to intercept, especially since 3rd and 4th gen Aircrafts are no longer interceptors and significantly slower than their 2nd gen cousing (F-4 could do M2.5, Foxbat was M3.2). Anti-aircraft missiles are point defenses, they can shoot down a subsonic or supersonic missile but struggle with a hypersonic one.

      The original article assumes an enemy (*cough*China*cough*) is going to fire all of their subsonic and supersonic missiles first to force USNAVY to spend their missiles in their AEGIS cruisers and then promptly sink then with their modern, hypersonic missiles. It is possible but not likely.

      One thing to remember from WWII: The bomber will always get through.

    88. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you ever really played missile command? Guess what they used. They used interceptor missiles that resulted in an airburst at the point you marked with your cursor. You had a limited number of interceptor missiles. That's how you eventually lost the game--the incoming missles overwhelmed you with speed and numbers. I remember the crushing feeling of failure watching incoming vaporize my cities as my empty batteries sat and watched in futility.

      By the way, does anyone else tend to misspell Missile as M-i-s-s-l-e?

    89. Re:Simply put... No. by Farmer+Pete · · Score: 2

      Um, actually we do. Which one spent the least amount of money? That was the most effective, since the one who spent the most money just threw it away. Maybe it will be helpful in the future, but for now, it was a total waste.

    90. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... a strategy is a winner if it costs them more than it costs you ...

      Hello North Korea! The US was winning the war and thought the 'kill, crush and destroy' play-book that worked so well in Germany and Japan could be used again: After all, N Korea didn't have nuclear weapons and China wouldn't dare complain about US soldiers on their border.

      Smarter weapons change the kill ratio in a big way but if an enemy suffers the losses, the advantage is meaningless. Warfare has always been about having more weapons: The US's own war-games proved their mighty ships can be sunk by thousands of rockets on jet-skis.

    91. Re:Simply put... No. by eth1 · · Score: 1

      Indeed. This is an incredibly stupid article and the implication that this is some inherit law of math is outrageous... Somehow the missile defense installations have a fixed amount of resources but the enemy doesn't? Come on!

      One of the most basic rules of warfare is this: a strategy if a winner if it costs them more than it costs you. A missile defense is still a valuable tool if interceptors cost less than what they're intercepting regardless of whether or not what they're intercepting would do any damage because the enemy still had to build the thing. And from the same perspective if an enemy is going to build a missile why not just put a ton of TNT on it and point it in the general direction of a city? Even without guidance (which would add meaningful cost, unlike the TNT) a city is a big enough target that it presents a credible threat anyways and so needs to be intercepted.

      Arg, this is just ridiculous!

      Basically, math, schmath... this whole thing is just another way to say that wars are won by logistics, which we've known forever...

    92. Re:Simply put... No. by TWX · · Score: 1

      That would call for the development of cheaper antimissile systems, not more expensive ones, especially if the detection system can determine type, and then choose the appropriate countermeasure.

      As expensive as Phalanx is, it's far cheaper to fire machine guns at incoming missiles, if those bullets have a real chance of taking out lower damage offensive weapons. Then there are anti-missile missiles, and if they can be perfected (like Patriot's issues) then they can take out the lesser incoming missiles, saving the expensive anti-missile missiles for the really dangerous incomings.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    93. Re:Simply put... No. by nabsltd · · Score: 1

      I wonder about hybrids? Ballistic high arc, then go guided (for any definition of guided)?

      This is pretty much the definition of most missiles that aren't "cruise" missiles. A cruise missile hopes to hide beneath radar detection altitude, while a ballistic missile either hopes to overwhelm with speed, or has a desired range that requires using gravity and less air resistance at higher altitudes to extend the range because not enough fuel can be carried economically.

      For example, the Phoenix air-to-air missile heads pretty much straight up until its fuel is expended, then dives on the target. Again, this is the mode of operation for most missles, as almost all have used up all their fuel by the time they strike their target. Cruise missiles are biggest class of exception, as they often have remaining fuel at impact.

      Compared to the overall cost of the missile, it's trivial to add some terminal guidance system to allow a missile that has expended its fuel to be able to make small corrections for far greater accuracy, even if they would not otherwise be required. In general, though, without terminal guidance, you end up the like the Scuds that basically had only a small chance of hitting the correct city.

    94. Re:Simply put... No. by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Umm. Ahh no. A ballistic missile will be in it's coast phase by then. To turn and it a new target will take energy. That will slow down the missile and make it easier to hit not really practical..
        What the author of the piece doesn't seem to get is that Long range missiles are not cheap and that for any small state the problem will be the warheads. North Korea or Iran do not have hundreds of long range missiles or nuclear warheads to expend.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    95. Re:Simply put... No. by codemaster2b · · Score: 1

      You're right, the nukes weren't developed for Mutually Assured Destruction. However, they were developed as a deterrant against further war, which is very close to the same thing. By dropping one bomb, we sent a message that technology had now made war a terrible, terrible thing to behold. By dropping two bombs, we sent the message that we had the ability to keep going. The war ended in fact because the nuclear warheads had successfuly deterred futher bloodshed.

      I am not sure what the Germans intended to do with the nuclear bombs they were developing. Perhaps they too would have served more as a deterrent / threat than an actual tactical option.

      --
      And over there we have the labyrinth guards. One always lies, one always tells the truth, and one stabs people who ask t
    96. Re:Simply put... No. by Golddess · · Score: 1

      but the idea that these systems are stupid enough to shoot down missiles that aren't going to hit targets is laughable.

      I do not think that is what TFS meant by "fire off older weapons that are not as accurate". More like "poor accuracy may result in an impact up to 100 miles away from the intended target". I'm fairly certain the American public would not take too kindly to the idea that the military would ignore incoming missiles that have a low chance of hitting, say, the White House, but still a 100% chance of causing destruction somewhere within the country.

      --
      "I'm not sure I like the fugnutish tone you used in your post!" -RogL (608926)-
    97. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nuke it from orbit, it's the only way to be sure.

      Jesus christ stop with that stupid line. Please. For the love of god think of something original.

    98. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Very true. However, you don't need to seriously attempt to damage high value targets.

      The Cold War was a contest to see who could muster the most resources. The USSR lost but, looking at the debt inherited by President Clinton, the USA took one heck of a hit. In the case of Israel, the Tamil interceptor missiles are estimated to cost $35k-$50k each whereas a Qassam costs around $800 each, which is quite an imbalance. With an average income around $30k per year, each missile gobbles up a lot of productivity. And this doesn't include the costs of the equipment, its maintenance, and personnel needed to operate and guard it.

      There are 2 more ways to increase the imbalance. The first is to reduce cost, which could be done by not including any kind of explosive. If your only intent is to draw an interceptor, you don't need to worry about it exploding on impact; only 1 in 10 or so need a warhead in order to preserve a credible threat. The second is to make it more difficult to predict where it will hit. This could be done by changing course during flight. E.g., if the missile had a 50% chance of falling short of the target calculated by Iron Dome, the system would have to be more aggressive in its attacks. Any such interceptions would popularize the system, increasing the number deployed and the amount of money spent on it.

      It is unlikely that the cost of running such a system would be prohibitive; Israel received around $3B in military aid from the US on an annual basis, which is the equivalent of 60,000 rockets. Economic warfare works much better when you can bait an enemy into a highly disproportionate response via a relatively small act of aggression.

    99. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are, of course, technically correct. Just as it is technically correct to say that it wasn't everything else that broke the camel's back. It was simply that one, last, final, singular piece of straw that did the deed.

    100. Re:Simply put... No. by Chris+Burke · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Though, they arent called ballistic for the hell of it.

      Right. They're called that because the majority of their flight is ballistic. So it's an accurate term, even if they do incorporate terminal guidance.

      They aren't called "ballistic" because terminal guidance is verboten, as you are implying.

      still most of these people cant tell the difference between a ballistic munition and a guided one

      Though I do. And I also know that being in the "ballistic" category does not categorically prohibit having terminal guidance... something you apparently do not understand. Fortunately weapon and defense system designers are smarter than you.

      This is the only aiming/steering that modern ballistic ICBMs perform after launch... However, once each RV reenters the atmosphere, that's it. It is back to being a purely ballistic path again.

      Shows what you know. There are lots of ICBMs with terminal guidance -- you know, guidance during the phase that begins once the RV reenters the atmosphere when you said it is 'purely ballistic' -- dating back to the 80s.

      since you want to be an obtuse arse

      You're so funny!

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    101. Re:Simply put... No. by Githaron · · Score: 1

      At the end of the day you have to have more interceptors than I have missiles.

      Not if my interceptors are laser or other energy weapon based. Think Missile Command (loved that game at the time...) Sure we may be a ways away from that now, or I should say as far as the *public* knows we may be a ways away from that, but we'll get there...

      Energy generation is still limited and high-capacity capacitors only recharge so quickly.

    102. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "What they were developed for" != "what they got used for". Initially nukes were used to actually level Hiroshima and Nagasaki (and Nazi Germany was in the crosshairs but they didn't last through the development cycle). Later came the whole MAD thing, semi-accidentally.

      The way I learned it was the nukes were used to demonstrate the U.S. military supremacy to the Soviets and for the general glee for having impressive new toys. The Japanese war was kept on life-support until the bombs were ready to be dropped.

      The Soviets were impressed all right; they immediately knew they wanted some of the cool toys as well.

      Japan apparently didn't surrender (conditionally) because of the nuclear bombs, which did no more damage than the conventional bombing of Tokyo. Japan was scared into surrendering by the late Soviet land invasion that continues to this day.

    103. Re:Simply put... No. by rahvin112 · · Score: 3, Informative

      You act as if the Navy learned nothing from that. They learned plenty, operational plans changed, engagement tactics have changed and how to react to small vessels has changed.

      As has been pointed many times on Slashdot, the Navy's plan for Iran is to sit outside the gulf in the Arabian sea where those small vessels can't reach. They then use air-power to wipe out all those vessels, docks and marinas that could be used before they move any ship back into the gulf.

      Everyone likes to run around and say the Navy is a bunch of idiots and they ignored the problem by refloating the group and restarting the war game. The point is that what they could learn from those tactics had been learned and that there wouldn't have been value in continuing the war game on the same rules or declaring the games over while they were spending the money on the games. In other words they learned what they could then continued to learn more about different things. Now there are morons on the DOD that want to build Littoral combat ships but from what I understand they are in the extreme minority. Most of the Navy's leadership understands that the value in a navy is in the carrier grouping and it's air power, not the combat vessels. The future of the navy is to dramatically scale down the number of personal on board with automation and potentially even bring about carriers that carry massive numbers of drones along with carrier groupings armed with rail guns and other offensive weapons that allow even further stand off power.

    104. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How in the hell do you make a warhead look like a decoy?

    105. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Okay, that's great. Now, the interesting question: do you really think that the US Army, Air Force, Marines, and Navy are just sitting idly by while you launch thousands of missiles?

      All the missile defense system needs to do is stop your first couple salvos. Then you've got a whole lot of pissed off airmen, soldiers, marines, and seamen inbound, and your launch sites are PROBABLY going to be pretty hot (a few hundred degrees, give or take a thousand) pretty quickly.

      This "I could just keep launching missiles to deplete your ammuniition" argument assumes that the ONLY defense available is a missile shield, and that once that's depleted, your opponent is defeated. That's a pretty fucking stupid assumption to make. Start launching, and I guarantee that members of the 82nd Airborne, 1st Marine Division, whatever carrier group is closest, and a few ACC squadrons will soon be knocking on your door asking you to please desist immediately.

    106. Re:Simply put... No. by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      You act as if the Navy learned nothing from that.

      No, only that the poster I replied to hadn't gotten the message yet.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    107. Re:Simply put... No. by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      I don't know, I think a propped up American standard of living had a lot to do with the Russian people pushing for a more Western/capitalist government & economy as did all of the money wasted on the arms race.

      Of course, that notwithstanding I'd also argue idiotic tax breaks have done more to kill the US than social services. Many of those services have been around for decades, but tax rates are a 60 year low.

    108. Re:Simply put... No. by countach · · Score: 1

      It assumes the weapons are so primitive that they can't change direction.

      Also, if some weapons are smart and advanced, and some are primitive, can you recognise which is which in mid air?

    109. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's a difference in cost and complexity between ballistic missiles and guided/cruise missiles.

      You can slap a GPS & cheap guidance system on a JDAM because it has time while falling to adjust its line of travel - and that doesn't make a JDAM capable of "changing directions." in any sense other than "it can adjust where it's falling to." With a missile, you need to add a guidance system to it, and fuel to allow you to change direction, and a control system to allow you to change direction either on command, or on a predetermined system - it is an entirely different design, not simply "bolt a rudder on a ballistic missile."

    110. Re:Simply put... No. by VortexCortex · · Score: 2

      That's what nukes were developed for. Make the destruction so bad no one would dare attack us and those who do will be glowing in the end.

      That's what Death Stars are developed for. Make the destruction so bad no one would dare oppose us and those who do will be motes of dust in the end.

    111. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Within a fairly limited targeting area, yes.

    112. Re:Simply put... No. by JonBoy47 · · Score: 1

      Actually, not to split hairs or anything, but there was a third factor was the Soviet declaration of War against Japan on August 8 (in violation of the Soviet-Japanese Neutrality Pact, but in accordance with the Yalta agreement), and the Soviet invasion of Manchuria on August 9. Historians differ as to the relative weight of these two developments in terms of their motivating force towards Japan's surrender. The generally accepted rationale for America's use of the bomb to drive Japanese surrender was to avoid loss of life associated with the invasion of the Japanese mainland (codenamed Operation Downfall). This invasion, had it been mounted, would have involved an amphibious landings double the size of Operation Overlord in Normandy, which was itself the largest amphibious assault in the history of warfare. Allied planners anticipated heavy casualties on both sides as the defending Japanese military (and even civilian population) would fanatically defend the Japanese homeland to the last man.

    113. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps better to say that that's what nuclear missiles were developed for.

    114. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are the same approach in the end - have missiles/warheads look the same, the question is whether the (presumably harder) altering of the real ones in smaller numbers is cheaper overall than altering the fake ones in larger numbers.

    115. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So all of those MIRV ICBMs aren't practical? Darn, the Soviets, China and US will be having a fire sale any day now to get rid of thousands of these impractical missiles.

    116. Re:Simply put... No. by david_thornley · · Score: 2

      They had another V1/V2 countermeasure.

      The Germans had no direct way of knowing where each missile hit. They could rely on their calculations, which were not going to be reliable in predicting the impact site, or gather information on impacts from what intelligence they could access.

      Therefore, by working with the newspapers, reporting V-weapon attacks, they reported impact zones significantly different from the real ones, to pull German aim from London to the countryside.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    117. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's blog spam.

    118. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How in the hell do you make a warhead look like a decoy?

      Wikipedia does say that the British Chevaline warheads had a disguise to make them look like the decoys to rader, but doesn't specify what it was.

    119. Re:Simply put... No. by fnj · · Score: 1

      A Katyusha type rocket is about as cheap a rocket powered "ballistic missile" as it gets. These are the type of which Hezbollah forces fired 3970-4228 in the 2006 Lebanon War. They are reported to cost $3-5000 each to produce. As the parent to your post alludes, you can buy a GPS, an ARM board, and some batteries and servos off the shelf for no more than $300. Use your own imagination how much it would cost an RC modeler to modify the fins to steer. Burn up a few Katyushas and some volunteer hours in the development effort and you've got a cheap guided weapon.

      You want something a lot cheaper still? Buy or build thousands of RC model airplanes and put a grenade on each one.

      Asymmetrical warfare.

      I do not believe the rest of us are quite as clueless as you arrogantly suppose.

    120. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is possible (and does exist) to add terminal guidance or independently guided warheads (such as MIRV systems) to a ballistic-trajectory missile. That said: let's just discuss guided missiles.

      I don't agree with your conclusion and would like to see your support. Indeed: such notable names in the field as Tom Clancy (see: Red Storm Rising) have proposed exactly this scenario on the past. The nature of an ambush attack is that I only need to deal with defenses in isolation. I think you are wrong to believe, say, Iran could not stage enough surface-to-surface missiles within radius of an ambush location to overwhelm the defenses of a single US carrier group (or worse, a lesser force).

      Take out their launchers first? Are we currently destroying all launchers in Iran? No? So if the attack started (looks at watch) "now"?

      When you say "The number of attackers required to overwhelm the close in defense systems in such a scenario is so large that it is simply, again, a non-issue.": put a number on it. Would 100 inbound cruise missiles be enough? What is the interception capability of an Arleigh Burke class destroyer? How many are in a carrier group? Do you believe Iran lacks 100 guided missiles?

      How do you tell a well guided missile from a poorly guided one at distance?

    121. Re:Simply put... No. by Sloppy · · Score: 1

      That is a good idea, but I'd hardly say it's a solution to the problem being discussed. All that means, is that they don't try to dodge bad shots. It doesn't solve the problem of lots of good shots, and tech advances favor adversaries eventually taking good shots. You can't count on them all being Stormtroopers.

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    122. Re:Simply put... No. by Sardaukar86 · · Score: 1

      What do you mean escalate? Things escalate _to_ armed conflict. Once you're there you prepare for the worst. You might worry about drawing more countries into the fight, but not sending just the right amount of response to a threat like that - the gloves come off at that point and everyone either watches or jumps in.

      I reckon there are shades of grey here. The two Gulf conflicts and the fighting in Afghanistan certainly escalated to armed conflict but managed to avoid going nuclear. We all held off on the chemical and biological agents and nobody carpet-bombed cities, detonated EMP weapons to mess up infrastructure, nor any number of things that could have been pursued beyond what we'd consider conventional armed conflict.

      I appreciate you weren't necessarily talking about a highly-unbalanced conflict such as the three I mention here, however I'd wager we all know by now that no matter the conflict, the first mushroom cloud that appears - anywhere - represents Game Over for our way of life.

      --
      ..Mullah or Pope, Preacher or Poet, who was it wrote: "Give any one species too much rope and they'll fuck it up"?
    123. Re: Simply put... No. by CalSolt · · Score: 1

      I think your argument is valid for Israel but when you are talking about the US the dynamics change. There's really only three places you can launch cheap rockets at the US from: Canada, Mexico, and the Caribbean. These countries are in our back yard and sphere of influence and we would definitely stop attackers before they launched (see: cuban missile crisis). That means the only remaining place to hit us from is across the ocean. You CANNOT build something cheaply that will be able to cross the Atlantic or Pacific and still be aimed at a target when it gets here. Plus the intercepting missiles won't have to fly as far so they might actually be cheaper. We also have systems to detect ICBM launches since hurling a nuke halfway across the planet takes a LOT of launch energy and is easily detectable from space. Cruise missiles are harder to detect in the launch phase but no one would argue that they will ever be cheaper than interceptors. Cruising 3,000 miles without being shot down is way more expensive than shooting down what is basically a fast aircraft.

    124. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you realize there is far more than a single country in that category?

    125. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK, I gotta ask: after the number of times this has come up, at this point isn't this question just a subtle troll?

    126. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Was the US in danger of collapse when the tax rate was at a 100-year low?

    127. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GPS chips, at least those designed in the US, are required to not function above 18km altitude or 515m/s for specifically this reason. Otherwise, they are classed as a munition. It's possible to get unrestricted GPS chips from other countries, but you couldn't just strap on any old common GPS chip.

      Close; The regs state that GPS chips shan't operate above when 18km AND exceeding 515m/s (999 knots). You're right in that many will implement that as an "OR" function (SIRF, notably) but it's certainly not hard to find chips that implement it as "AND".

    128. Re:Simply put... No. by qwak23 · · Score: 1

      Frustrating? yes.

      Entertaining? also yes! ;)

    129. Re:Simply put... No. by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      There's a difference between reflecting and absorbing and re-emitting photons. Perfect mirrors do not absorb photons.

    130. Re:Simply put... No. by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      In fact, that would be about 1929, so yes, it kind of was! Thanks for proving my point...

      The other time that was close in terms of top rate, but not in terms of effective tax paid, was the lat 80's. Hmm. 1929, 1987, 2003. Seems like whenever taxes hit a low, the market soon collapses. I suppose it's probably a combination of people investing stupidly to take profits from low taxes, and the taxes being lowered when there is more income from higher profits.

      Though, of course, if the morons in Congress had any backbone or economical sense they'd understand that the market is cyclical, so they should be taking more income during good times like everyone else to get through the lean years. Instead it's too tempting to gain points with equally shortsighted voters by lowering taxes to give back any surpluses, while refusing to raise them back to previous levels once the inevitable shortfall comes.

    131. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At the end of the day you have to have more interceptors than I have missiles.

      Not if my interceptors are laser or other energy weapon based. Think Missile Command

      You mean the game where you have a limited number of interceptors per base? And the interceptors explode just like a missile?

    132. Re:Simply put... No. by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      a propped up American standard of living

      A what? Who/what "propped up" the American standard of living? Certainly not a foreign country, and if you think the government can "prop up" the standard of living you are ignorant of economics, like Obama. The US had a high standard of living because its people were productive, and that is not "propped up".

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    133. Re:Simply put... No. by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      No mirvs, change targets at the top of the arc and have a very limited amount of maneuver after that point. You can not have it heading to Seattle and at the last minute hit Boise Idaho.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    134. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, it would be that advanced iranian technology at that point!

    135. Re:Simply put... No. by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      Bullshit. Go demand every citizen to pay their share of the national debt today (which is about $52,000 per person, or over $200k for a family of 4) and see if that doesn't affect a lot of people's standard of living. For a significant number of families, that's more than their life savings.

      All of those houses, cars, and consumer electronics cost money, and $200k can pay for a lot of them.

      Tax rates have been WAY too low for decades. If you think this deficit spending can continue indefinitely *you* are ignorant of economics.

    136. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good to see you are either ignorant or lying. I knew you would prove to be one of those two options.

      The 100-year low tax rate was 100 years ago, when the rate was 7% in 1913-15. As for the 1929 rate, it was the same as the previous 4 years before it, at 25%.

      In addition to you being wrong about a century ago, you said the rates are at a 30-year low now. So why were they lower 20 years ago? Do you not understand what the phrase "x-year low" actually means? It means that the measured item was not lower within that x number of years, compared to what it is now (or some specified date, if looking historically). So, since the top rate was 31.9% in 1991 and 1992, and it was 37.9% last year, we are nowhere near the 30-year low.

      So, please tell me: Is your propaganda based on ignorant parroting of leftist intellectuals, without bothering to check their accuracy, or are you the leftist intellectual whose lies get repeated so often by other propagandists?

    137. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh damn! Looking at your initial post again, I see I mis-remembered your time period. You said a 60-year low, not 30-year low. Which is even more stupefying, since the rates from 80 years ago to 60 years ago were all higher than recently. The phrase "x-year low" also typically signifies that either x or (x+1) years ago, the measured item was in fact equal to or lower than it is now. So your "60-year low" is doubly wrong and inaccurate, along with your 100-year low being complete bullcrap.

      I'm glad I could clear these things up for you. Now go out and let the world know what you have learned here today.

    138. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-ship_ballistic_missile

      "China has designed the world's first anti-ship ballistic missile, known as the DF-21D.[1] In 2010, it was reported that China had entered the DF-21D into its early operational stage for deployment.[2] The potential threat from the DF-21D against US aircraft carriers has reportedly caused major changes in US strategy."

    139. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is based on the premise that at least as far as the US goes, the US hasn't attacked the missile launch points with its own barrage of cruise missiles, B-2 strikes, etc. There's no way that a US carrier battlegroup is going to be surprised and swarmed by a land-based system, unless US commanders are incredibly naive and stupid at the same time. Larry Bond war-gamed this out in Harpoon effectively, both for Tom Clancy's books and his own, where a large number of AS-4 cruise missiles launched by the Soviets more or less at the same time from far out were enough to overwhelm the AEGIS system, and simply by attrition a few did get through and sink the carrier. China doesn't have a huge fleet of aircraft able to launch that missile, nor does Russia anymore, really. So.

    140. Re:Simply put... No. by jmcvetta · · Score: 1

      Missile Command was such an awesome game! Gotta get an old Atari console... :) The great thing about that game is, no matter how well you play, it always ends in total annihilation. No one who played Missile Command as a kid will ever start a nuclear war, for sure.

      Thanks for the video link!

    141. Re:Simply put... No. by Compaqt · · Score: 1

      How could a GPS chip itself know what altitude it's at? It would have to get input from an altimeter, which you could simply replace with something that gives output of "10 ft above sea level".

      --
      I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
    142. Re:Simply put... No. by ColaMan · · Score: 1

      GPS signals give results that are three-dimensional.

      You look at three sats - and you know the distance to each one and the position of each one.
      That gives three spheres around each satellite where you could be, and you are at or very near the point where they all intersect.

      You know your altitude as a byproduct of knowing the distance to each satellite. It's not *perfect* altitude - unless you're doing some sort of mapping/reference, your atitude is with respect to a general oblate sphere called 'Earth' with an average sea level. But it works pretty well in practice.

      --

      You are in a twisty maze of processor lines, all alike.
      There is a lot of hype here.
    143. Re: Simply put... No. by Paradigma11 · · Score: 1

      An fascinating article i found some time ago on the cuba missile crisis: http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2013/01/the-real-cuban-missile-crisis/309190/?single_page=true

    144. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well look at the things happening in the hobbyist UAV sphere, and you'll find that really fancily guided missiles are not that awfully hard to make. I would guess that the reason Hamas etc. are still using artillery rockets that would been considered semi-obsolete eighty years ago is that their political objective is to deny peace, which these things do very well, and not to kill a lot of people, which they don't.

    145. Re:Simply put... No. by Compaqt · · Score: 1

      Oopsies, I knew that and then forgot it.

      --
      I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
    146. Re:Simply put... No. by drinkypoo · · Score: 1, Troll

      Both history and technology usage are funny like that, mostly not according to any original plan.

      There's also this thing humans can do called lying, where they tell one person that the plan is A, when it is really B. Anyone who doesn't think this was a factor in the history of the atomic bomb is hilariously naive, like the scientists who developed it.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    147. Re:Simply put... No. by http · · Score: 1

      I sure will miss Starbucks.

      --
      If opportunity came disguised as temptation, one knock would be enough.
      3^2 * 67^1 * 977^1
    148. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the poster should probably not have said "mirror" but rather "reflective coating"

    149. Re:Simply put... No. by swilver · · Score: 1

      So, I guess we'll have to attack you when it rains then.

    150. Re:Simply put... No. by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      I remember reading a possibly apocryphal tale about different attitudes to deploying decoys on nuclear missiles in the Cold War; supposedly the US military went to a great deal of trouble building decoys that looked like nuclear warheads, whereas the British saved a lot of money by making the warheads look like decoys.

      That doesn't seem to be a very good description of Chevaline.

      The British system was so cheap that it's cost overruns were <pinky>1 billion pounds.</pinky>.

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    151. Re:Simply put... No. by jht · · Score: 1

      The US has an advantage in missile defense compared to many nations - the places from which you'd launch a missile at the US are distant, and it takes a lot of resources to attack them from a distance. Plus there's a lot of ground to target, but relatively little to defend. Defending NYC, Washington, LA, etc. from a distance of thousands of miles isn't as hard as defending Tel Aviv from 150 miles away, or defending Seoul from Pyongyang.

      Sure, you can overwhelm a defense system, but it's cheap to make enough rockets to overwhelm a system when they don't have to travel 5000 or more miles. And at this point outside of the US and (to an extent) Russia, though there are plenty of nuclear powers there aren't a lot of missiles that can travel that far with any kind of payload and hit a target.

      Those sort of missiles are expensive to build, expensive to operate, and very expensive to maintain.

      --
      -- Josh Turiel
      "2. Do not eat iPod Shuffle."
    152. Re:Simply put... No. by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      I never said anything about 100 years, and the whole point of the thread (which you clearly didn't follow) is tax rates with social services (ie. SS in the 30's, Medicare in the 60's, etc). Thus 1913-1915 is totally irrelevant (well, as is the rest of your post, but for different reasons). I just picked 60 years, sure (sort of as an average to the biggest social programs) but as you point out, 80 years would have made an even *stronger* point, thanks.

      And you also missed my statement "not in terms of effective tax paid" - even in the 80's the effective tax rate paid in the upper brackets was higher, because there are so many more people in the upper brackets taking advantage of loopholes and the current *15%* capital gains rate (vs the previous lowest rate os 20% in the 80's). In fact for many wealthy people cap gains and dividends are their major source of income.

      Also, the top tax rate for last year was 35%, not 37.5%. But I'll give you a pass on that since I doubt you were anywhere near it.

      And if this weren't enough to make your post look bad, the effective top *corporate* tax rate is also at a modern low (here's a simple chart so you don't have to try to do math)

      So my point is the same - originally taxes were at a level to pay for social services. Unrealistic tax cuts are as much responsible for the current debt as excessive spending.

      Anyway, if you want to keep ranting have some balls and don't be an anonymous troll, at least. But you have to try harder than that either way.

    153. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about the ones Israel is showering others* with?

      *Others being civilian populations.

    154. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > "the country with the largest army wins"

      Wrong! ONLY applies in a symmetric conflict (per Lanchester Square Law). Make it asymmetric (which is the point of the article) and Square Law completely disappears!!

    155. Re:Simply put... No. by uninformedLuddite · · Score: 1

      Did you ever win against the onslaught of missiles?

      --
      The new right fascists are bilingual. They speak English and Bullshit.
    156. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no one would dare attack us and those who do will be glowing in the end.

      I think they'd be glowing all over their body.

    157. Re:Simply put... No. by quenda · · Score: 1

      But if the incomings are nukes and they destroy all the farmland

      Farmland!? They might destroy some crops, barns and even irrigation dams, but nukes can hardly destroy large areas of farmland.
      Starving people are not going to worry about a miniscule amount of residual radiation after a few weeks.

    158. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      U c!!! Nuclear war is really really REALLY catastropic! If you seen the movie about nuclear war, a big change in temperature around the world, and and and ... (no more audible coz he is already a victim!)

    159. Re: Simply put... No. by rufty_tufty · · Score: 1

      These countries are in our back yard and sphere of influence and we would definitely stop attackers before they launched (see: cuban missile crisis).

      I'm not sure that is a good example.
      Let's (for the sake of argument) suppose that relationships between Brazil and Argentina get worse. To the point where is limited military conflict between them. Both of them either develop their own or buy off the market some cruise missiles, actually let's assume they both get lots.
      Should the US intervene to stop them? What gives the US the right to interfere?
      These are sovereign nations and what right (other than might makes right) does one country have to interfere with others?
      But let's suppose the US does interfere - this very intervention would then be the event that kicks off that attack on the US with an overwhelming number of warheads.

      I believe the point of the article wasn't to say that there is something to currently worry about,I think it was simply saying that the current situation is potentially flawed.

      You CANNOT build something cheaply that will be able to cross the Atlantic or Pacific and still be aimed at a target when it gets here.

      These days guidance technology is so cheap it's just not funny. Plenty of amateurs have demonstrated guidance systems on their model planes that cost no more than a few hundred dollars. Let's face it the cost of a guidance system is a GPS receiver, a small processor and a few servo motors.
      Now I believe you're right that the complexities of building a plane capable of crossing the Atlantic or Pacific is no mean feat. However I do not believe it is that much more complex than say building a modern car - and there are plenty of countries that are capable of doing that and doing it in huge numbers at low cost.
      Again I don't think any of those are currently annoyed at the US enough to do anything like this, but you can bet they have thought of it.

      --
      "The weirdest thing about a mind, is that every answer that you find, is the basis of a brand new cliche" -
    160. Re:Simply put... No. by hairyfish · · Score: 1

      So are you saying if I fire my 10k small missles from within my enemy's territory into the US, then the US will win my war for me? This US of which you speak doesn't sound very smart.

    161. Re:Simply put... No. by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Even "perfect" mirrors absorb photons, and would need a heat sink. This would make them too heavy.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    162. Re:Simply put... No. by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Tax rates have been WAY too low for decades.

      That's a very subjective statement. Objectively, we CAN say that the delta between tax rates and spending has gotten too high. And objectively, the largest growth rate has been in the social services category of spending - specifically healthcare and Social Security. Military spending bounces in and out of historical norms, as do tax rates.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    163. Re:Simply put... No. by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      USSR spent a lot more, as a percentage of GDP, on their military than we did.

      Today, of course, we go overboard... by maybe double! :)

      My comment was based on the fact that both SS and Medicare EACH surpass defense these days. In '86, in the midst of the Cold War, our military spending was 40% of our budget, and Medicare was 11%, with SS at 23%. The growth in social spending is a bit astounding, but understandable given our demographic shift and the rapid cost increase of healthcare.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    164. Re:Simply put... No. by war4peace · · Score: 1

      So... please enlighten me. HOW would you carry to, install at and fire 10K long range missiles from your ENEMY? If I were your enemy, as a country, I am pretty certain I wouldn't let you do that.

      --
      ...gis sdrawkcab (usually not responding to ACs; don't bother posting as AC)
    165. Re:Simply put... No. by steelfood · · Score: 1

      The assumption you're making is that you're fighting an enemy soverign state. If your enemy does not have a "homeland", your retaliatory measures will be fairly useless.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    166. Re:Simply put... No. by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      A perfect mirror is a theoretical concept that doesn't exist in reality. My main point is that a mirror works by reflecting photons and any photons it absorbs reduces its efficiency as a mirror because they won't be re-emitted at the same frequency they came in at.

    167. Re:Simply put... No. by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Yes, I re-read my comment and it is very misleading. A mirror does reflect, but it also absorbs part of the energy. My apologies.

      In any case, point a high-energy photon stream at a missile, and it would heat up, no matter how shiny. You can bet that the source mirror is actively cooled, and made from heavy materials that have no business going on the skin of a missile.

      If the missile is liquid-fueled, you might be able to polish the surface and also run the liquid fuel down the inside of the skin to convect heat away. I imagine this would create all sorts of practical challenges, and most importantly make the missile more expensive. All things being equal, that means fewer missiles - which could be a good strategic outcome.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    168. Re:Simply put... No. by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      An apology is not necessary. It was a good interchange. I pretty much agree with the rest of what you wrote.

    169. Re:Simply put... No. by asylumx · · Score: 1

      Arguably they both wasted the money. Also arguably, the jury is still out.

    170. Re:Simply put... No. by war4peace · · Score: 1

      Kind of difficult for an enemy with no homeland to send over 10K missiles. Do they spawn them from thin air? They surely must have some base off of which they launch their attack. And a pretty large one, to accommodate 10K missiles.

      --
      ...gis sdrawkcab (usually not responding to ACs; don't bother posting as AC)
    171. Re:Simply put... No. by hairyfish · · Score: 1

      Who said they had to be long range? And who said I have to carry them? WW2-era cruise missiles could be built from scratch in any garage and there's a few countries within range of the US that I might want disposed of. At $5k/missile that means I need a budget of only $50m to have Mexico wiped off the face of the earth?

    172. Re:Simply put... No. by war4peace · · Score: 1

      You gotta be fucking kidding me. If a country has a police that's dumb enough to not detect 10K missiles being carried around under their nose... well, then they kind of deserve it, to be honest.

      --
      ...gis sdrawkcab (usually not responding to ACs; don't bother posting as AC)
    173. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you want us to nuke that line from orbit, because it's the only way to be sure?

    174. Re:Simply put... No. by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      save the costal shots for the end of the barrage.

      Are you ribbing me?

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    175. Re:Simply put... No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The levelling of Hiroshima and Nagasaki was essentially a display of power for mutually assured destruction. They were specifically selected because their population density was less than say Tokyo (and because there might not be anyone left to surrender if Tokyo was bombed). Japan wasn't going to surrender just because America said it had bombs that could level entire cities, they had to show it was true.

    176. Re:Simply put... No. by Kaenneth · · Score: 1

      4 Dmmensional, you also get the current Time as a bonus =)

  3. The math may win... by immaterial · · Score: 0

    The math may win, but the spelling sure doesn't. Reagen??

    1. Re:The math may win... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If I remember correctly from my youth, wasn' it spelt "Raygun"?

    2. Re:The math may win... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      The math may win, but the spelling sure doesn't. Reagen??

      Just taking a queue from the next VP, Dan "Potatoe" Quayle.

      (Here's wondering how *he* spelled Ronnie's name.)

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    3. Re:The math may win... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      If I remember correctly from my youth, wasn' it spelt "Raygun"?

      Which actually brings us back on topic.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  4. The other real enemy: logic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nevermind the math - how about "logic"? Just who exactly in the fuck is supposed to be SHOOTING all these weapons?

    But then again, "missile defense" was NEVER about getting a system that works, it was always just a handy way to shovel massive piles of tax dollars at defense contractors - a mission which it has succeeded and continues to succeed at.

    1. Re:The other real enemy: logic by postbigbang · · Score: 1

      You can whatif yourself into a deep, deep bog. There are unknown variables, and the answer to the question must rely on them.

      You can put a big divisor on this, however, with the fact that a nuclear winter trumps most cards, dystopic science fiction scenarios notwithstanding.

      --
      ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
    2. Re:The other real enemy: logic by Synerg1y · · Score: 1

      Russia or China? Have you been under a rock? It doesn't seem likely, but isn't war all about surprise? So rather than live in fear of that, the government builds missile defense systems.

    3. Re:The other real enemy: logic by ByOhTek · · Score: 1

      Both have too much to lose. At one point, they appeared reasonable, but it was never reasonable that Russia would have attacked us directly (appearances aside), they played a better-intel/counter-intel game, not a better-military game.

      More likely if N. Korea, or possibly Iran get a missile system in place, we might have a group desperate and nuts enough to do this (not so sure about Iran in either category), but for the most part, we currently don't have a serious threat due to lose of a trade partner, or risking a way-too-severe counterattack.

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    4. Re:The other real enemy: logic by steviesteveo12 · · Score: 1

      I think you get to point to 60s-80s movie villains *or* suggest that the other guy has been living under a rock.

    5. Re:The other real enemy: logic by alen · · Score: 1

      we have the best submarines that will sink any ships equipped with large amounts of cruise missiles
      we have our own cruise missiles that can destroy the bases where the cruise missiles are based

    6. Re:The other real enemy: logic by ravenlord_hun · · Score: 1

      Just keep in mind they have those things too.

      The more realistic description would be, "everyone has subs that can sneak close to shorelines and fire off nukes that noone can't do a damn thing about".And that's why noone wants to start this game: everyone is almost guaranteed to lose. Way too high risks for virtually zero gain, even excluding the economial disaster that would follow. Virtually every industry is heavily reliant on foreign supplies/subsidiaries these days.

    7. Re:The other real enemy: logic by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      So you're saying if you can't build a system > 90% effective, you shouldn't bother?

      Sure.

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    8. Re:The other real enemy: logic by Synerg1y · · Score: 1

      Consider that Germany marched against the entirety of Europe... twice.

    9. Re:The other real enemy: logic by Grave · · Score: 1

      Actually, no. Most countries do not have subs quiet enough to sneak up on US shores. Most countries don't even have submarines, and most of those that do are diesel based, not nuclear, hence they're quite loud. A really careful captain, with the most current maps of our sonar bouys and ships, could probably manage to sneak close enough to get a short range missile or two launched, but they would not have the kind of volume that we do. This assumes, of course, that we didn't happen to have a Los Angeles-class sub lurking somewhere that picked them up, and wiped them out before they even knew they were being stalked. Seriously, the US Navy so vastly outclasses everyone else in the world that you can't even begin to make the comparison.

    10. Re:The other real enemy: logic by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      But then again, "missile defense" was NEVER about getting a system that works, it was always just a handy way to shovel massive piles of tax dollars at defense contractors - a mission which it has succeeded and continues to succeed at.

      Actually, it was never about getting an impenetrable force field. It was about lessening the probability of a debilitating first strike.

      Japan nearly won WWII with pearl harbor had they pushed the US more right after it. They didn't but they severely hampered or ability to seriously retaliate until we moved some resources around and the war machine. Advances in radar and early warning systems from WWII and the cold war that followed made an attack like pearl harbor near impossible unless you start counting ICBMs and missiles in bordering countries. There is very little time between knowing about an attack and receiving damage from it with missiles where an aircraft carrier or whatever else coming within striking range would have magnitudes of more time associated with it.

      The entire idea of mounting nukes in subs was based around this. The enemy can first strike all they want but with enough nuclear missile floating in the oceans in movable and secrete locations, you can't remove the threat of a retaliation with a first strike. Now our threats are less capable and missile defense systems give a non nuclear option to negating the impacts of a first strike.

    11. Re:The other real enemy: logic by dywolf · · Score: 1

      to piggyback onto that, its only in the last 6 years or so that China has built its first nuclear subs, and they are missle boats. 5 in service, 1 still udner construction. Theya re not yet armed, Chian hasnt compelted developement of their SLBM yet. Btu the ships are in service, and we do shadow them already, much as we already shadowed some of their oldfashioned deisel/battery subs just to get a feel for what china can do. Our guys are kinda already pro at this game thanks to the last several decades.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    12. Re:The other real enemy: logic by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      Consider that Germany marched against the entirety of Europe... twice.

      The second time was because of a bad case of the stupids.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    13. Re:The other real enemy: logic by M1FCJ · · Score: 1

      Ah, an other person who has drunk the US NAVY's cool aid.
      US carriers are notoriously vulnerable to diesel submarines who run on batteries. On nuclear subs, the engine never gets shut, they are inherently noisier than diesel submarines. More than once US Carrier fleets got a nasty surprise when a submarine surfaced quite near to them. (shame, link for Daily Scarymail http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-492804/The-uninvited-guest-Chinese-sub-pops-middle-U-S-Navy-exercise-leaving-military-chiefs-red-faced.html#axzz2JgOdt8mi)

    14. Re:The other real enemy: logic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yeah, the Germans are nuts.

      note: my ancestors were all from Germany.

    15. Re:The other real enemy: logic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > but isn't war all about surprise?

      No. Where did you pull that from? Was is about removing the opposition's ability to fight (removing the motivation, destroying the weapons, killing the wielders of weapons, whatever the method). Surprise is a tactic.

    16. Re:The other real enemy: logic by dryeo · · Score: 1

      IIRC, WW I saw Europe pretty evenly divided and for most of the war it was basically a draw. The invention of the tank and reinforcements from America tipped the balance at the end.
      WW II started with Greater Germany, Italy and the USSR on one side. Luckily Hitler was stupid, started the war almost a decade early (they had plans to build up till the late '40's then start the war) and turned against the USSR early.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    17. Re:The other real enemy: logic by dryeo · · Score: 1

      Russia is building subs like crazy, building more nukes and various other weapon buildups. Look at some of the articles here, http://barentsobserver.com/en

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    18. Re:The other real enemy: logic by ravenlord_hun · · Score: 1

      I didn't try to imply most would. But as far as this discussion thread goes, only a very few select countries are relevant ;)

      At any rate, you don't need to land a lot of missiles. You just need to land one nuke on a (few) major population center, you don't need complete annihilation. That risk is already sufficient to deter most decision-makers, which is the whole point of keeping those things anyway. And as rainbow-tinted your glasses are, I'm not buying that the US Navy is patrolling both coastlines in their entirety 24/7, especially in a depth that'd render any SRBM launch impossible. Was that the case, everyone else would just stick to building diesel carrier-group-hunting subs and invest into land-based MIRV missiles only, but I'm not really seeing that (not that I have a great insight into this matter mind you).

  5. That's not math by jader3rd · · Score: 5, Informative

    That's not math, that's known as attrition.
    Sometimes you don't need the better soldiers, you just need more soldiers.

    1. Re:That's not math by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Quantity has a quality all of its own.

    2. Re:That's not math by luis_a_espinal · · Score: 2

      That's not math, that's known as attrition.

      Stop. You are making sense.

    3. Re:That's not math by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "That's not math, that's known as attrition."

      Um, yeah. Attrition is math. Simple addition and subtraction, but it's still math.

    4. Re:That's not math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yeah i thought this would be about math not brain dead strategy of attrition.

      Or these days are lowering the subject of math to encompass a basic this is more and more is better/worse - in which case we can say 'the real enemy is math' on pretty much any topic u like.

      the real defence is the enemies faith in retribution

    5. Re:That's not math by Nutria · · Score: 1

      Sometimes you don't need the better soldiers, you just need more soldiers.

      That's why European leaders that had more than cheese for brains wanted US short and intermediate range nukes in their countries: because we knew that "we" couldn't and didn't want to field a bigger military than "them".

      Thus, nukes were the "equalizer".

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    6. Re:That's not math by dywolf · · Score: 1

      No, attrition is numbes. Math is numbers, but numbers are not math.
      Math is using numbers to get another number.
      Simply having more numbers isnt "math".
      The article is retarded, as is the writer for thinking he's discovered anything new. This has already long been an aspect of interceptor design.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    7. Re:That's not math by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      During World War II, a reporter caught up with the renowned Chinese General Chiang Kai-Shek and asked him "For every Japanese soldier than you kill, you lose 40 men. Why do your countrymen think that you are a success?"

      General Chiang Kai-Shek replied, "Soon no more Japanese."

      -

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    8. Re:That's not math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And at the European end the war was in essence won by Russians being able to outbleed Germans.

      Hell, even WW1 was won by one side getting fresh supply of troops (Americans) when the other was about to run out (even with the shutdown of the eastern front).

      Every damn war since the introduction of gunpowder (and perhaps even before) seems to have been won more on attrition than skill and technology.

      ovo -hoot

    9. Re:That's not math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      aka: Zerging works for a reason.

    10. Re:That's not math by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "Simply having more numbers isnt "math"."

      No, but attrition isn't just having more numbers. It is having losses (look it up). Which means attrition is subtraction from those numbers.

    11. Re:That's not math by Alomex · · Score: 1

      Very true. Yet you often see Pentagon revisionists trying to argue that they won the Vietnam war since the kill ratio was 1 to 10.

      Sorry guys, but as long as the other side is willing to off you at that price and has enough soldiers to sustain the pace, they'll win.

    12. Re:That's not math by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      At the time the US forces left Vietnam, the war was won: South Vietnam had the capability to defend itself, provided that North Vietnam received no outside help. Well, China provided N.V. with arms and ammunition, the Democrat controlled US Congress refused to provide any money to help S.V., and the rest was history. Go on believing your leftist lies; there aren't many people who know the truth.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    13. Re:That's not math by Alomex · · Score: 1

      Go on believing your leftist lies; there aren't many people who know the truth.

      Let's compare reality against what I said and what you said. I claim we lost in Vietnam and you claim we won. Now let's check who is in power in Vietnam, which army is in Hanoi and which army went back home.

      It is clear who is lying and mostly to yourself. Go ahead, go on believing that "provided China and the USSR didn't help North Vietnam, and provided the Democratic party didn't exist, then we won" if that makes you feel better. It is funny you cannot see how absurd your provisions are.

      Wars are fought in the real world, with real life constraints, such as who are your enemy's allies and how high a price politicians are willing to pay at home for the victory.

      An analysis outside of those parameters is pure fantasy.

  6. "Kill the Archer" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    If you kill the archer before he shoots, his arrow is no longer a threat to you. This has been part of US Navy doctrine for some time.

    1. Re:"Kill the Archer" by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      I think the idea here would be to have many archers.

      Not like disguising fighting vessels as merchants or fishing vessels is anything new.

    2. Re:"Kill the Archer" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a bad plan. Once you actively start disguising military assets as civilian ships, anyone you aggression is left with no action but to attack all civilian ships.

  7. Navy Fire Control Computers Know Math by EmagGeek · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Here's a video:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mpkTHyfr0pM

    (seriously, watch the series. It's pretty amazing)

    1. Re:Navy Fire Control Computers Know Math by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      Same video but not split into parts

      Thank you for the share, this is excellent. Consider that these can compute (within the limits of friction and material strength) infinitely fast. Digital computation (seems) to have a hard speed limit.

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    2. Re:Navy Fire Control Computers Know Math by NonUniqueNickname · · Score: 2

      Way to kill Friday afternoon productivity. Thank you.

  8. Math? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I was hoping for some sort of dynamical systems result. Instead it is about having more missiles?

    1. Re:Math? by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      The point holds, though. Interceptors are highly sophisticated devices - they need to exactly hit a small target in three dimensions, while both interceptor and target are moving at great velocity. Your basic attack missile, on the other hand, can be as simple as a garage-made rocket with a chunk of fertilizer on the end. For every interceptor one side makes, even a comparatively low-tech and poorly-funded attacker could build many missiles.

    2. Re:Math? by dywolf · · Score: 2

      No the point is that attrition works, but the writer stupidly called it "math" when it is no such thing.
      The interceptor math is a solved problem, easy enough to do on the back of a napkin.
      The only problems have been designing/engineering a system to sufficient tolerance to carry it out, but that isnt math either.
      Target ID is already an inherent part of the design.

      And if such a tactic were used, it would be readily/quickly seen, and rather than waste anti-missle interceptors, we would just find the enemy "cheap" launchers and take them out.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    3. Re:Math? by dywolf · · Score: 2

      addendum: this reminds me of people inherently misunderstanding the system in question. a question i come across commonly of "why doesnt the radar pick up all the birds, and trees, and dust, and ...". the answer is: it does pick all those things up, its just been designed to ignore them.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    4. Re:Math? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People also misunderstand that a lot of lower capability weapons will end up being soft-killed, ie. they will be seduced by countermeasures which may not be expendable, such as ECM.

      The other thing that is not well understood by most people (tm) is that you somehow have to bring all this stuff to the fight. The logistics are not easy at all, and the platforms and weapons can actually interfere with each other. Further, the platforms can be disabled or destroyed before they expend any or all of their weapons.

      While the entire premise seems to make sure in a game scenario, it doesn't make quite as much sense when you try to apply it to the real world. It's incredibly situational, and, FYI ... all forces currently employ decoys of all manners, so this tactic is already taken into account in some fashion.

    5. Re:Math? by s.petry · · Score: 1

      Exactly what I was thinking. It's a hypothetical scenario where no numbers are given, and claiming "Math" breaks something.. ugh..

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    6. Re:Math? by s.petry · · Score: 1

      Sorry man, but you are quite wrong. A poorly funded attacker would have to get their poorly funded missiles in range to be used. Look at the range Iran, who has decent levels of funding, has for missiles. Missile defense at the level being discussed in the article, like the Aegis and Star Wars were made for, is not for "poor" missiles. Like the shoulder fired crap we see Hezbola lob in to Israel. It's for long range ballistic missiles.

      Now what Israel just released on their borders, the US has similar systems, is for smaller missiles which are cheaper. But honestly, go look at the numbers of rockets fired into Israel last year and compare that to damage and death. Those "cheap" missiles are not very damaging nor very accurate. Often, they land in the dirt and never explode.

      So if you are Joe Turd, the great Commander and Leader of Turdworld Country, and you make half a million fertilizer tipped missiles you have to somehow get them in range of the US to be a threat. Heartily, you brave the waters and bring your tin barge fleet, carrying all of those missiles, within a few hundred miles of the US. We, in the US, would see that threat long before you launched any missiles. Hell, you would probably have to call the US Coast Guard to rescue some of your less equipped barges that are sinking. When we saw your "missile fleet", we would buzz helicopters around your boats to make wake and sink the fleet. The US would wave, and say goodbye to both Joe Turd and the massive missile fleet of Turdworld Country.

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    7. Re:Math? by ikedasquid · · Score: 2

      The AEGIS interceptors are not as sophisticated as you'd think. All of the directing comes from the ship's powerful radar. The ship tracks the inbound missile, and when the timing is right launches an interceptor (the Navy calls them "Standard Missiles" or SMs). The missile has no idea where it's going or what it's supposed to hit, in fact it doesn't even know where IT is. It's only real link to the world is it's ability to listen to the ship's powerful radar. The same radar that detected the threat can also see the SM. It basically hits the SM with radar in a special way that tells the SM "go up", "go down", "turn this much" etc. and guides it into the target. At the very end of the flight there is a terminal phase that is a bit different, but it's still the radar doing the heavy lifting, not the missile. Most of this is called out in more detail in the wikipedia page for Aegis Combat System.

    8. Re:Math? by s.petry · · Score: 1

      I should correctly have spelled Hizballah and apologize if anyone is offended or confused by the incorrect spelling.

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    9. Re:Math? by Sloppy · · Score: 1

      No, the real point holds, that "math" is not a synonym for "one side has more of some resource." Comparing two numbers doesn't make one of the numbers MATHIER than the other one.

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    10. Re:Math? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      I don't know, it might hold; but if we are actually talking about sophisticated devices vs garage-made rockets, the sophisticated missiles seem to have done well in the only case where that scenario has been tested in real life: Iron Dome. So from a practical perspective, it seems to be an alright method of defense.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    11. Re:Math? by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      The enemy doesn't have to fight fair. They can exploit that. Just place the launcher on top of a school, hospital or orphanage. Wait for the counterstrike. Propaganda win.

    12. Re:Math? by anyGould · · Score: 1

      No the point is that attrition works, but the writer stupidly called it "math" when it is no such thing.

      Well, it is "math", just not complicated math:

      (number of missiles that will hit target) - (number of interceptors * interception rate) = (number of explosions you have to explain to the PM in the morning)

      Or, in English - it's fantastic that Israel has the ability to tell where a missile will hit and conserve interceptors. The counter to that is to throw a whole *lotta* missiles in the air and see just how fast it can do that math. It's the primitive form of the Macross Missile Massacre.

    13. Re:Math? by uninformedLuddite · · Score: 1

      He says while humming the Star Mangled Banner

      --
      The new right fascists are bilingual. They speak English and Bullshit.
    14. Re:Math? by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Stalin worked this out last century: "Quantity has a quality all of its own".

      Compare the T-34 tank to the Tiger. Was the latter better? In most ways, yes. But it wasn't 60 times better, which is roughly the ratio the Russians outbuilt the Germans by.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    15. Re:Math? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      hehe, in other words, not only did the article describe it poorly, it also didn't have anything close to an original thought!

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  9. Exhausting happens at both parties by Skinkie · · Score: 1

    If party A would send (all - 1) their conventional weapons, imagine what happens if the rocket launch would indeed destroy everything foreign because the foreign missile defense is exhausted. Now think of what happens with the forces that are actually on route, how should the country be defended against them? This is an optimization problem is both cases: taking causalities because of potential worse problems, or exhausting everything and no defense.

    --
    Support Eachother, Copy Dutch Property!
    1. Re:Exhausting happens at both parties by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      "I think we should look at this from the military point of view. I mean, supposing the Russkies stashes away some big bomb, see. When they come out in a hundred years they could take over! I think it would be extremely naive of us, Mr. President, to imagine that these new developments are going to cause any change in Soviet expansionist policy. I mean, we must be... increasingly on the alert to prevent them from taking over other mineshaft space, in order to breed more prodigiously than we do, thus, knocking us out in superior numbers when we emerge! Mr. President, we must not allow... a mine shaft gap!"
      - Buck Turgidson

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
  10. Yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You could fire so many nukes that even if they were shot down, the left over radioactive material poisons the seas and kills all life on earth. But that's expensive.

    1. Re:Yes by YodasEvilTwin · · Score: 1

      Not really. There aren't remotely enough nukes in existence to do that.

    2. Re:Yes by PIBM · · Score: 1

      A nuke that gets shot down can explode by nuclear explosion before being destroyed by the enemy. Think about 50 000 nuclear explosions mid sky. I'm pretty sure that it would be pretty close to killing all life on earth (I know, some extremophiles would not be affected, whatever, humans would have a hard time.)

    3. Re:Yes by fredrated · · Score: 1

      Some think that wiping out all human life would essentially be the equivalent.

    4. Re:Yes by SJHillman · · Score: 1

      Depending on the type of nuke, it can be fairly difficult to accidentally set one off by shooting it down. More likely the conventional explosives in the nuke will go off in an uncontrolled manner and spray a relatively small amount of radioactive material on the ground.

      I'm also not sure why you would have 50,000 nuclear explosions mid sky when there's only about 17,000 nukes still in existence, with fewer than a quarter of them active. Russia is estimated to have the most with about 8500 warheads of which fewer than 1800 are active.

    5. Re:Yes by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      Nuclear weapons require a precise detonation of explosives to compress the fission core to attain criticality. If you hit a missile and cause it to explode, you might get a fizzle, or nothing but the conventional explosives going off. It is extremely unlikely you will get a full yield explosion in that case.

      There will be radioactive pollution, of course, and I imagine there could even be one freak detonation, but it won't be 50,000 weapons going critical.

    6. Re:Yes by PIBM · · Score: 1

      It could be relatively easy to detect countermeasure being employed against the weapons and trigger them to explose mid-air before being destroyed.

  11. Simply put: does strategy win? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Yes....

    But don't call it math.

  12. Numerical superiority, not "math"... by Dystopian+Rebel · · Score: 1

    And I expect that a highly numerate society would understand the probabilities well enough not to wage open war against a numerically superior adversary.

    Hence the "global economy" that we have today.

    --
    Rich And Stupid is not so bad as Working For Rich And Stupid.
  13. Entropy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Without becoming a hyper-power, then this is correct. But looking at 9/11, those events were preventable--without exhausting resources. It occurred because resources weren't used wisely--and to some extent, resources and intelligence were ignored entirely due to partisan politics.

  14. This is exactly why... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    we need the Death Star that Obama refuses to build.

    1. Re:This is exactly why... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and lasers, lots of lasers.

  15. That's retarded... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Math also wins against pasta strainers. Think about it. Could there be so much pasta in the world that all the available strainers would be FULL ?

    1. Re:That's retarded... by Red+Herring · · Score: 1

      As long as there are Pastafarians in the world, his Noodley Goodness shall keep the strainers always full, but never running over.

      Math has nothing on His Noodleyness.

      --
      #include "standard_disclaimer.h"
  16. Math? by phantomfive · · Score: 5, Informative

    Is this what we have degenerated to? When I read the title, I thought, "wow, someone has done the calculations to find the weak spots in the trajectories of the defense missiles or can calculate live the precise way to avoid them."

    No. When they say math, they mean, "a lot." Nothing more mathematical than that. Shoot a lot of projectiles at the target, and one of them will get through. We've degenerated mathematically past the level of a two-year-old and down to that of a rat or something. Chickens can even distinguish between 'a lot' and 'a little.'

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  17. OK PLEASE STOP WITH THE DAMN WHAT IF POSTS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What if aliens come and cut the planet in half? What if my tuna sandwich doesn't taste good? What if i actually ask a worthwhile question?

    Seriously, what the fuck do you think would happen if we get attacked by an overwhelming force?

    1. Re:OK PLEASE STOP WITH THE DAMN WHAT IF POSTS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What if the "what if" posts stopped?

    2. Re:OK PLEASE STOP WITH THE DAMN WHAT IF POSTS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Seriously, what the fuck do you think would happen if we get attacked by an overwhelming force?

      We'd make homemade weapons and kill the enemy with pipe bombs and homemade rocketry.

      And then when we run out of that we'd use sticks and stones and harsh language.

    3. Re:OK PLEASE STOP WITH THE DAMN WHAT IF POSTS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And then when we run out of that we'd use sticks and stones and harsh language.

      Don't forget strongly worded e-mails.

  18. There will be no second wave attack. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Nations monitor other nations to know their capabilities. When during the first attack one observes missile sites not being deployed, then they become the highest value targets for a counter attack. What you are describing is strategy, not math.

  19. First post - not going to bother with a login by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But I can speak with some accuracy on this. What the author is referring to is called a Saturation attack. The notion that "All that has to get through is one." We also have what are called SWARM attacks in the small boat arena. Tom Clancy discussed it in one of his older books - Russia fired off some three digit number of missiles, some fell short, some defense in depth tactics took some out, flares and chaff did their job, but finally a couple hit. We did the same thing in WWII well in advance of the JDAM - drop enough tonnage around a target, something will hit.

    What gets wildly irritating is when WE have a 99.87 success rate with ordnance-on-target, the only thing that gets any press is the .13. Go sell your ad space, media folks. Folks gotta pay their mortgages...

  20. missle command by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've played enough Missle Command to know you can only defend one city.

    1. Re:missle command by Beezlebub33 · · Score: 1

      In Missile Command, you don't get to shoot the thing that is firing all those missiles at you. The point is that after the first wave (and it's easy to defend against that in Missile Command), you fire your remaining missiles at their headquarters, launch sites, communications nodes, etc, so there isn't a second wave.

      --
      The more people I meet, the better I like my dog.
  21. It's not about the long term survivability. by Red+Herring · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In the case of AEGIS and related defenses, the goal is not necessarily to be able to absorb/defend against anything and everything that the enemy throws against you. The goal is to survive long enough to turn the attacking launch site into a glass parking lot (or a steaming hole in the water) before they can destroy your offensive assets. In the mentioned case of Iran, I expect the goal would be to absorb one or two 'provocative' attacks. If there was full out attack, though, I'm pretty sure they would not have the opportunity to launch all the missiles...

    Why so many of these stupid questions on /. over the last few days? I feel like I'm reading Digg. And not the good Digg.

    --
    #include "standard_disclaimer.h"
    1. Re:It's not about the long term survivability. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The goal is to survive long enough to turn the attacking launch site into a glass parking lot (or a steaming hole in the water) before they can destroy your offensive assets

      Except this assumes that launchers are not mobile.

    2. Re:It's not about the long term survivability. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Introduction to virtual attrition: This is what happens when the offence has to change plans to account for expected losses when assaulting a defended position. Any assets used against the defended target are assets that cannot be used against another target until the position is taken. Historically this is one of the reasons to build fortresses, as any troops that were besieging your castle were troops that were not be conquering or occupying other parts of your land. Ballistic missiles are particularly vulnerable to virtual attrition because they are one time use only and cannot be retargeted on the fly. Allow me to illustrate below.

      First, some equations. The probability of a given target being destroyed (P), is equal to the probability that any one missile won't destroy the target (F), raised to the number of missiles power (M), and subtracted from one. Which is to say P=1-F^M. For its part, F is equal to the probability that a given missile will destroy the target (D), subtracted from one. So F=1-D. Then D is equal to the reliability of the ballistic missile system (S) multiplied by the probability that it won't get shot down (L). So D=S*L. The completed equation then is P = 1-F^M = 1-(1-D)^M = 1-(1-S*L)^M. Clear?

      Okay then, the reliability of any nation's ballistic missile systems are highly classified for obvious reasons. As far as I can tell, estimates for modern missiles tend to hover around 90% (S=.9), so we'll go with that. Now suppose there is a target that the enemy wants to be 90% certain is destroyed in the event of war (P must equal .9). If it is undefended (L=1) then they can aim a single missile at it and call it day. This target is important to you, else the enemy wouldn't be so keen on destroying it. Suppose you decide to defend it with an BMD battery that is 50% effective (L=.5). Now the enemy has a problem, their probability of destroying their target has dropped to 45%.

      Because of the way probabilities interact with each other, the problem can't be solved by simply aiming two missiles at the target. As it turns out P = 1-(1-.9*.5)^2 = .6975, or 70%. With the given parameters, the probability of a given missile failing to destroy the target is always 55% (F=.55) so we can easily determine how many missiles are required to have a P of at least .9 . That is given by M = Log base .55 .1 = 3.85. Therefore the enemy will need to lob four missiles at the target in order to be 90% certain that it is destroyed. However, the enemy has a finite number of missiles, so your crappy BMD has just defended three targets without firing a shot. Congratulations.

    3. Re:It's not about the long term survivability. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Aegis and Patriot both had to be downgraded to comply with the ABM treaty with the Soviets. Meanwhile, they kept their ABM system around Moscow operational.

      Basic rule: Any decent high performance SAM system is also an ABM system. The counter is not true.

      Also, ABM systems are not really difficult. We were achieving skin on skin hits with Nike-Hercules in the 60s.

    4. Re:It's not about the long term survivability. by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

      You assume that a mobile launcher can outrun the collective blast radii of a MRV payload. You would be wrong.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  22. Sound theory, but in practice... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Sure, running your opponent out of ammo is a valid strategy. On the other hand, you have to maintain those older weapons on top of maintaining the ones you want to sneak past, not an easy job. Plus you're against ships designed to be able to operate over long periods without replenishing stores anyhow, so it's going to take a lot of weapons to burn through. Plus the US will be sure to begin retaliating as soon as the first birds are shot down, so you'll have to worry about defending the launch sites you're holding in reserve.

    This is exactly why we planned massive salvos in the Cold War, saturation beats duration.

  23. Evil with trumph over Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because Slashdot is dumb.

  24. The problem with averages by MyLongNickName · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The problem with averages is this: Only a small percentage of the population are in jobs that require advanced algebra, trigonometry and calculus. Although I went through differential equations in my undergraduate, and still enjoy math, I do not need it for my IT Management job. Statistics I use infrequently. Algebra I use somewhat (but not advanced). When you are measuring the US population average against other country averages (and in many cases just a subset of those other countries) you are not getting to the crux of the issue -- how does our top 2%(or whatever the appropriate number is) compare against other countries' top 2%. If our universities are producing engineers with much worse scores than our counterparts, then I will worry.

    On a side note: When trying to make fun of another group's intelligence, you should write a post that doesn't make you sound like a 9 year old who forgot his ADHD medication.

    --
    See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    1. Re:The problem with averages by SJHillman · · Score: 2

      Agreed, calculus was one of my favorite subjects in high school (the other being Latin), but I don't need anything remotely that advanced as a sysadmin. Basic seventh grade algebra gets me through the day-to-day. I know some people who do need high level math in their job and they're brilliant.

      As a side note, your post is insulting to 9 year olds. I know many 7 year olds who can write better than the original poster.

    2. Re:The problem with averages by Stone+Rhino · · Score: 5, Insightful

      In a democracy, you can't get away with having a small minority with all the knowledge. The whole population needs to be informed enough to do basic math and critical thinking. A basic grasp of statistics, algebra, and how to do a budget would make a huge difference in the ability to evaluate what politicians say and have a well-functioning democracy. If you can't decide for yourself, the facts just become another political football with competing claims.

      --


      Remember, there were no nuclear weapons before women were allowed to vote.
    3. Re:The problem with averages by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If our universities are producing engineers with much worse scores than our counterparts, then I will worry.

      Our universities produce other countries' top engineers, too...

    4. Re:The problem with averages by unixisc · · Score: 2

      I completely agree with this. I've never figured out why an average person on a day to day basis would need to know things like trigonometry, calculus, complex numbers, or things like Laplace Transforms. OTOH, Math courses would do well to introduce Binary Arithmetic and Boolean Algebra at school level, so that kids get up to speed on those things early, and can segway from there into either programming, or logic design. In the meantime, topics like complex algebra should be shifted to Pure Math courses, while things like trigonometry & calculus would still be there, but take a back seat to computing-centric math: their main purpose being to form the basis of programing exercises to calculate heights and distances and so on. In other words, computers should be the ones using trigonometry, calculus and so on, not average people.

    5. Re:The problem with averages by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      You are confusing test scores with insight.

      A lot of problems resolve down to something simple and intuitive that any reasonably bright middle school student should be able to understand. Other things not so much. On the other hand, a lot of this is influenced more by politics and ideology than whether or not you understand the problem.

      Too many missiles. Not being able to manage 100%. That's not something that that requires Diff Eq.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    6. Re:The problem with averages by sl4shd0rk · · Score: 2

      If our universities are producing engineers with much worse scores than our counterparts, then I will worry.

      Umm.. the US does not seem to be producing[0] engineers like other countries[1] are. You could probably start that worrying you speak of.

      [0] - www.freep.com/article/20121017/BUSINESS01/310170028/Reuss-U-S-lags-in-producing-engineering-grads
      [1] - http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/12/polands-universities-turn_n_2285849.html

      --
      Join the Slashcott! Feb 10 thru Feb 17!
    7. Re:The problem with averages by Kingkaid · · Score: 1

      I don't think it matters what you study or how good you think your engineers are. The thought it rather simple - unless you have unlimited defensive ammunition, why couldn't a country just have all of its missiles go on a narrow path over missile defenses to where they become depleted of countermeasures and then go in for the kill.

    8. Re:The problem with averages by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are making the case for unpopular ideas - like "qualifications" for voters...

    9. Re:The problem with averages by loufoque · · Score: 0

      It's appalling to see someone that, despite being somewhat educated, still misunderstands the purpose of having mathematics as part of general curricula.

    10. Re:The problem with averages by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps, but judging from employment numbers, they're making more than they need...

    11. Re:The problem with averages by SJHillman · · Score: 2

      Because then you'd need to launch all your missiles from within a relatively small area... and that would make them much easier to detect upon launch as well as much easier to stop. Missiles are not airplanes that can be launched from all over and then group up. They carry limited fuel and have relatively limited flight control so you want to take the shortest path possible to minimize detection and countermeasure time.

    12. Re:The problem with averages by marnues · · Score: 1

      Here is my problem with the way we teach math. Calculus is not advanced. It is a different method to doing math. I use calculus all the time. Not because I'm doing Integrals, but because I see the world with Calculus. It is possible to learn Calculus without applying it to the world. What a waste though.

    13. Re:The problem with averages by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      I've never figured out why an average person on a day to day basis would need to know things like trigonometry, calculus, complex numbers, or things like Laplace Transforms. OTOH, Math courses would do well to introduce Binary Arithmetic and Boolean Algebra at school level, so that kids get up to speed on those things early, and can segway from there into either programming, or logic design.

      You seem to make two entirely opposite points.

      Why would your average person need to know Binary Arithmetic and Boolean Algebra either, if your first thought is true? And by the way is 'segue' not 'segway'.

      It's a pretty narrow view to think advanced math is not needed for programming. For instance much the software we write in my profession uses trigonometry, calculus, complex numbers, Fourier transforms, and Hilbert transforms, just to mention a few things.

    14. Re:The problem with averages by unixisc · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but the average person wouldn't need to know L'Hospital's Rule, Fourier Transforms, Derivative or Integral Calculus, Complex Algebra or Trigonometry in order to balance their home budgets or calculate their cost of home ownership, and other Math related items that the average person does.

    15. Re:The problem with averages by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As soon as we stop the first missile we should be sending out missiles out to deplete the attacker. That is why

    16. Re:The problem with averages by MyLongNickName · · Score: 1

      Be appalled all you like, but I am appalled that you would read what I wrote and jump off to a wild conclusion that I am against mathematics in schools. Perhaps you didn't have enough reading comprehension and logic in yours. The bottom line is that the comparisons between countries are not apples-to-apples and that having a pissing war over who has the average highest score is a bad metric.

      --
      See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    17. Re:The problem with averages by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Reminds me of, "Use up the Irish. The dead cost nothing."

    18. Re:The problem with averages by john.r.strohm · · Score: 1

      However, the average person most certainly DOES need to understand Rolle's Theorem, since it is the theoretical underpinning of the Laffer Curve. (Laffer himself has observed that the curve bearing his name is a trivial application of Rolle's Theorem.)

      Rolle's Theorem says that given a differentiable function f(x) and two points a and b such that f(a) = f(b) = 0, there exists at least one point c such that the derivative f''(c) = 0. To get the Laffer Curve, f(x) is tax revenue as a function of tax rate, a = 0% tax, and b = 100% tax. (Hint: It is generally safe to assume that nobody will work for free. Then somewhere between 0% tax and 100% tax there is a point beyond which tax revenue goes DOWN instead of up when tax rate is increased.

    19. Re:The problem with averages by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's still a waste of time when it comes to tax. Since in practice nobody knows where the point(s) is(are) till they actually try it. Secondly people could change - many Scandinavian countries have high tax rates but a large percentage of the taxed population seem to regard it as an acceptable trade-off.

      Note: it's "at least one point", so you're not even sure whether it might still go up again after you're past one point. Hence the theory is still useless for tax in practice. Thus the curve is also mostly useless except in an academic context.

    20. Re:The problem with averages by jandar · · Score: 1

      Calculus is a very simple part of math. Even I'm not applying it often directly it shows perspectives on things.

    21. Re:The problem with averages by Sarius64 · · Score: 2

      Simply use something besides missiles. Seems like laser-based tech holds the best promise for long-range repetitive targeting.

    22. Re:The problem with averages by Farmer+Pete · · Score: 1

      A basic grasp of statistics, algebra, and how to do a budget would help politicians create a functioning country.

      Fixed

    23. Re:The problem with averages by dryeo · · Score: 2

      The problem is that the Laffer Curve is such a simplification that it can be used to trick people to work against their best interests. Besides the points the sibling AC posted there are a couple of other points.
      With a drop in taxes why shouldn't your wage go down. You make $100,000 with a take home pay of $50,000. Taxes are reduced to zero. Your wage is cut back to $55,000. You should be happy as you're making $5000 more then previously and your employer is very happy as his profits have gone up by at least $45,000.
      That $55,000 goes way less far. As example instead of paying $100 towards road improvements a month, you now pay $200 in tolls a month along with all businesses paying more and passing those costs on.
      A population has to be pretty educated to understand these ramifications of moving left or right on the Laffer Curve.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    24. Re:The problem with averages by thomasw_lrd · · Score: 1

      I enjoy math, and until recently, I haven't needed it as a programmer. But now I have to write a pareto function to analyze customers, so you never know when it will come in handy.

    25. Re:The problem with averages by Maxx169 · · Score: 1

      Rate of incoming missiles - rate of missiles being destroyed (dM/dt) ... ?

    26. Re:The problem with averages by jader3rd · · Score: 1

      In a democracy, you can't get away with having a small minority with all the knowledge.

      Sure you can. You only let the people with a certain threshold of knowledge have the ability to vote.

    27. Re:The problem with averages by loufoque · · Score: 1

      First, I was exaggerating, as is customary of discussion on Internet forums. It is not a big deal at all.

      What I meant to say is that mathematics are taught not because they're going to be necessary in your future jobs, but because learning mathematics trains yourself to a certain way of doing work rigorously and logically, which will be valuable in any field.

    28. Re:The problem with averages by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      I completely agree with this. I've never figured out why an average person on a day to day basis would need to know things like trigonometry, calculus, complex numbers, or things like Laplace Transforms.

      Because we don't know what we are going to need in life. I've held several different positions in my career. And while mine has been probably been more diverse than many, with, lifeguard, traveling automotive salesman, CATV system design ans implementation, Electronic technician, chemical technician, photographer, videographer, computers and networks for directorate, conference room design for audio and video.

      All except the lifeguard had at least algebra level math, and several used trig, and various transforms. I kinda miss being a lifeguard.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    29. Re:The problem with averages by Americano · · Score: 1

      And by the way is 'segue' not 'segway'

      No way of being sure. He MIGHT have been referring to students using a Segway to get to their classes in programming & logic design.

      I'm not sure why early exposure to Boolean Algebra and Binary Arithmetic would lead students to be more likely to ride segways, but I'm willing to hear his reasoning.

    30. Re:The problem with averages by buybuydandavis · · Score: 1

      A lot of problems resolve down to something simple and intuitive that any reasonably bright middle school student should be able to understand.

      Apparently the scientific method was not "intuitive" for thousands of years, while saying "a wizard did it" was. Humans have insane and retarded intuitions compared with the best of our accumulated cultural inheritance - which only a small percentage of people have availed themselves of.

    31. Re:The problem with averages by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Apparently etymology is not your strong point. Wizard = Wise man= scientist.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    32. Re:The problem with averages by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      The trouble is, the Laffer Curve doesn't actually have a definitive solution. It is more propaganda than anything else. While it is obviously true, it has a strong component of Public Trust in the Government. When trust is low, the maximum of a Laffer Curve is low. When trust is high, the maximum of a Laffer Curve can easily be 70%-90%, because the population trusts the government to take care of them.

      In addition, since trust is highly individual and subjective, there are people for whom the Laffer Curve *does* maximize at 100%, IF certain other conditions are met (government guaranteed material future, for instance).

      Yes, nobody will work for free, but compensation doesn't HAVE to be in money.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    33. Re:The problem with averages by Livius · · Score: 1

      "laser-based tech", like sharks.

    34. Re:The problem with averages by buybuydandavis · · Score: 1

      People used to think that knowing magic is what made you wise, until some of them wised up and discovered the scientific method, and other good ideas. Which was my point.

    35. Re:The problem with averages by peragrin · · Score: 1

      The problem becomes the majority of people who don't meet that threshold are still smart enough to figure out they are stupid and which end to hold a weapon by.

      It is why democracy both sucks, and is relatively stable. The stupid(not just disagrees but actually stupid) have an equal voice even if they don't really deserve to it. But because they can say it and have it listened to, and most importantly because they don't suffer completely from it(social services stabilize peasants). Keep the stupid people mostly fed, clean, medically cared for, with an obvious way out if they work for it, and they won't riot or revolt as often.

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    36. Re:The problem with averages by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      And those who actually knew "magic", knew about the scientific method all along. There is no difference for the average person who doesn't seem to know the scientific method from a magic spell, the only difference is the language.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    37. Re:The problem with averages by wagnerrp · · Score: 1

      If your taxes drop to zero, you are correct, however that still is an oversimplification of the concept. The idea is that as you raise taxes, the market reacts to conserve money, and the total cash flux in the system decreases. Since your employer must pay you almost twice as much, they can only afford to hire half as many employees.

      Most taxes are applied against the movement of money in the system, rather than the absolute quantity. Reduced flux means that increased tax rate is applied over a smaller value, resulting in reduced overall tax revenue. If you drop tax rates to zero percent, of course your proceeds from taxes will be zero, but the non-linear dynamics of the system mean your optimum long term rate is going to be unintuitively low.

    38. Re:The problem with averages by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      At the risk of returning to the topic at hand : What's being forgotten here is that if someone tries this move against the US, what AEGIS will do is give the US time to react to the threat, and destroy the source of it.

      The fantasy that everyone seems to believe in on multiple levels is that purely defensive moves can protect one indefinitely. Everybody who's done a bit of fighting sports knows that no matter the difference in skill, eventually tori (the attacker) will get lucky. Paradoxically this usually results in a much bigger violent reaction than the initial provocation would have caused. Initially someone hits you, it doesn't really hurt but he keeps going, and you simply defend. You're not punishing tori for his mistakes (ie. you're not attacking him in return). He'll get lucky, sooner or later, and get a kick in on your shin, or a fist in your face (I wear glasses, so that's really fucking annoying and the edges of those glasses cut, plus this happens if someone just gets close enough, they don't have to actually hit). At that point, I retaliate as hard as I possibly can, and that ends the fight, though generally not in the way I would have preferred.

      Once someone chooses to attack, the only way to end the violence is to deliver so much violence to them that they are at least temporarily disabled. Although several fighting sports, ju-jitsu for example, work under the assumption that unless sufficiently physically damaged an attacker won't stop. The same is true on a larger scale.

      There are 2 reasons violence stops. Either because one side is disabled, temporarily or permanently, in other words, because someone used so much violence against an attacker that he is stunned, wounded or dead. The alternative is that the situation is relatively calm and the predictable retaliation is too high.

      Historically, most wars were fought because the attacking side thought they could win the war. Even though there are high-profile exceptions, they attackers generally were right.

      What this AEGIS system allows, tactically, is for the US to have a coherent, thought through reaction to rocket attacks. If before AEGIS a terrorist fired a rocket, and it got through and killed a few tens of thousands USians, the US would have to immediately retaliate against any possible launch sites. Needless to say, that means launching a massive attack against the military of the country the attack was launched from, possibly even attacking the citizens of that country (muslim countries in general put their military hardware partly in civilian centers because sharia states that there is no difference between soldiers and non-soldiers (aside from gender and maybe age), so in war everybody's supposed to participate in military action, an additional reason is that they have to because most of the time they're fighting their own citizens). If AEGIS is in place that first rocket will be intercepted and a thoughful response can be worked on for months, knowing that the only real danger is a massive attack, which will betray itself before the actual launch.

      Second the fact that a large scale attack is required to succeed raises the bar on military capabilities needed to hit the US. This will reduce the number of people who try.

      Third, even if it only intercepts 90% or even 10% of the rockets, it's saving lives.

      This does not change the only possible military response to a massive rocket launch : the only effective response is to strike first, the only alternative defence is MAD, and I for one find that one seriously disappointing.

    39. Re:The problem with averages by MaskedSlacker · · Score: 1

      Only if you care about the number of missiles penetrating defenses as a function of time, and, while I can think of a few situations where you MIGHT want that, in most cases you just care about the total which just requires subtraction.

    40. Re:The problem with averages by mikael · · Score: 1

      There were several short sci-fi story on this topics. The first story had two advanced technology countries at war with each other. Gone were the days when orders or messages or even mathematics were written down on pen and pencil. Layer and layer of defence and and attack technology was developed. Long range radar, missile shields, interceptor drones, attack satellites, jammer satellites, space mines, all networked and controlled by defence computer systems. At the same time, an archeologists rediscovered hand-written mathematical notes. After deciphering them, he figured out a way that a human could navigate and pilot a high-altitude aircraft without the danger of being jammed. Then the military became interested.

      Another story had two space battalions engaged in a permanent game of three-dimensional chess in deep space. For every move recommended by one strategic computer system, the enemy's strategic computer system would formulate a counter move. For generations this extra-solar game of chess had been played with people graduating from space warfare academy, assigned a position, climbing up the ranks and retiring on a pension. Then one person figured out a way of winning this game - sending the order to attack at random.

      --
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    41. Re:The problem with averages by dryeo · · Score: 1

      Yes, my examples were an over simplification meant to show it is much more complex then simply lower taxes are good. You're doing the same thing by claiming that higher taxes would result in less employment when it may just as easily result in the employer deciding that he'd rather hire an extra employee to bring his own tax burden down, employees being an expense.
      As the AC says, there may well be multiple ideal points on the Laffer Curve and they change.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    42. Re:The problem with averages by ChrisMaple · · Score: 2

      You make $100,000 with a take home pay of $50,000. Taxes are reduced to zero. Your wage is cut back to $55,000.

      Your claim is justified neither by experience nor theory. But even if it were, the employee then sees that being an employer is a very good thing, so he quits and starts his own business, realizing he can greatly undercut his old employer's prices because his old employer has a profit margin exceeding 45%. The ex-employee sells goods for 75% of what his old employer did and has a higher personal income than before. This happens generally throughout the country, and prices generally fall by 25%: A dollar now goes farther.

      Still happy with your scenario?

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    43. Re:The problem with averages by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      Trust is a factor, but incentive is far more powerful. Most people will work harder when there is incentive to do so, and that far outweighs the effect of someone who will work if mommy is nice to him. The Laffer Curve, like much in economics, studies what happens in groups of people rather than the quirks that motivate very few.

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    44. Re:The problem with averages by dryeo · · Score: 1

      That's only true for businesses that have a low barrier to entry, those same businesses that are likely paying low enough wages that a tax cut isn't going to make much difference to the employees.
      For businesses with a high barrier to entry, good luck starting a competing business. Whether it's large amounts of infrastructure or the business has invested in paying off the government to erect artificial barriers, there are a lot of businesses that you can't just start your own and those that it is easy to enter are usually minimum profit businesses.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    45. Re:The problem with averages by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Incentive only works when you trust your employer to actually pay you instead of run off with the payroll in his own pocket, which has been happening quite a lot as of late.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    46. Re:The problem with averages by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      I wonder how we could do this.

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

      --
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    47. Re:The problem with averages by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      Simply use something besides missiles. Seems like laser-based tech holds the best promise for long-range repetitive targeting.

      The "repetetive" part is still a problem with lasers.

      If your laser has enough energy to destroy a missile it's going to burn up a big chunk of something every time it's fired, something being capacitor charge time, reactor output or horrible chemicals.

      It's probably also going to have to deal with some nasty heat disposal problems.

      --
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    48. Re:The problem with averages by GLMDesigns · · Score: 1

      The problem is that most politicians have a poor grasp of math and science. Most are trained as attorneys and many would not know what 5 squared is let alone know (nor be able to figure out nor describe) what 5! Not to mention figuring out derivatives. Look at politicians who think that the temperature of the sun goes into the millions of degrees; or that the island of Guam might tip over; or that Apollo 11 landed on Mars.

      --
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      Vote 3rd Party in 2016 and beyond
    49. Re:The problem with averages by T-Bone-T · · Score: 1

      I've got bad news for you. The sun does reach millions of degrees but I guess you are technically correct, as the sun reaches tens of millions of degrees in its core.

    50. Re:The problem with averages by GLMDesigns · · Score: 1

      whoops!!!! my bad! :-) The politician I was thinking about said that about the earth's core.

      --
      If you're scared of your govt then you need to further restrict its powers
      Vote 3rd Party in 2016 and beyond
    51. Re:The problem with averages by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what is the difference between algebra and 'complex algebra'? Your post lost all credibility at that point.

      Responding to the GP, yeah it would be a great world if everyone took intellectual pursuits seriously and made an effort to learn something new every day, but the reality is, people just wanna self medicate of TV, the internet (facebook and other crap like that) get drunk, do drugs etc so unfortunately that is the fact of the matter. I believe in lifelong learning but most people simply do not. This is why we end up with an intellectual elite who can do things like make computers, fly to the moon or build nuclear bombs.

      " If you can't decide for yourself, the facts just become another political football with competing claims."

      Emphasis on the word "can't" because most people are not capable of intellectual achievement beyond a certain point and never will be. As patronising and condescending as it may sound, with my degree results (physics) I am still in the top 5% of intellectual achievers in my country, yet I am at the bottom of that top 5% being inherently lazy and unmotivated. Yet I do not regard myself as inherently smarter than some street savvy punk, altho given the right resources I could achieve more, but then getting that relates back to the political football of which ye spake.

    52. Re:The problem with averages by unixisc · · Score: 1

      The average person doesn't need to understand Rolle's theorem. Only the politicians who support/oppose the Laffer curves do. I'll avoid the political arguments everybody who responded to you are making, since it's all opinion on their part, but again, the average person sitting at home watching TV doesn't need Rolle's theorem unless he is in politics advocating Reagan or Kemp economics. Just like an average person doesn't need to understand Poisson's equation, but someone working in a company where they are trying to migrate people from product A to product B would need it to quantify how much of a mix of A & B would be needed in production during the transition period. Similarly, Fourier transforms would be very useful for someone trying to determine the constituent frequencies of a random RF signal being received, but pretty worthless for someone sitting at home preparing the lasagna.

    53. Re:The problem with averages by unixisc · · Score: 1

      Difference between simple & complex algebra? If I had 6 strawberries before I ate 4, how many did I initially have? That is simple algebra, and something we do day to day. Complex algebra? Who on earth wants to deal with the square root of -1, if it is not a real number, and only has validity as a representation of trigonometric concepts? When was the last time you needed to handle surds?

    54. Re:The problem with averages by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Complex numbers have practical applications in electromagnetism. They can also be used to draw pretty pictures.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    55. Re:The problem with averages by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      And those who actually knew "magic", knew about the scientific method all along.

      Really? It's actually possible to predict the outcome of a battle by looking at a goat's giblets?

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    56. Re:The problem with averages by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      to balance their home budgets or calculate their cost of home ownership, and other Math related items that the average person does not bother with, which partly explains the mess we're in..

      FTFY

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    57. Re:The problem with averages by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      It's a pretty narrow view to think advanced math is not needed for programming. For instance much the software we write in my profession uses trigonometry, calculus, complex numbers, Fourier transforms, and Hilbert transforms, just to mention a few things.

      You're confusing programming itself with the problem domain, i.e. the thing you're programming about. If the distinction isn't clear, imagine that computers are abolished; you'd still need the maths to do it by hand, so the maths is nothing to do with programming per se.

      Most programmers are writing unglamorous stuff like stock control and accounting systems for tin-pot companies. It's rare they do more than add, subtract & multiply.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    58. Re:The problem with averages by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      The Woz has one.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    59. Re:The problem with averages by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      The goat's gibblets are just for dramatic effect.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  25. Yes, before you fire 100 missiles we've killed you by raymorris · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Enemy plan:
    Fire 100 "cheap missiles" to get intercepted
    Wait for the US to use up it's anti-missile capabilities shooting those down
    Fire more, more better missiles to hit target.

    What would really happen
    Fire 6 "cheap" missiles
    Die in a hail of US missiles you have no defense against

  26. Not exactly new by compro01 · · Score: 2

    Aegis was state of the art, the best SAM system yet devised, but it had one major weakness: Tico carried only ninety-six SM-2 surface-to-air missiles; there were one hundred forty incoming Kingfish. The computer had not been programmed to think about that.

    --
    upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    1. Re:Not exactly new by NouberNou · · Score: 2

      Possibly the best chapter in that whole damn book.

      But lets get realistic here, the intention of the AEGIS ABM system was NOT to counter the Russians or China, who we know full well could overwhelm our ABM systems. It is to counter "rogue" states that will have smaller, less capable ballistic missile programs and might be "unstable" and attack with a few of them. It is to prevent the people/states that might be crazy enough to sacrifice their entire populations just to get in a spiteful blow to the US. If we can prevent their nukes from hitting us, then we have no reason to then counter and destroy millions of their people. That is the reasoning behind the modern ABM system. It is not Safeguard or SDI, or even the Moscow ABM system. It is meant to prevent crazy launches or accidental launches.

  27. It doesn't matter by Baloroth · · Score: 1

    If you can stop a significant fraction of the missiles, that still gives you a massive reduction in total damage, provided of course your enemy doesn't have so many weapons even a few percentage points can wipe out everything. And besides, it still gives an advantage even in that case: if you need to fire all your missiles, and you need to fire some of them later on, that means the defending country has time to retaliate (so you can't rely on first strike-advantage), plus all their missiles will still hit, which may well mean you never get to fire the later missiles after the system is overwhelmed. And the defender would retaliate, and quickly, make no mistake.

    Anyways, missile defense was never about a full-scale war. It was always gamesmanship and preventing smaller powers with only a dozen or so missiles from threatening anyone and everyone (countries like North Korea, potentially).

    --
    "None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license." --John Milton
  28. Um, really? by Zcar · · Score: 2, Informative

    Ever since the advent of anti-ship missiles, a big part of naval surface warfare tactics has been managing to get enough anti-ship missiles on target at the same time to overwhelm the target ships' defenses, so this is pretty much "Duh!"

    Also, AEGIS is a 1970s naval air defense technology for protecting against anti-ship missiles and aircraft. It's only recently had an ABM capability added. It is true, as I understand it from public sources, that the VLS systems most often used with AEGIS are difficult at best to resupply at sea and pretty much is never done.

    1. Re:Um, really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This comes to mind: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millennium_Challenge_2002

      ovo -hoot

    2. Re:Um, really? by Chuckstar · · Score: 1

      It's a little unfair to refer to AEGIS as a 1970s system. It's gotten lots of TLC over the years.

    3. Re:Um, really? by Zcar · · Score: 1

      True, but the name is definitely 1970s. There is an implication in the summary that it's an ABM system.

    4. Re:Um, really? by firesyde424 · · Score: 1

      That's like saying the F-16 or F-18 are 60's era equipment. Sure, the first models were built around then, but just like aegis, those fighters have seen a lot of upgrades and love over the years. The aegis systems of today are much more capable than their predecessors.

    5. Re:Um, really? by Chuckstar · · Score: 1

      They retrofitted ABM onto the AEGIS system in the 2000s. It's actually a completely separate system hosted on the same destroyers. A planned upgrade will integrate the two different systems, as both could be enhanced by sharing data between the two systems.

  29. Yes Math wins! by OzPeter · · Score: 1

    After the defense systems of a naval vessel get overwhelmed and it goes down in flames, the country that owns that vessel stomps big-time on the attacker.

    War isn't a "No loss evan" scenario .. its a question of balancing resources against potential threats. And given that the military spending of the US is around double that of all its "enemies" combined - who the hell is going to try to pull off a stunt as proposed??!?!?!?!

    --
    I am Slashdot. Are you Slashdot as well?
  30. can target discrimination win? by swschrad · · Score: 1

    imagine Nut Korea shoots off 43 Rong Dong missles, 16 Ding Dong noisemakers, and is fuelling six nukes. the Rong Dongs will get halfway to nowhere and hit the water. the Ding Dongs spark and arc and in the end do nothing. the nukes would be the real threat after the radars clear on the Aegis cruisers.

    if you get a look at any weapon, it will have definite characteristics that are generally repeated with every shot. it is moderately well known that repeatable data can be programmed for recall, and since the US seems to be around semi-announced tests with snooperships, we should have some target discrimination rules in the missle system on the Aegis.

    if something gets close enough to the ship to be thought a threat, it will be taken out. that should leave a hold full of Standard missles for the nuclear missles.

    I'm still not digging a bomb shelter.

    --
    if this is supposed to be a new economy, how come they still want my old fashioned money?
  31. The only... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The only winning move is not to play.

    1. Re:The only... by plover · · Score: 1

      The only winning move is for both sides not to play.

      FTFY.

      --
      John
  32. Cold War scenario by SirGarlon · · Score: 1

    'Think about it â" could we someday see a scenario where American forces at sea with a fixed amount of defensive countermeasures facing an enemy with large numbers of cruise and ballistic weapons that have the potential to simply overwhelm them?

    This is the Cold War scenario with a couple of string substitutions: s/land/sea/g and s/artillery/missiles/g. The US spent over 40 years developing strategies to counter that scenario. Rest assured, they have a smart answer, or rather several of them. I believe a nuclear first strike is on the short list of possibilities.

    --
    [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
  33. The only way to win is not to play by scorp1us · · Score: 1

    War Games got it right.

    --
    Slashdot's rate-of-post filter: Preventing you from posting too many great ideas at once.
    1. Re:The only way to win is not to play by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      War Games got it right.

      Except...
      Read some history. Any tribal / city / religion that doesn't get wiped out is at least militaristic enough to defend itself.

      The -quickest way to become a footnote in a history book- is not to play.

  34. Dumb article name by Zaphod+The+42nd · · Score: 1

    Enemy isn't math. Its brute force / overwhelming numbers. Dumb article name is dumb.

    --
    GCS/MU/P d- s:- a-- C++++$ UL++ P+ L++ E+ W++ N o K- w--- O M+ V- PS+++ PE Y+ PGP t+ 5- X R++ tv+ b++ DI++ D++ G+ e++ h-
    1. Re:Dumb article name by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yea, but by what mechanism are those overwhelming numbers generated? Oh yea, addition. Math. How can you tell that the numbers are overwhelming? Subtract the resources available to respond from the # of individual attacks. Math.

      That said, the enemy definitely ISN'T math. It's MOAR MISSILES!

  35. Red Storm Rising by lax-goalie · · Score: 1

    This was the premise of the first naval battle in Clancy's Red Storm Rising. TFA is neither original nor insightful. Even armchair strategists understand the concept of attrition.

    1. Re:Red Storm Rising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Absolutely correct, the Russians use a mass bomabardment of older missle types to screen incoming higher tech weaponry allowing the US forces to waste precious defensive firepower on equipment that was barely a threat so the better weaponry would have a much higher success rate against the now almost defensless US forces.

      It is a well thought out and enacted scenario in that book, which is wholly accurate in this modern age, why else does the Iron Dome system in Israel triage all incoming targets it is tracking in order to determine landing location and do the math of "Is spot X more costly to replace than spot Y? Yes, defend X."

  36. Saturation by zelbinion · · Score: 1

    I've always thought several thousand simple, relatively stupid, cheap "cruise missiles" could pretty easily defeat a carrier battle group. When I say "cruise missiles" I'm talking about pilot-less drones that are really small air craft (could even be built of wood) with a warhead aboard. You wouldn't even need them to be completely autonomous, though a auto-pilot would probably be a good idea. You'd need a satellite up-link to control them (and to diminish the possibility of someone jamming your control signals) but it seems like it wouldn't be very expensive to build a cheap small aircraft (again, wood would be okay) with a simple air-cooled piston engine and a propeller, a remote control system with a simple auto pilot, and, say, a 500-pound free-fall bomb attached. Build many thousands of these for the same cost of a few modern fighter planes, and then fly them en-mass at a target. Sure, the combination of defensive aircraft and anti-missile systems would knock-down the vast majority of your "cruise missiles", but it would only take a small number getting through and dive-bombing the target with a few well-placed bombs to destroy the target. This seems so much less expensive than building a modern air force/navy/etc. I don't understand why other nations haven't tried it.

    1. Re:Saturation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its harder to hide 'building many thousands of these'. It is also a lot of time effort energy and materials to make them and, especially if it was the us you were attacking, the moment a few hundred are launched, a counterattack would overwhelm almost any who would try this tactic.

    2. Re:Saturation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The type of plane you are talking about could be detected with radar from probably at least 200 nautical miles away and probably would fly less than 100knots, so any fighter plane, and the US has many, would have over an hour to fight. How many of these pre-WW2 tech planes do you think a single fighter could shoot down in an hour? Would any even get through? Then even if a few got through, what happens next? You get pounded with Tomahawks by the other targets you didn't hit.

    3. Re:Saturation by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      How many of these pre-WW2 tech planes do you think a single fighter could shoot down in an hour?

      About as many as the number of missiles it carries. And each missile will probably cost as much as a squadron of pre-WWII tech aircraft.

    4. Re:Saturation by mjwalshe · · Score: 1

      Trouble is the building of several thousand cheap drones and the launch facilitates to launch them in enough numbers is going to be so obvious that your facility gets carpet bombed (like the v1 and v2 plants). Finding the target is another problem Carrier groups are moving targets in the middle of the ocean how do you find the position.

    5. Re:Saturation by RandomFactor · · Score: 1

      If we're really talking "pre-WW2 tech", wouldn't a supersonic flyby be enough to take them out?

      --
      --- Mercutio was right.
    6. Re:Saturation by plover · · Score: 1

      The Phalanx is an American Close In Weapons System. It features a Vulcan M61 and a magazine holding 1,500 rounds of armor-piercing ammo (either tungsten or depleted uranium). Once switched on, it does not distinguish friend-or-foe, it just shoots at anything inbound that is traveling towards the ship and within range. It has configurable minimum and maximum velocities, and was designed to take out anything from planes and bombs to missiles. One of them could easily handle an entire Zerg rush of propellor driven aircraft. Two or more ships can defend each other during reloads.

      And that's assuming the fighter pilots have gotten bored with their bonanza of target drones*, and are now too busy writing "thanks for all the fun targets!" notes to the aggressor.

      Modern weapons are extremely effective at engaging with an incredible range of possible threats.

      * Hint: this will never happen.

      --
      John
    7. Re:Saturation by operagost · · Score: 1

      Modern fighter aircraft still have cannons. Ammo is relatively cheap.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    8. Re:Saturation by zelbinion · · Score: 1

      It's all a numbers game. Okay, so 3,000 cheap cruise missiles isn't enough? build more. An F-15 carries what, 8 air to air missiles max? Plus the gun, so best case, an F-15 can shoot down, say 12 cruise missiles, assuming they can launch, get to the the intercept, and have enough time to expend all of their stores. An F-22 carries 8 missiles as well, plus a gun (but with less ammunition than an F-15). F-18 can carry maybe 6 missiles, and the same goes for the F-16. So, how many of these do you have in-theater and can get airborne with the fuel, range, and armaments to do the job? So, let's say you have maybe 100 F-15, 50 F-22's, 250 F-16's, and maybe 60 F-18's available. Let's assume you could get a maximum of ~80% of those in the air in time (some would be down for maintenance, others might not be fueled and armed yet, etc.) so, maximum best-case theoretical anti-missile kills would be:
      80 F-15's x 12 = 960
      40 F-22's x 10 = 400
      200 F-16's x 10 = 2000
      50 F-18's x 10 = 500
      Total: 3860

      Now, add in a carrier battle group with maybe 8 AEGIS cruisers/destroyers, each with roughly 70 interceptors. That's another 560 potential kills, plus CIWS, the carrier's sea sparrows, Marines shooting MANPAD's machine guns, whatever. Figure maybe another 100 kills, max.

      Final total: about 4500.

      Okay, fine. So what if I build 10,000 cheap cruise missiles? Maybe 30% of them fail for some reason (hey, I said they were cheap, we've got to expect some failures.) The US shoots down 4500 of them. That still leaves 2500 you can't shoot down. Maybe their accuracy is pretty bad, and only 5% of those actually hit anything. That's 125 hits with 500 pound war heads on your carrier battle group. I think that would safely take care of it.

      So even while the strike is being executed, the US counter-attacks with cruise missiles. At, what, exactly? The cheap cruise missiles I have in mind have wheels and can take off from a road, or any reasonable flat piece of ground. Distribute the cruise missiles to 500 hundred locations around the country, and scatter paper decoy's to another 500 sites. What are you going to target? When you hit a launch site, what have you done? Put a hole in a road? Collapsed an empty building? Big deal. I just blew up a carrier battle group.

      If the airframes were simple wood construction, you could have relatively unskilled labor build them in hundreds of small shops distributed throughout the country. The engines would be a little more complicated, but no more complicated than an air-cooled motorcycle engine, and some Asian and Latin American countries produce many thousands of engines a year without the technical advances of a super power. A decent motorcycle might cost $1000 US to manufacture. Let's say my "cruise missile" costs 10 times that: $10,000.

      Okay, let's build 10,000 of them: $100 million, in U.S. dollars. That's less than a single F-22, less than four F-15's. With $100 million dollars worth of cheap ordinance, I've taken out an entire carrier battle group, costing BILLIONS of dollars. Let's not stop there. How about we build another 10,000 cruise missiles, and target the airfields where all of your expensive planes (now out of fuel and out of weapons) have to land. Those get launched right after the first wave, so your tomahawks haven't arrived yet to take out the launch sites. The returning fighter planes return to wrecked air fields, the patriot batteries have all been expended, and there are still another 1000 cruise missiles loitering around waiting for your F-22's and F-15's to land on roadways so that they can be destroyed on the ground. Many more billions lost.

      Granted, any prolonged fight with the US is generally not a good idea. The US has such a vast military and such massive manufacturing capability that a prolonged war would not be winnable unless you also have vast resources. However, if you are a nation (like North Korea) that doesn't always act rationally, and has far fewer resources, I still think there are reasonable strategies that could produce some pretty impressive results comparatively cheaply. Unless you employ weapons of mass destruction, I think a quantity vs. quality approach is nearly always a viable strategy if you can produce enough quantity cheaply enough.

    9. Re:Saturation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This seems so much less expensive than building a modern air force/navy/etc. I don't understand why other nations haven't tried it.

      Because even if you somehow manage to hide the production and storage facilities, your giant swarm of "missiles" will get picked up on radar the moment it takes off. Given the relative speed of your prop engines compared to modern missile engines, the counterstrike will hit you before your swarm is even halfway to its target.

    10. Re:Saturation by zelbinion · · Score: 1

      The trouble is, the CIWS fires those 1500 rounds at 4,500 rounds per minute, so it can only fire for 20 SECONDS. How many targets can a single CIWS take out before it is out of ammo? 10? If I have 100 cruise missiles flying at your ship, I don't care if you shoot down 10 of them.

    11. Re:Saturation by zelbinion · · Score: 1

      So, don't product them all in one place. Cheap wooden airframes could be built in a garage. Engine production would be a bit more difficult to decentralize, but again, a machine shop in the basement of a house is sufficient to built engines. Unless you carpet bomb EVERYTHING, it is going to be hard to shut down production. The Germans did this in WWII with aircraft production, and were able to still build aircraft right up through 1945 in the face of massive bombing. The V1 and V2 were different, because they required fixed launch sites, and unusual materials for the fuel.

    12. Re:Saturation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't need missiles to shoot down a wooden, propeller-driven aircraft, particularly if it's too cheap to have any kind of threat detection and evasion system. Traditional aircraft and ship mounted machine guns/cannon will do that quite effectively and inexpensively.

    13. Re:Saturation by careysub · · Score: 1

      You aren't appreciating just how good modern defensive armaments really are, and how hard it is to destroy an aircraft carrier. And you are overestimating what a really cheap drone can do.

      Lets look at the drone. If you want several thousand of them (lets say 4000) "cheaply" then you are spending, what?, $1.1 billion on an equivalent of a $275,000 plane - like a Cessna 172. Cruise speed 140 mph - this is only 4 times faster the ships; its never exceed speed is 188 MPH, total load (including fuel) 750 lb. There are cheaper cars that drive faster. And that $1.1 billion is not exactly chickenfeed.

      In the slow crawl out to engage the fleet (3 hours to hit it 420 miles out) the fleet can relocate 100 miles. Makes a dense coordinated attack impossible even if you can track the fleet in real time.

      The Phalanx CIWS (Close In Weapon System) that every U.S. combat ship carries is designed to shoot down missiles up to 10 times faster with a much smaller profile with high reliability. The Phalanx success against "soft ball" targets such as you propose is essentially perfect. A carrier strike group deploys at least 8 of these on four ships that can provide mutual support and together can engage 40 targets a minute indefinitely or 200 targets all at once. Of course if this threat was known to exist, they can double up on supporting combat ships if needed for additional Phalanxes, perhaps to double this engagement capacity. And then there is that air wing that can surge enough fire power during this period to engage roughly 1000 targets.

      So the air wing gets to thin out any close clumps of targets far out from the fleet so that the CIWS crews can watch their system clean up the rest. Since there is enough time for up 25 CIWS engagements for each target (more if the ships are staggered) there is no chance that even one would reach a ship.

      And then there is the ability for the group to lay down a smoke curtain - an ancient tactic. It still works against cameras, but not against the radar-guided defensive weapons.

      An accident on the USS Forrestal during the Vietnam War led to nine bombs exploding on-board, the ship returned to service nine months later. The current Nimitz Class aircraft carrier is two-thirds larger and even harder to sink.

      This proposal is not unusual to hear from people unfamiliar with the effort put into defending ships.

      --
      Starships were meant to fly, Hands up and touch the sky - Nicky Minaj
    14. Re:Saturation by Chuckstar · · Score: 1

      You'd have to build a ton of them to be able to get through the defenses. That would be hard to hide. Your simple system is vulnerable to destruction by a single air strike before they lift off.

    15. Re:Saturation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Tower this is Ghostrider. Requesting permission for a flyby"

      Imagine what a Mach 2+ shockwave from 20 meters away will do to your wooden planes

    16. Re:Saturation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      RAM and Phalanx would eliminate any low tech stragglers in an approach like this. In a conflict the US would own the airspace immediately. Pre-conflict, we would certainly take note of a bunch of airfields being loaded up with airplanes, and react accordingly.
      And, of course, the elephant in the room is what the response would be if a nation managed to destroy an american aircraft carrier? I imagine the response would be the 10 other aircraft carriers. And the 11 "helicopter" carriers. And a lot of pissed off soldiers intent on doing harm. Or a tactical nuke. To blatantly destroy one of these strike groups invites hell to rain down on you.
      Nobody is that stupid. Hopefully.
      War is dumb.

      andy

    17. Re:Saturation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How many of these pre-WW2 tech planes do you think a single fighter could shoot down in an hour?

      About as many as the number of missiles it carries. And each missile will probably cost as much as a squadron of pre-WWII tech aircraft.

      I think they can probably hit them pretty easily with the chain guns most fights still carry. Hell an A-10 could kill a thousand of those drones. Then land and refuel and do it again if needed.

    18. Re:Saturation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In this scenario, 3-10 rounds from a Phalanx CIWS unit would be enough to eliminate a unit, no need to waste missiles. Plus, ships move. If you're talkin drones, GPS guidance wouldn't be enough to keep it on target (plus GPS can be jammed on top of ship movement), so you're stuck with expensive radar guidance. If you're talking RPVs, you're stuck with expensive remote control schemes, trained operators, and radio links (which can be jammed).

      Slow prop aircraft can also be engaged at range by the carrier group's air wing (slip in behind the formation, pick them off one-by-one with guns; drones would not evasively manouver, RPVs probably would not see the fighter threat in their small field of vision), unless guarded by expensive fighter aircraft.

    19. Re:Saturation by zelbinion · · Score: 1

      The fact of the matter is, a carrier battle group embarks a fixed amount of ordnance. Replenishment at sea is time consuming. If you throw enough stuff at a carrier battle group, at some point it will run out of ammunition. It is simply a numbers game. There is also no reason a drone needs to cost $275,000. About 8 years ago some hobbyists built a balsa wood model aircraft that flew autonomously across the Atlantic with an on-board auto pilot and telemetry for less than $500. That's a 2500-3000nm range, with simple electronics (which are even less expensive and more powerful today) with the ability to receive data and track the location of said drone for less than $500. Scale that up a little, and a VERY cheap, albeit slow and vulnerable cruise missile is entirely possible. A small drone like this doesn't need a dedicated launch facility. I can be produced in a large number of fairly basic distributed shops. There are no obvious fixed targets to hit with tomahawks or laser-guided bombs. No fixed runways to bomb, nothing to take out with a preemptive strike. Put enough of them into the air, and you simply aren't going to shoot them all down. Radar guidance is probably too expensive, so it would be limited to cameras. The carrier group could certainly put up a smoke screen, but how long can it maintain that? It certainly can't launch or recover aircraft while emitting a smoke screen, so at some point it will have to stop before any aircraft already in the air run out of fuel. With a 2500mn range, the drones can simply loiter until any aircraft in the air are out of weapons and out fuel and the carrier has to stop the smoke screen to recover aircraft. At that point any remaining drones can attack. Phalanx weapons have a limited ammunition capacity, and take time to reload. Yes, they would wipe out large numbers of drones easily, but at some point they will be empty and will become useless.

      A plan like this probably was not economically or technically feasible 15 years ago. Only with the miniaturization and drastic cost reduction in electronics needed to build the control/guidance system could you even contemplate something like this. I'm not saying it is simple. You'd need thousands, probably tens of thousands of drones or more, costing many millions of dollars, but that's still cheaper than a squadron of 4th generation fighter planes. I don't care how good your defenses are. If I can cause you to expend ammunition, and you have a fixed amount of ammunition at your disposal, and I can build weapons cheaply enough and deploy them fast enough, I can overwhelm you every time.

      The Japanese tried this tactic in WWII with the kamikaze attacks. That tactic had some (although limited) success mainly because they could not train enough pilots well enough or fast enough, and you lost your trained pilot with every attack. At the end of the war they still had airplanes, and even fuel (although it was alcohol based because we had long since cut off their supplies of oil.) Remove the pilot from that equation, and you remove the main limitation on the numbers of drones you can produce and field at one time.

    20. Re:Saturation by zelbinion · · Score: 1

      Yep and Yep. So don't hide them. Distribute them, so that a single air strike takes out only a fraction of them. Then, build ten times that many out of cardboard and distribute them as well. Turn everything everywhere into a potential target. Short a preemptive nuclear strike, what are you going to hit with your air strike?

    21. Re:Saturation by zelbinion · · Score: 1

      Phalanx shoots 75 rounds per second. I don't think you can just fire 3-10 rounds per target. These would quickly run out of ammo. GPS can effectively be jammed at ground level. With directional antennas, it is much harder to jam them in the air, as you can filter out any signals at a little above the drone's altitude and below. So, you'd have to be ABOVE the drone to jam GPS signals. This limits the available platforms to electronic warfare aircraft, but with a movable directional antenna, even these signals could be filtered out without much difficulty. There is also more than one GPS system, so you can't just turn it off, or reduce the error correction to make it unusable. Cameras with relatively straight-forward image recognition software would be enough for terminal guidance. The technology for this has existed since the 1980's, and is relatively cheap these days. While not full RPV, it shouldn't be difficult to make the drones able to accept basic directional commands (change navigational way points, confirm target selection, etc.) Using spread-spectrum frequency hopping and limiting the number of times updates are transmitted would make jamming this communication channel extremely difficult. There are open-source software radios that could handle this sort of set up easily at very low cost.

      You are correct that the drones would not have any defensive ability. An air craft could easily pick them off with a gun. However, this gun has a high rate of fire and limited ammunition, so each fighter can only shoot down a limited number of drones. Fly lots of drones, and accept losses due to aerial engagements.

    22. Re:Saturation by crunchygranola · · Score: 1

      ... There is also no reason a drone needs to cost $275,000. About 8 years ago some hobbyists built a balsa wood model aircraft that flew autonomously across the Atlantic with an on-board auto pilot and telemetry for less than $500. That's a 2500-3000nm range, with simple electronics (which are even less expensive and more powerful today) with the ability to receive data and track the location of said drone for less than $500. Scale that up a little, and a VERY cheap, albeit slow and vulnerable cruise missile is entirely possible.

      You mean this one? An 11 lb airplane that flew at 50 mph (not too much faster than a ship can steam) for 1888 miles (1640 nm) with zero payload (unless you want to count the 2 kilos of gas)? Scaling it up large enough to carry a payload of 500-750 lb (like a real bomb or missile would) is a 200-fold scale up in size. If the cost per pound is the same then the cost comes in at $100,000, not too much lower than the figure I used for a real airplane. Your very-long range with a substantial payload does not come for free.

      Sorry - real airplanes that carry real payloads cost real money.

      --
      Second class citizen of the New Gilded Age
    23. Re:Saturation by careysub · · Score: 1

      ... With directional antennas, it is much harder to jam them in the air, as you can filter out any signals at a little above the drone's altitude and below. So, you'd have to be ABOVE the drone to jam GPS signals. This limits the available platforms to electronic warfare aircraft, but with a movable directional antenna, even these signals could be filtered out without much difficulty....

      Wow. You have decided that electronic warfare doesn't really work at all, since an incredibly weak signal (10^-16 watts per square meter) can be detected against a 200 watt jammer directly overhead "without much difficulty". Electronic warfare experts everywhere will be amazed. The U.S. Navy only has the best electronic warfare planes in the world.

      First off GPS antennas detect signals from satellites in different parts of the sky - they are non-directional (or else have a very small gain since they don't need to look down). Second, the jamming signal strength will be on the order of 100 billion times stronger than the GPS signal. Only a gain of 110 db will overcome this jamming signal, and the highest gain antenna in the world in the 305m Arecibo radiotelescope with a gain of only 70 db.

      This also means that the supposed telecomm link to the army of controllers via satellite (must be geosynch to stay in position for hours) cannot be maintained. A high gain antenna would work here, but a 60 cm satellite dish only has a gain of about 35 db, meaning the jamming signal will be 10 to 100 million times stronger.

      10,000 drones churn around completely unguided whenever they come within miles of the ships, while any that blunder into an intercept trajectory get blasted with 100% success rate. Number of drones hitting ships: zero.

      Satisfied?

      --
      Starships were meant to fly, Hands up and touch the sky - Nicky Minaj
    24. Re:Saturation by zelbinion · · Score: 1

      Yes, that's the one. However, I don't think you can scale up the costs by a simple price per pound ratio. It is entirely possible to build an airplane for less than $10,000:

      href=http://www.airspacemag.com/flight-today/ten_grand.html

      If you don't have to put a pilot inside, and using more mass-production techniques, you could probably get the cost down even further. My cousin built a plane in his garage for less that $30,000 that can easily carry 500 pounds (assuming no people on board). It was designed for aerobatics so it traded speed and maneuverability for range, but the concept is the same. The biggest road block to doing something like this before now is the prohibitive cost and complexity of building an autonomous guidance system. That part is getting cheaper and easier all the time.

      Heck, this guy: Bruce Simpson built a cruise missile with off the shelf components for $5000, though I think it is too small to carry a reasonable payload.

    25. Re:Saturation by Chuckstar · · Score: 1

      That's what human intelligence is for.

      And you can only distribute them so far, because they need airfields to take off on.

    26. Re:Saturation by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      Aren't the artillery shells used to shoot down these drones a lot cheaper than the drones?

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    27. Re:Saturation by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      The targets would include: capital city and other major cities. Troop concentrations. Long range launch facilities. Dams. Manufacturing plants. Harbors. Military targets generally.

      Losing a substantial portion of a fleet would be a nasty blow, but unless the US leadership is too vile to counterattack, it would be suicidal for the attacker.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    28. Re:Saturation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How many of these pre-WW2 tech planes do you think a single fighter could shoot down in an hour?

      Back in the early days of Flight Simulator, I found it an interesting experiment to set a P51 Mustang against a F14 (I think it was an F14).

      The P51 Mustang almost never won. But it never lost. The F14 couldn’t get a radar lock on the P51 to use its missiles, and it couldn’t fly slowly enough to use its guns effectively. The P51 was maneuverable enough to keep the F14 in its sights as the F14 passed.

      It was almost always a draw, in that neither plane was downed, but the extremely expensive F14 always came away more damaged. In a few fractions of a percentage, the P51 would get lucky and win.

  37. Wrong question: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The limitations make sense if you realize the true purpose of 'missile defense'. The true purpose is to take care of the residual missiles surviving a US first strike.

  38. math? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let me get this clear....

    there are systems in the sea that are meant to track and shoot down missiles and stuff. They suddenly assume that there could be more missiles fly past one or more of these systems, creating the possibility of the system(s) being unable to track and shoot 1 or more missiles down. And they're blaming math. As if, there should be some way that mathematics will be able to produce a faster physical device, capable of physically moving faster.

    My analogy is going to be a football player that is to come up with a way to successfully defend against 2 men, or maybe 3. He sits down, and runs all sorts of probability on the size, speed and agility of each of the 3 men, and is able to figure out a way to manage them all. Now you're thinking of his inability to defend against more men, of all different sizes and ability, and finding him unable. But you're blaming math, and not physical reality.

    Why is it that technology is expected to be able to solve any problem. Why wouldn't this problem be solved with, rather than math, some other shared component of the universe.... maybe, oh I don't know, civility? Everyone on the gas, no one on the brake.

  39. Re:Yes, before you fire 100 missiles we've killed by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

    Or they launch six each from many small vessels and land based launchers. Launch the expensive ones mixed in with the cheap stuff.

  40. Ever fought an anthill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't try... Next question.

  41. David L Parnas by maksa6877 · · Score: 1

    David L Parnas (yes, that one) wrote a famous piece on the feasibility of Star Wars (pdf ahead): http://www.cs.helsinki.fi/u/przybils/courses/CBD06/papers/p1326-parnas.pdf I don't think that anything has changed. Computers are faster, technology is better, but the problem is still equally complex.

  42. tilt the machine and put in another quarter by swschrad · · Score: 1

    seriously, folks, dump the game and replay.

    --
    if this is supposed to be a new economy, how come they still want my old fashioned money?
  43. Really complex problem by fermion · · Score: 1
    In missile defense it is a matter of calculating capability of enemy and acceptable losses.

    In the recent example of Israel and it's alleged shield, the success depending on the ability to acquire a threat quickly, access the target, and make a judgement to destroy or ignore. Based on information in the media, a enemy who could launch a hundred missile quickly from diverse location could overwhelm the system, take it out if locations were known, and then be free to attack targets. A country like Iran could do this, easily.

    Protecting against global threats using ICBM is more complex but possible. It requires the ability to detect and identify launches in real time, then respond and destroy threats during the boost phase. Even so there is a danger of momentum carrying debris to populated areas and causing destruction and fatalities. One way this can be done is with airborne lasers. This could potentially defend the US against a country like Korea with a few old style ICBM.

    If we can't destroy a threat during boost phase, then all is probably lost. Once payload is destroyed, there could be a hundred projectiles, one which is live, and no way to distinguish. We would spend all our resources destroying half of then, and the love projectile takes out Denver.

    Of course none of this accomplishes the faith based fantasy put forth by US conservatives of protection against the reds. That takes diplomacy of the order shown by JFK.

    --
    "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    1. Re:Really complex problem by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      The whole argument is ignoring retaliation.

      This is especially relevant for the case of Israel. They or any other nation will immediately retaliate against anyone that can overwhelm their current missile defense strategies. It will be like 911. You get just one opportunity to use that tactic. After that, your ability to attack again will be destroyed as you will be taken apart.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    2. Re:Really complex problem by Sardaukar86 · · Score: 1

      and the love projectile takes out Denver.

      That's not a missile, it's a token of North Korean affection.
      Hug me with nuclear arms, baby!

      --
      ..Mullah or Pope, Preacher or Poet, who was it wrote: "Give any one species too much rope and they'll fuck it up"?
    3. Re:Really complex problem by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      I was thinking you had a point until the point started sounding like it was ignorant of reality. Then you pushed politics into the mix and I'm sure you have a problem there.

      First, a missile defense shield is not some impenetrable force field. It will protect basically high value targets. It is meant to stop first strikes from taking out large population centers and military assets and give time to mobilize efforts to retaliate. It might be able to fend off an all out attack by a small entity but it would be nothing like the article suggests.

      Second, The type of force needed to over whelm a defense shield like what is being talked about will be far too large for terrorist groups to do. It will be a clear state enemy and putting that in check is a lot easier then what the Israelis had to put up with. We wouldn't have to worry about only hitting the terrorist groups hiding within a civilian population. We would in stead, be targeting the country's ability to wage war and pop missiles our way and swarm resources in to take them out from multiple directions. From there, it would be a matter of how much we wanted to pursue the matter to how badly we destroyed the country.

      My only hope is that should a situation like that ever happen, our commander in chief at the time is not too much of a pussy to use nukes to stop the threat.

    4. Re:Really complex problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hahahaha Sardaukar86 has to "eat his words" -> http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3417867&cid=42756893

  44. Return Address by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 1

    Given that the US has enough nukes to melt the world twice, any large threat even before arriving will be getting quite the return visit.

    I still occasionally wonder if Mecca is on the US doomsday nuke 'em all list...

    1. Re:Return Address by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      Given that the US has enough nukes to melt the world twice, any large threat even before arriving will be getting quite the return visit.

      1. No, they don't.
      2. They'd have a hard time justifying a nuclear attack just because China sank one of their carriers operating close to their coast. Few US Presidents would want to see the Chinese nuke LA because the US fleet tried to stop them invading Taiwan and then attacked Beijing.

    2. Re:Return Address by Sulphur · · Score: 1

      Given that the US has enough nukes to melt the world twice, any large threat even before arriving will be getting quite the return visit.

      I still occasionally wonder if Mecca is on the US doomsday nuke 'em all list...

      That is probably on the New York Times handy list of contingency plans.

    3. Re:Return Address by niado · · Score: 1

      Given that the US has enough nukes to melt the world twice, any large threat even before arriving will be getting quite the return visit.

      1. No, they don't.

      I believe that was intentional hyperbole by the op, and the difference between "melting the world twice" and the actual capabilities of the current US nuclear arsenal are trivial. We can't destroy the earth twice, but we can certainly destroy civilization.

      2. They'd have a hard time justifying a nuclear attack just because China sank one of their carriers operating close to their coast. Few US Presidents would want to see the Chinese nuke LA because the US fleet tried to stop them invading Taiwan and then attacked Beijing.

      Certainly true, though I wouldn't call this scenario a "large threat" to the US. It would certainly be a political fiasco and would likely cause some continuing skirmishes, but wouldn't turn into a real "war" in most respects. Nukes would never get involved. China's leadership isn't armageddon-crazy, and neither is the leadership of the US (for the most part, ha).

  45. Defense Triggers by number17 · · Score: 1

    I am certain that the military on both sides have looked into what triggers the defense system and built several types of decoys. Decoys that fire in parallel and others that fire in sequence. Does anybody know how easy is it to determine if an incoming attack actually has a payload, and how much delay that adds?

  46. Near inexhaustible defense weapons by Endophage · · Score: 1

    If a defense system could be built with something like lasers, you could defend against far more missiles than current countermeasures. You could probably exhaust the aggressors supply of missiles. Basically, make the ammo small enough that you can carry an enormous amount of it. In the case of said ammo being electricity, we already have nuclear reactors on ships that run for a very long time while only requiring a comparatively small amount of fuel to be carried.

  47. This is why I don't read slashdot by evilviper · · Score: 1

    This kind of crap is why I hardly read slashdot anymore, after 15 years of daily reading and tens of thousands of comments...

    Could a potential adversary fire off older weapons that are not as accurate, causing a defensive response that exhausts all available missile interceptors so more advanced weapons with better accuracy can deliver the crushing blow?

    Sure! That could happen... if our missile defense systems are designed by morons.

    Otherwise, no, that wouldn't happen, because a defensive system will be perfectly capable of distinguishing between threats and dummies. Hell, the hard part of missile defense systems is making sure they don't accidentally take out friendly jets, so they'll already be designed with the kind of intelligence they need to make this distinction.

    In addition, it could be a completely non-nonsensical question depending on the defense system used... If we're talking about lasers, anything with a nuclear generator has unlimited ammo. If we're talking about rail-guns, then the ammo is extremely tiny, and a huge amount can be carried aboard-ship.

    If we're talking about current CIWS systems, then in the list of all the limitations the system has, the need to CARRY ENOUGH AMMO doesn't even make the top-5 actual concerns.

    And let's not forget that the DEPLOYMENT of such systems might just be fairly important... Ships can START MOVING when they're being inundated with incoming missiles. They can CALL FOR HELP and get it. They can LAUNCH AN OFFENSIVE ATTACK against the source of these incoming missiles as soon as the barrage is spotted lifting off, over the horizon.

    Slashdot... news for 5-year olds.

    --
    Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    1. Re:This is why I don't read slashdot by fliptout · · Score: 2

      What are the alternatives? I cannot find any comparable tech blogs that aren't dumbed down. Slashdot was never that great, but the SNR was better than average in the early days.

      --
      A witty saying proves you are wittier than the next guy.
    2. Re:This is why I don't read slashdot by g8oz · · Score: 1

      Hacker News is interesting. As for the community, at its best it is very well informed, at its worst it is insufferably smug

    3. Re:This is why I don't read slashdot by rgbrenner · · Score: 1

      shame I have to undo my moderation to post this.. but http://news.ycombinator.com/ is better than /.

    4. Re:This is why I don't read slashdot by evilviper · · Score: 1

      What are the alternatives? I cannot find any comparable tech blogs that aren't dumbed down.

      I've almost completely stopped reading /. in favor of ArsTechnica. The editors and articles are certainly far better, and there's plenty of original content, rather than just a paragraph excerpt. On the negative side, they don't have a very good comment system, which would be conducive to interesting discussions... Still though, there's enough smart people over there that chime-in with better insights than the crap you'll find on /. these days.

      Second, there's Popular Science. They do a far better job covering the up and coming technological advancements, which /. at least used-to have stories about... You know... before it was all global warming trolling by the editors. PS is a good place to stay updated on developments in carbon nanotubes, battery tech, etc. If that's too dumbed-down for you, an alternative is sciencemag.

      Hacker news in an interesting one, but their unwillingness to post even a basic summary makes them useless for me. And they post far too many stories a day to makes discussion possible, and the sheer volume naturally lowers the article signal/noise ratio and quality.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  48. Red Storm Rising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Red Storm Rising gives a good description of a hypothetical sea battle.

    Enough incoming missiles will eventually allow a hit. That was part of the driving force behind MIRV warheads. A single booster and half a dozen or more warheads is more effective than one booster and one warhead.

    Cruise missile AI is getting better all the time, as are their stealth factor and penetration aids. I would venture to say that a US task force with a 100 mile bubble will probably have time launch one strike before the situation becomes very dire. I wouldn't want to be involved with either force in that sort of battle. Once it starts, the task force might be sunk, but I can guarantee that the opposing force would be nothing but scattered dust and ash within the week.

    Shit's to scary to even comtemplate.

  49. Enemy has to do math as well by backslashdot · · Score: 2

    The enemy would need to have a massive ICBM missile force. That is not very feasible. How many of our enemies have a budget for that? I don't think even China has that kind of money .. and if they could allocate such a budget .. corrupt politicians would allow only a small percent of it to go into actual weapon acquisition .. they same way they take money off highway contracts. I don't see how any of our credible adversaries could organize a massive missile force coordination while we remain clueless.

  50. I think you mean attrition instead of math by rdorn · · Score: 1

    And yes, we're already losing a war of attrition. When terrorist attacks that cost hundres of thousands of dollars can spur a trillion dollar response... how long can the US keep that up?

  51. Always have a shaved knuckle in the hole by sunking2 · · Score: 1

    And they're called nukes. Everyone has always known that a single carrier group is vulnerable. The question is not if you can, but what happens if you do. In the end nobody wants the gloves to come off.

  52. Sure, Its happened before (kinda) by ClassicASP · · Score: 2

    During World War 2 the Germans had WAY more superior tanks. They had better armor, better accuracy, better range, delivered a more explosive package, plus the soldiers driving them were very well trained in tactics. They even had better camoflauge.

    American tanks sucked by comparison. They were easy to spot, they had very poor armor, their accuracy was crap, range was crap, and the soldiers driving them were dunces by comparrison.

    But we still overwhelmed them and won with sheer numbers. Our tanks sucked, but we had a crapload of them.

    1. Re:Sure, Its happened before (kinda) by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      If I remember correctly, most German tanks in the last years of WWII were destroyed by one or more of:

      1. Russians.
      2. Air attacks.
      3. Germans.

      Most of the big tank battles were on the Eastern Front, and by the end of the war the Germans were destroying new tanks when they reached the front line (or turning them into static defences) because they no longer had the fuel to operate them.

    2. Re:Sure, Its happened before (kinda) by Maximum+Prophet · · Score: 1

      Yes. More tanks in WWII were killed by soldiers running up to them and shooting into the vents or with a grenade down the hatch. Many German officers were killed by snipers when they stuck their heads out.

      AFAIK, during the Africa campaign, we ran the German army out of fuel and other supplies. Our tanks didn't take as much fuel.

      --
      All ideas^H^H^H^H^Hprocesses in this post are Patent Pending. (as well as the process of patenting all postings)
    3. Re:Sure, Its happened before (kinda) by Chuckstar · · Score: 1

      I agree with the other posters, it wasn't U.S. armor that defeated Nazi armor.

      Nazi armor was defeated by:

      1) Russian tanks
      2) Air strikes
      3) Artillery
      4) Infantry
      5) Lack of fuel
      6) U.S. tanks

  53. Re:Yes, before you fire 100 missiles we've killed by avandesande · · Score: 1

    Making missiles en-mass that can go half way around the world isn't cheap.

    --
    love is just extroverted narcissism
  54. Warhead type is immaterial by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Today, America has a sizable sea-based system, dubbed AEGIS, that has been deployed to defend against rogue states missiles, both conventional and nuclear."

    So a missile interceptor can hit a missile carrying either type of payload! Amazing,

  55. Real enemy: It just doesn't work by bigsexyjoe · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Since the 1960s until the present day, missile defense has been a hot topic

    TRANSLATION: We've been trying to get it to work for 50 fucking years but we can't seem to get two object moving faster than bullets to collide.

    That's the real problem. They can barely even shoot down those first cheap missiles. They can't compensate for evasive action at all. It's been nonsense for the last fifty years and will be for the next fifty years.

  56. Pseudo Intellectualism... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The statement sounds profound, doesn't it? "Does missile defense have a hidden hole?".

    But the statement is actually just stupid. The same can be said of *anything*. "The real enemy of the infantry - math!" - What is the enemy has more infantry than us? "The real enemy of the navy - math!" - what if the enemy has more boats than us? "The real enemy of intellectualism - math!" - what if there are more stupid people than smart ones...

    It is a mindless statement that engenders nothing in terms of prescribing a course of action - it merely serves to allow the speaker to sound profound and then walk away with a smug look on their face as if they had actually thought of something relevant...

  57. fox news on slashdot? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apparently slashdot is now run by fox news. Keep up the good work.

  58. Odd discussion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is an odd discussion, and most of the posts countering it are wrong anyways. Lots of them are saying "you fire X missiles, we defend long enough until we turn the launch site to glass". It's not that simple.

    It's true that any defensive system can be overwhelmed. The closest to the US in terms of raw military power right now is China, and their military is focused around an area-denial role for China's eastern waters (Western Pacific, South China Sea), with a focus on denying operational capability to the US Navy in those areas. The main weapon here is submarines, but their secondary weapon is shore launched anti-ship missiles. The Aegis can knock down several of these, but the Chinese have built a very large number of them, and when fired in sufficient quantities will likely overwhelm an aircraft carrier. These missiles are on mobile, truck moutned launchers, so they are difficult to know where they are launching from, and will likely move before any counter-attack can destroy them. The DF-21 is the main concern right now:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DF-21#Anti-ship_ballistic_missile

    Now yes, given a major engagement, this missile would likely overwhelm the defenses of a carrier group and cause significant damage. They don't have enough to stop all of our carriers if we were truly committed, and there is no guarantee they would sink a carrier. But to the US there is no guarantee they wouldn't either. The trick is, a country that can act military without fear of reprisal always has the upper hand in diplomacy. What it all comes down to then is, how far is the US willing to push China, and risk a carrier battle group? The missile raises the stakes of pushing China; doesn't mean we wouldn't win in the long run, but the cost is now a lot higher and therefore changes are diplomatic calculus towards China.

    That's just an example. Strictly speakng, tactically, it's already been proven that a sufficient force of inexpensive weapons could overwhelm a carrier battle group. If we got into an engagement with IRan, Iran's large stock of missiles, combined with a large number of inexpensive suicide boats would likely get through the defenses of a carrier group and take it down. The only effective counter to a large scale missile or small attacker assault would likely be a tactical nuclear countermeasure that would wipe out targets in a large swath of territory and well before they get close to the carrier group.

    1. Re:Odd discussion by careysub · · Score: 1

      ... What it all comes down to then is, how far is the US willing to push China, and risk a carrier battle group? The missile raises the stakes of pushing China; doesn't mean we wouldn't win in the long run, but the cost is now a lot higher and therefore changes are diplomatic calculus towards China.

      ...

      But you are missing the real value of the defense system. The chances of China really committing an act of war against the U.S. (firing on an aircraft carrier) is very, very slim. Their missile capability is a rhetorical or psychological threat, to gain the upper hand in diplomatic or geopolitical situations. U.S. defensive weapons neutralize that leverage. The U.S. simply asserts that the Chinese attack would fail and the only way China can prove that it would succeed and is not a "paper tiger" is to begin a shooting war.

      --
      Starships were meant to fly, Hands up and touch the sky - Nicky Minaj
  59. Nothing new here... by Bugler412 · · Score: 1

    This was the USSR's naval attack strategy during the cold war. Puke up a LOT of high speed sea skimmers from backfire bombers and sacrificial destroyers tailing the carrier group along with deceptive jamming, drones, etc. Overwhelm the system. You don't need to hit the carrier 100 times to make it ineffective, just a few will do the trick. And the defense is more expensive than the offense.

  60. Clancy covered this by gorfie · · Score: 1

    In an old 1980's book by Tom Clancy (Red Storm Rising), he covered the scenario where an attacker launched a barrage of missiles against an aircraft carrier and the carrier deployed counter measures against what was essentially a wave of decoys. The aircraft carrier had nothing left to stop the second wave. I'd say this is an old problem and the military has probably already thought about it.

  61. divert by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe the best solution is to have a flight robot that can attach itself to the nuke and jam all communications while diverting said nuke to space. Is a space explosion any safer than one in a body of water ?

  62. Re:Yes, before you fire 100 missiles we've killed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That is an illegal move and will cause the war game to be restarted.

  63. What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is slashdot worthy?

  64. DEFCON by alendit · · Score: 1

    Someone won his first DEFCON game and thinks he is a nuclear tactics expert now.

    (I know how it feels, I thought I was one too....)

  65. It's a matter of cost-effectiveness by cpghost · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The real problem is that a missile interceptor is more expensive than the missile (or decoy) it is supposed to intercept. Take for instance Israel's Iron Dome vs. Hamas' rockets. A single Iron Dome interceptor costs $10k+, if not one order of magnitude more, while a single Hamas rocket is less than, say, $100. The same holds true for strategic defense missile systems: it's always a lot more expensive to intercept a ballistic missile than to send one. That's the real issue here. As long as missile defense technology doesn't become a lot less expensive (think e.g. some kind of futuristic force field shield of some kind that doesn't consume a lot of energy when idle), it will always be overwhelmed.

    --
    cpghost at Cordula's Web.
    1. Re:It's a matter of cost-effectiveness by eap · · Score: 1

      The real problem is that a missile interceptor is more expensive than the missile (or decoy) it is supposed to intercept. Take for instance Israel's Iron Dome vs. Hamas' rockets. A single Iron Dome interceptor costs $10k+, if not one order of magnitude more, while a single Hamas rocket is less than, say, $100. The same holds true for strategic defense missile systems: it's always a lot more expensive to intercept a ballistic missile than to send one. That's the real issue here. As long as missile defense technology doesn't become a lot less expensive (think e.g. some kind of futuristic force field shield of some kind that doesn't consume a lot of energy when idle), it will always be overwhelmed.

      You're right about the costs, to an extent. We must also consider the cost to Isreal of a Hamas rocket hitting a populated area. This cost is far more than the cost of an interceptor. So, while the Isrealis may have a cost imbalance vs. Hamas, they are likely preventing an even greater imbalance by selectively using interceptors.

    2. Re:It's a matter of cost-effectiveness by Comrade+Ogilvy · · Score: 1

      Yet another factor is the number of Hamas crews skilled at launching simple missiles with useful accuracy is a limited resource. So if the defenses can intelligently pick off the most dangerous missiles, it is at least buying time. Time is valuable, as it opens many options for avoiding the full arsenal.

    3. Re:It's a matter of cost-effectiveness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The cost of the Iron Dome interceptor is effectively $0, paid for an uncle that likes to spoil.

    4. Re:It's a matter of cost-effectiveness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The cost difference is because Hamas is not shooting guided missiles. They are firing plain old rockets that may, at best, have enough rudimentary guidance to land it inside a city's limits. The average rocket fired into Israel is little more than a bottle rocket writ large.

    5. Re:It's a matter of cost-effectiveness by lee1026 · · Score: 2

      A cost of 100-1 is perfectly acceptable if you just need to win a arms race with the Irans/North Koreas of the world.

    6. Re:It's a matter of cost-effectiveness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well it depends on the situation. In the case of most of these anti-missile systems the goal is not to sit there and take hit after hit for the reasons you provide. The goal is to survive long enough to employ some other counter measure. Iron Dome may only be able to defend against an incoming missile attack for a short time. But if that short time is long enough for everyone to get into bomb shelters than it has accomplished its mission.

      Similarly the US anti-balistic system will never work against a major power. But against rogue states like North Korea or Iran, it can block the few missiles that they have, then a counter attack prevents them from making more.

    7. Re:It's a matter of cost-effectiveness by PPH · · Score: 1

      So, a necessary part of Israel's defense is to maintain the economic disparity between themselves, their sponsors and Hamas. As long as a $100 rocket is a much larger share of an aggressor's GDP than a $10K interceptor is of the USA's, all is well.

      In the final analysis, Hamas may have the last laugh as we are forced to minting trillion dollar coins to keep this game going.

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    8. Re:It's a matter of cost-effectiveness by jafac · · Score: 1

      The fact is (while I believe your cost numbers are off, your point is valid) . . . Palestinians just plain are not supposed to even HAVE those rockets.

      They are getting them on the downlow. They are being financed from external sources. So the cost of their rockets is really kind of invalid. Also, Iron Dome was financed, in large part, by US military aid (I acknowledge the extensive work Israelis did improving on Patriot). These costs are also not really valid. And when you're talking about protecting say, your own bank from being targeted and bombed, a $10k investment in a defense missile is pretty trivial. Because if your bank blows up (figuratively) - you're not investing in anything else at all ever again. They will happily "loan" you as much money as it takes to defend them. (so in economic terms, that cost is not "real" - it is coerced).

      Another possiblity is: what if the same entity is financing BOTH sides and providing them with weapons. (those palestinian rockets, actually, are pretty worthless, in terms of the actual damage they do. They can kill a few people, but usually, they're just terrifying, and harmless). There's no real risk in supplying angry Palestinians with these mexican firework-grade missiles, while, raking in profits from poor, terrorized Israelis. I'm not saying that that's exactly what's going on. But since nobody seems interested in stopping it, and nobody seems to give a crap about where the money's coming from, or when it will ever end - it sure seems to be the most likely explanation. (if property owners were REALLY concerned about stopping the Palestinian missiles - they'd put a stop to it. It wouldn't be pretty, or humanitarian. But the ongoing situation isn't pretty either. It's just more profitable this way.)

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    9. Re:It's a matter of cost-effectiveness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And yet, Iron Dome worked in the last war. It protected Israeli cities long enough so that the Palestinians, taking accurate, telling hits from Israeli air strikes, basically gave up and agreed to a cease fire.

      Israel is many times richer than the Palestinians. They can afford to spend more money on defense because they have a more effective economy. What modern wars should have taught us is: bigger economy wins.

  66. Re:Yes, before you fire 100 missiles we've killed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The history of war is littered with things like this

    For example the Zulu overwhelming the British with spears. It wasn't until the machine gun was introduced that the British won that. Or the British thumping the French with longbows and the French had cannons. The French came back with way more cannon and more importantly accurate cannon.

    However one thing has almost always been true. Those who can throw the most stuff, faster, and on target wins. It is why the British dominated the world for awhile. They had machine guns and enough soldiers to back it up. But once everyone else got to the same level of tech or better they lost it.

    The worst words for an army is 'tried and true'. As your enemy will be willing to try anything to not lose.

    You see upcoming weapons such as metalstorm and armed drone swarms being the future of warfare. As they reduce the cost of weapons and can 'throw' things faster (think 5000 rounds all showing up on target in 2 seconds from 5 directions).

    If it is just a raw numbers game you either have to make a weapon that throws more. Or have more people to throw things than your enemy.

  67. Re:Yes, before you fire 100 missiles we've killed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Enemy plan:
    Fire 100 "cheap missiles" to get intercepted
    Wait for the US to use up it's anti-missile capabilities shooting those down
    Fire more, more better missiles to hit target.

    What would really happen
    Fire 6 "cheap" missiles
    Die in a hail of US missiles you have no defense against

    What would really happen with lasers:
    Fire 100 "cheap missiles" to get intercepted
    Laser countermeasures shoot down all missiles, are ready for more.
    Die in a hail of US missiles^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H lasers.

  68. Re:Yes, before you fire 100 missiles we've killed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They're talking about nukes, not regular warheads.

    It doesn't matter that the "enemy" succeeds in hitting every american target, because by the time that happens, their own nukes will hit the enemy targets as well.

    Unless of course, the ones launching the attack, 1. don't care about their own civilians, or 2. have an even better missile defense.

  69. Correct Math does win by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here's some real math World Military Spending:

    US: 41%

    China: 8.2%

    Russia:4.1%

    So enough with the propaganda.

  70. tangent by NotQuiteReal · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The word "math" is a poor substitute for "overwhelming numbers".

    --
    This issue is a bit more complicated than you think.
    1. Re:tangent by robot5x · · Score: 1
      thank you.

      I'm out of mod points, regrettably.

      --
      Hej! Nasi tu byli!
    2. Re:tangent by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      ...and less.

      > "Simply put: does math win?"

      Does our enemy really want to get into an all-out war vs. the US' productivity?

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    3. Re:tangent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since it appears you're the first to try to resuscitate this into a meaningful discussion, I'll ask here.

      Do anti-missile missiles cost overwhelmingly more? You don't need massive munitions on them like wildly inaccurate outbound missiles do, right? And presumably the guidance parts are cheaper every day? And we've already got the platforms to launch them from for other tactical and strategic reasons? And we're working on non-missile based defense systems, right? And we'd be hitting back with extreme prejudice just after the first volley went up?

      I can't help but think this scenario is way more complicated than just overwhelming numbers, and that it's probably being considered every day by those whose job it is to do so.

    4. Re:tangent by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      ...and less.

      > "Simply put: does math win?"

      Does our enemy really want to get into an all-out war vs. the US' productivity?

      But the article is explicitly talking about fleet defence. The fleet has no productivity, it's limited to what it has on board.

      (and one of the proposed "enemies" is China, who's GDP is rapidly aproaching that of the US).

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    5. Re:tangent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wholeheartedly agree.

  71. obvious PR : Government buy more Compute Power! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This has nothing to do with math and everything to do with trying to scare people.

    bullshit article is bullshit. It's straight out of the PR department of AMD or Intel.

    lrn2detect these kinds of things.

  72. Why would we wait that long again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seems the US will bomb anyone who gives us a cross look these days. If we have enough anti-missle defenses to last an hour, you can be pretty sure the enemy has a mass counterattack to worry about to just sit there lazily firing more and more munitions at us.

  73. Re:Yes, before you fire 100 missiles we've killed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    3) everyone else launches all of their missiles to counter the threat of american missile launches
    4) everyone dies.

  74. already been discussed.... by Iswandulla · · Score: 1
    1. Re:already been discussed.... by gregulator · · Score: 1

      This.

    2. Re:already been discussed.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This.

      What is "This."? was that supposed to be a link or something?

  75. Re:Real enemy: It just doesn't work by SlippyToad · · Score: 1

    Yea that is what I'm trying to figure out. Last I knew, tests of our vaunted missile defense system succeeded only because the target "incoming" missile was eagerly broadcasting its position.

    As far as I know, they have not yet successfully shot down one missile with another, without cheating.

    --
    One day I feel I'm ahead of the wheel / the next it's rolling over me / I can get back on / I can get back on
  76. Re:Yes, before you fire 100 missiles we've killed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who could possibly get 'many small vessels' and land based launchers anywhere near striking range of the United States?

    Turns out the largest threat to the United States was not China, or Terrorists, or Communists, or Fascists, or Anarchists, but the humble Canadian fishing trawler industry.

  77. Re:Real enemy: It just doesn't work by mjr167 · · Score: 1

    I think Isreal disagrees with you.

  78. Wrong by DaveAtFraud · · Score: 1

    I worked air defense command and control software development in the late 1980s. Our load scenario was called "the silver sky" because it assumed everything would be comming at us. We used to joke that we only had to hit one airplane and the rest would go down from mid-air collisions.

    Just because some hack put it in a novel doesn't mean ithat it's true.

    Cheers,
    Dave

    --
    They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither safety nor liberty.
    Ben
    1. Re:Wrong by ChronoReverse · · Score: 1

      That chapter only pointed out that the system worked great until it ran out of missiles. The "not programmed to think about it" part was just flavor text.

    2. Re:Wrong by Chuckstar · · Score: 1

      IIRC, the key aspect to that section of the book was that it turned out that all of defensive missiles were actually aimed at decoys. So the 96 vs 100 part really didn't end up factoring into the equation. (I read that book like 20 years ago, so I could be mistaken.)

    3. Re:Wrong by DaveAtFraud · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but the same can be said for any defensive system. They all only work until they run out of ammunition. During the battle of Leyte Gulf during WWII American destroyers and destroyer escorts ended up expending all of their regular ammunition against the approaching Japanese battle fleet and ended up firing illumination rounds as a means of at least distracting the Japanese from the escort carriers that they were defending. That hardly meant that the destroyers and destroyer escorts were worthless. In fact, they saved the bulk of the escort carriers they were defending.

      Would they have done better with more ammunition? Probably. But the additional weight and additional cost would have also limited their manueverability and the number of ships available. The same can said of why wasn't something larger than a DD or DE assigned as escort and the simple answer is putting that resource there would have meant taking the resource away from someplace else.

      All systems and especially weapons systems are a trade-off between a number of competing factors. One trade off is how much ammunition to carry. Nothing new here. Sorry that some nitwit got the original article published.

      Cheers,
      Dave

      --
      They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither safety nor liberty.
      Ben
  79. Math? Stupid by ArtemaOne · · Score: 1

    Calling this "math" is really stupid. That is a war of attrition. Exhausting your enemy's resources already has a name. Saying they can beat us with math means that most first world countries have already won with their education systems.

  80. Re:Simply put... Maybe. by Thruen · · Score: 1

    While I don't consider that many missiles coming at us to be a particularly realistic scenario, even less realistic would be that many missiles coming at us that aren't going to hit worthwhile targets at all. Other posters mentioned that Israel allows rockets to hit "expendable" areas and so they don't need to intercept every one, but the US doesn't have very many areas that we can really consider expendable. I'm of a mind that if missiles are going to land in the country, they need to be taken out. That said, our nuclear arsenal is a pretty effective deterrent. I don't see any massive attack against the US happening unless they've somehow managed to knock out our defenses, so as long as we can avoid that, we're good. Too many missiles would be a problem, it's just very unlikely to happen.

  81. Look at Israel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The desert rats in Gaza have been unable to overwhelm that system. Most scumbag countries that we will face are no better.

    1. Re:Look at Israel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks to financial subsidies from you-know-who. And a bit of political blackmail to allow an ongoing system of Apartheid.

      If Israel had to go it on their own, they'd have to drop the Irgun's goal of complete control of the old British mandate (which includes Jordan, if you Israel supporters want to know what you've signed on to).

  82. Idiots can't do math, so they think math says no. by gurps_npc · · Score: 1
    The question is not: Does X defense cost more than y attack?

    Because defense has ALWAYS cost more than the attack - from the first time a guy decided to make a wooden shield to defend against rocks being thrown at him.

    Instead, the question is as follows.

    Is the defense spending to counter my enemies attack worth more than the cost to replace what the enemy is trying to destroy.

    We don't care - we never care - how much the enemy spends to destroy a target. That number is IRRELEVANT.

    Lets assume it costs us 200 million to defend a US carrier group, per attack, and it only costs the enemey $1 million per attack.

    It is STILL worth it for us to spend that $200 million. Because it defends a $2 trillion US carrier group.

    --
    excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
  83. Awfully written article... =( by rs1n · · Score: 1

    This is a terrible article whose main question is: does the side with larger numbers have a better chance to win?
    I have absolutely no idea why they chose to use "does math win?" since there is absolutely no mathematics mentioned at all in the article, unless you equate "larger army" with "math." The answer is: yes, there is a good chance, even if the larger army consists of considerably weaker units.
    The more interesting question is: should we continue to devote resources into smarter systems for defending against missile strikes given that it is possible to never completely "catch up" in this cat and mouse game?

  84. You mean Reagan ? by goffster · · Score: 1

    sp - 5

    1. Re:You mean Reagan ? by Quirkz · · Score: 1

      I think he meant Ray-gun?

  85. five nine tolarance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think Isreal is a good example that this can work.

    http://nation.time.com/2012/11/19/iron-dome-a-missile-shield-that-works/

    The Iron Dome preformed very well in real world testing last year. It only fired on rockets deemed a threat. You could all the low precision missiles you have. We are only going to fire at once that will actually cause damage to targets we dream worth protecting.

    Opponents of missile defense always assume that 100% accuracy or protection is the only acceptable end goal. In truth missile defense is about mitigation. Its obvious that you can always just out build your opponent and no amount of defense will stop it, but for random small events or protecting localized area's its a reasonable goal and we have the ability now.

    Clearly, this will never be some Sci-Fi mass protection system which allows a small civilization to go on with its life shielded from the outside world for a 1000 years.

  86. Foreign Government Official by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I really hope that no foreign government officials are reading this and going "Heeeeeeey! This could work!" :)

  87. Re:Yes, before you fire 100 missiles we've killed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You'd need good time on target for that. Something that isn't cheap.

  88. This is the plot... by DG · · Score: 1

    ...of pretty much every David Weber "Honour Harrington" book ever written.

    DG

    --
    Want to learn about race cars? Read my Book
    1. Re:This is the plot... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to mention David Drake's Hammer's Slammers books and stories.

  89. Selective interception by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you are firing a large number of poorly guided rockets against a smart system, what forces the missile defence system to try to shoot at all the incoming weapons? Wouldn't a smart system calculate which of them have a high probability of causing damage and only attempt to intercept those that have a high probability of causing damage?

    To take a real world example, the Iron Dome system in Israel was quoted as an 85% success rate. They came to that rate not in terms of rockets fired, but in terms of which were deemed as possible threats by the system.

  90. numbers of missile's by kqc7011 · · Score: 1

    The HEL (high energy laser) coming. And a shipboard system should be operational by 2016 according to the USN.

    --
    Passionately Indifferent
  91. Re:Real enemy: It just doesn't work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The point of Star Wars, at least, was to bankrupt the Soviets by outspending them, in order to topple the regime. It worked.

    Whether or not Star Wars would actually work was irrelevant.

    Also, I seem to recall the Patriot missile system working pretty well.

  92. The 1980s called and would like its argument back. by conspirator23 · · Score: 1

    This is just the overload/decoy argument that was one of the core criticisms of the original SDI plan floated by the Reagan administration in the 1980s. In the total nuclear war scenarios that were being addressed at the time, this was a compelling and realistic criticism. TFA seeks to move this argument into the smaller-scale defensive scenarios that AEGIS is designed to cope with. There are two core problems that weaken this argument with respect to AEGIS:

    1. Since AEGIS is intended to defend against isolated attacks from "rogue states" there is a more legitimate question about the economic opportunity for a small state to overload the defensive capacity of AEGIS. The cost for the attacking state multiplies with each decoy launch, and the Total Cost of Ownership of a weapons system with multiple decoys grows as well. The USSR managed to bankrupt itself in the process of participating in the arms race with the USA. The capacity for a country like Iran or North Korea to successfully fund an overload strategy is questionable.
    2. Additionally, one needs to look at the underlying logic behind this argument in the first place. The fear over SDI is that it would undermine the deterrent effect of a strategic nuclear arsenal. "Mutually Assured Destruction" was, in essence, a 50-year long Mexican Standoff that the entire world was playing. A partially effective SDI program owned by one power (the USA) was seen as something that would actually encourage the USSR to engage in a pre-emptive first strike. The AEGIS situation is entirely different. The nuclear scenarios AEGIS is trying to defend against here are based on the assumption that a rogue state is inherently unstable and cannot be trusted to NOT use it's nuclear arsenal, whether that is because the regime leadership is batshit crazy, blindly fanatical, or insecure enough to allow their weaponry to fall into the wrong hands. Assuming you buy that argument, then the more basic idea that "some defense is better than none defense" is a sound one. In other words, you go with AEGIS even if your enemy attempts an overload strategy, because you simply need the best outcome posssible in the event of an attack.
  93. The point falls apart by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    The point holds, though. Interceptors are highly sophisticated devices - they need to exactly hit a small target in three dimensions, while both interceptor and target are moving at great velocity. Your basic attack missile, on the other hand, can be as simple as a garage-made rocket with a chunk of fertilizer on the end.

    But the system finding things to hit can easily simply attack only the items that will ACTUALLY hit anything of value or even come close. If an enemy fire a million missiles but only ten will hit; you only need ten interceptors.

    The point makes no sense at all when you think about the system as a whole and not just one tiny component.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  94. AEGIS was designed to defeat this by hackertourist · · Score: 2

    Attacks as described in TFS are called saturation attacks. Since the advent of the guided missile, this has always been a big headache for naval designers. Early missile-equipped ships had 2-4 radar directors, each capable of guiding one missile to its target. Navies wanted more, but there are constraints (financial, weight, systems complexity) to the number of directors you can add.

    The US Navy was the first to develop a partial solution in the shape of NTU ('New Threat Upgrade'), a system where one director could guide several missiles. This meant that the weakest link was now the missile launchers: even the biggest ships has only two twin-arm mechanical launchers so they were limited to a couple of missile launches per minute.

    The whole point of AEGIS was to provide a ship with enough defensive capability to defeat saturation attacks by the biggest threat on the planet: the Russian naval airforce.

    This meant using a phased-array radar that could track hundreds of targets, directors derived from NTU that could guide up to 18 missiles at once, and a vertical launch system that can fire more than 30 missiles/minute.

    In the end, it becomes a financial problem. A Ticonderoga-class cruiser has 128 missiles on board, that's easily $120M in missile inventory. AEGIS isn't cheap either.

    As missiles become cheaper, the calculation changes. The recent Israeli successes with missile defence using missiles that cost $100k instead of $1M shows that Defence departments are well aware of this.

    Still, anyone contemplating an attack on US Navy vessels usually has to contend not with one ship, but with a battle group of several of the best-defended ships on the planet, plus potentially an aircraft carrier that carries more firepower than most of the world's air forces.

  95. Why are you even on Slashdot? by SuperKendall · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How long until missiles are mirror-coated?

    It's just pathetic that a Slashdot reader doesn't realize that no mirror made yet would be able to last for more than .00000001 seconds against the kinds of lasers that can melt through a warhead in flight.

    No real-life mirror is a perfect reflector of energy at all wavelengths, the smallest degree of loss, or any dust whatsoever means absorbing a tremendous amount of energy from the laser which in turn destroys the mirror instantly.

    The warhead sure will look pretty on the ground though.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Why are you even on Slashdot? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing_YAL-1

      Realize that the ABL (and COIL) based weapons in general do not "melt through a warhead". Increasing the Albedo of the missile skin in the correct spectrum might be effective. It would depend on the state of materials science at that point.

    2. Re:Why are you even on Slashdot? by mapsjanhere · · Score: 2

      No current or near future laser will do anything to the warhead itself. The warhead is designed to survive high speed reentry, good luck to make a laser that can exceed that energy release. You need to hit the launching rocket while there's still fuel to trigger an explosive release, or otherwise damage it enough to miss. Also, by the time anyone deploys a long range anti-missile laser the wavelength is operates on will be fairly well known, so you only need to be good in a small wavelength band. And lastly, just by rotating your missile you can multiply your energy requirements as you greatly increase the surface area the beam hits. So, leave slashdot and go back dreaming of lasers that can blow through a warhead in 10 nanoseconds.

      --
      I'm aging rapidly, I bought a new game and had no idea if my machine was good for it.
    3. Re:Why are you even on Slashdot? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually it doesn't matter. Anti-missile lasers don't burn through warheads - they don't even target warheads, they target the missile body. The issue is the quantity of incoming "targets" and the outgoing rounds/shots/blasts. Current lasers have limits. The big ones require a short interval to recharge after each shot due to the massive energy used. They have to stay on-target long enough to damage the target sufficient to weaken its skin. Read up on Boeing's YAL-1, for example. It fires a 5-second burst of energy. 8-12 seconds for target acquisition and aiming, plus 5 seconds for the burst. And the burst does NOT burn off the skin of the target. Nor would it be enough to burn off a mirror coating. All it does is overheat the skin of the missile so that normal flight-induced friction can break the missile up. A reflective coating is actually a very good strategy that could indeed help to reflect a sufficient amount of energy for the 5 second duration, keeping the missile's skin from overheating and avoiding the breakup. That would force a second shot at that missile, meaning less time to respond to other targets. Currently, you can only get about 20-40 shots of a YAL-1 laser when it's airborne due to the fuel consumption. Not to mention the program was cancelled. And don't confuse the extreme-long-range anti-missile laser with something like the long-range lasers the Navy is developing for surface warfare. For a number of practical reasons, the only real time to destroy an incoming missile is in its launch phase, not its final trajectory, when using lasers.

    4. Re:Why are you even on Slashdot? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's just pathetic that a Slashdot reader

      Yea, like there's a basic criteria that must be met.

    5. Re:Why are you even on Slashdot? by WildBlueYonder · · Score: 1

      No current or near future laser will do anything to the warhead itself. The warhead is designed to survive high speed reentry, good luck to make a laser that can exceed that energy release.

      You are assuming that the parent is talking about ICBMs, which are the only missiles which have to survive any sort of reentry. Any shorter range land/air/water to land missile would have no reentry shield whatsoever. That's not to say that such shielding couldn't be installed, but it may very well be worthwhile to force your opponent to replace (completely arbitrary) 10% of their explosive payload with a heat shield.

      Additionally, your impression of ICBMs is incorrect, in three big ways:

      First of all, they do not have to survive high speed reentry, but low speed reentry, as they are not re-entering from an orbit, but from sub-orbital flight. Depending on the trajectory the reentry speed of an ICBM will vary from 4 to 7 km/s. We'll say 7, for the longest ranged missiles. The Apollo spacecraft are actual high-speed reentry craft, coming in at 11 km/s. While the maximum temperature a craft will sustain on reentry is linear with reentry speed, the total heat is based on the square, so Apollo entry speeds need to absorb nearly two and half times the heat.

      Secondly, the materials which are used to create such heat shields are ablative, which means that the protective power of the shield is used up on reentry. While there is obvious difficulty in getting through the safety factor of an ablative heat shield it's still at depleted strength.

      Lastly, in most modern ICBMs, the reentry stage is nowhere near the payload at close approaches. Instead the reentry stage deploys a whole host of goodies, chaff, decoys, multiple payloads, targeting aids, etc. At this point you are back to installing special heat shields on your payload, at the expense of yield.

      Note that I don't mean to imply that an end-of-flight intercept is preferable or even similar to a launch intercept from a technical standpoint. The missile is going much slower shortly after launch, and the energy input required to ignite the fuel is much less than other kill scenarios. However, you exaggerate the difficulties of an end-of-flight intercept. Also, while an end-of-flight intercept is technically harder, it has the practical benefit of not requiring line of sight to the launch site at the launch time. If we ignore the requirements for being in the correct position to intercept the missile, then the simplest technical solution is to cut the fuel lines.

  96. What about the counterstrike? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And what about the inevitable SLBM/ICBM counterstrike? But here's the thing:
    In recent years some western journalists have visited China and written about their trips. They have talked to Chinese citizens. Some of those citizens have said that if the US ever nuked China, it would be doing that country a favor. Think about that!

  97. MOD PARENT UP!!!! by sconeu · · Score: 1

    This is an incredibly important point.

    I worked for a few years in missile defense, and one of the big algorithms was determining *where* the inbounds were going to hit. If they were just going to splash, or hit something of no value*, we didn't bother scheduling an interceptor for them.

    * "no value" is a subjective term, determined by the higher-ups.

    --
    General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    1. Re:MOD PARENT UP!!!! by mpe · · Score: 1

      I worked for a few years in missile defense, and one of the big algorithms was determining *where* the inbounds were going to hit. If they were just going to splash, or hit something of no value*, we didn't bother scheduling an interceptor for them.
      * "no value" is a subjective term, determined by the higher-ups.


      Thus relying on these "higher-ups" knowing what they are doing. Which is likely to depend if they are "generals" or "politicians".

  98. War Games by BadPirate · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't you rather play a nice game of Chess?

    http://www.globalthermonuclearwar.net/launch/index.html

    --
    - Holy crap, I've got MOD points! Who thought that was a good idea.
  99. Re:Real enemy: It just doesn't work by bigsexyjoe · · Score: 1

    No. The Iraqi missiles just didn't work well to begin with. They didn't even need to be shot down, they just fell.

    If the point is to bankrupt the Soviets, does that mean we can stop missile defense programs now?

  100. DLP + 1 GW X-ray laser = problem solved by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thinking of missile shields in terms of interceptors is like thinking of the future of computers in terms of vacuum tubes (or silicon).

  101. 1 million drones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    drones will certainly keep falling in price til they are roughly as costly as a car.

    then 1 million drones cost what, $20 billion , certainly affordable by a few individuals ,not to mention countries.

    [dr evil] ONE MILLION DRONES [/dr evil]

  102. Real count by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    About as many as the number of missiles it carries.

    Why would you waste missiles on something so stupid and slow it would only take a few bullets per?

    You'd probably have to have many thousands and even then I doubt it would work at all as whatever stragglers made it through would easily be wiped out by close range defenses.

    I'm not sure why so many people are so eager to show how clueless they are about warfare today.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Real count by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would you waste missiles on something so stupid and slow it would only take a few bullets per?

      Because you only get a few bursts from your cannon before you're out of ammo, and you have to actually fly in close to hit them, which means a lot of time spent maneuvering. Nor can you fly for long supersonic at low altitude, if you can do that at all.

  103. There are no "cheap" munitions. by mosb1000 · · Score: 2

    A ballistic missile is not cheap. It may sound reasonable to say they can "barrage you with cheap munitions" but there really is no such thing. Sure, you can save some money by not putting a nuclear warhead on it, but the missile is still going to be the most expensive part of it.

    1. Re:There are no "cheap" munitions. by fnj · · Score: 1

      Depends on your definitions, but a ballistic missile can be cheap. Actually, a 5.56x45 round for an M-16 or a 7.62x39 round for an AK-47 is a "ballistic missile".
      ballistic: relating to or characteristic of the motion of objects moving without guidance or control only under their own momentum and the force of gravity
      missile: an object or weapon that is fired, thrown, dropped, or otherwise projected at a target; a projectile

      A Katyusha type rocket propelled projectile is a ballistic missile. The term is used popularly to describe just about any smallish unguided, ground rocket propelled projectile with an arcing flight path (non point-blank), and a warhead under 30 kg or so. During the 2006 Lebanon War, Hezbollah forces fired between 3970 and 4228 of them. They have been used in Iraq and Afghanistan by irregular forces, and by both sides in the recent Libyan civil war.

      And I think most would agree they are cheap. They are reported to cost $3-5000 each,

      So yeah, I think events of the last decade in the middle east have amply demonstrated that forces on the unsophisticated end of asymmetrical warfare can "barrage you with cheap munitions".

      Oh, you were thinking of something like ICBMs or IRBMs? I don't believe that is what your parent was talking about.

      Actually, just about all ICBMs of major powers that are of less than ancient vintage are not fully ballistic even after the main boost burns out, for what it's worth. They employ guidance and bursts of maneuvering rocket power to launch their warhead(s) (MIRV = multiple independently targeted re-entry vehicles).

    2. Re:There are no "cheap" munitions. by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      By your logic a sharpened stick is a chemical weapon, since cellulose and lignin are chemicals.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  104. The answer is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If someone fired a shitload of missles at me and I have nuclear strike capability then it we be a response that the other side really didn't want to test in the first place. What a stupid question

  105. Re:Real enemy: It just doesn't work by phantomfive · · Score: 1
    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  106. It works in real life just fine by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    We've been trying to get it to work for 50 fucking years but we can't seem to get two object moving faster than bullets to collide.

    Iron Dome has worked really well. It's pretty obvious that a missile defense system can work in theory, and since it's been proven also now in practice your statement comes off as offensively stupid.

    I mean, it's like you had to actually do work to become so ill-informed as to come up with your statement. DId you hire people cut our parts of your brain?

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  107. Re:Real enemy: It just doesn't work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think Isreal disagrees with you.

    But Isfake is totally on board.

  108. Re:Yes, before you fire 100 missiles we've killed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The reason for missile defense is that letting one nuke through means you lose.

    Of course the US could nuke the rest of the world in response but stopping the one nuke coming through is the challenge.

  109. Our hypotheticals can beat your hypotheticals... by Freddybear · · Score: 1

    Hypothetically.

  110. Is this a poorly considered question? by Maudib · · Score: 2

    Yes, of course it is possible. Here is why it is not likely and a poor argument against missile defense.

    (1) Witness Iron Dome in Israel. Combining human intervention with advanced software, Iron Dome does not attempt to take every missile. Instead the system is designed to identify and destroy only those that are a threat to people. It was very effective. Older inaccurate missiles that are not on target will be ignored.
    (2) Old missiles fielded by poor countries (see NK) are poorly maintained and are more likely then not to simply not fire.
    (3) Poor countries with large number of missiles are going to have awful command and control. They aren't going to be able to launch a coordinated attack.
    (4) Older missiles have bad range. Who cares if NK fires a bunch of scuds, what will they hit? They can barely build a handful of long ranged stuff, and that doesn't appear to be changing.
    (5) Richer countries like China aren't looking for a strategy that wipes the enemy out via surprise. They want a credible deterrent, which is best achieved by a limited number of advanced, hidden, city busters.

    1. Re:Is this a poorly considered question? by plopez · · Score: 1

      #1 can be defeated via cluster warheads, to use an analogy "shot gun vs. bullet". Take an older missile with, say, 2000kg payload. Load said missile up with 20 100kg bombs (or 200 10 kg bombs etc.). The use a simple explosive charge, like those used to blow canopies open when ejecting an aircraft, to break up the nose cone at a certain altitude. Mix in some delayed action bomblets just to make things interesting.

      BTW, I get your point. But from what I have seen Iron Dome had not really been load tested.

      --
      putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
  111. Re:Yes, before you fire 100 missiles we've killed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or they launch six each from many small vessels and land based launchers. Launch the expensive ones mixed in with the cheap stuff.

    Coordinated attacks are harder to pull off than people think... enemies really do come in waves precisely because of this.

  112. US Response? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You blow up 2 of our buildings, we blow up 2 of your countries.

  113. Harpoon Scenario by plopez · · Score: 1

    If you've ever played the modern naval battle simulator "Harpoon" this is old news. I haven't played in years, but when I first started the documentation spoke of large numbers of missiles in a coordinated attack as being the technological equivalent of human wave attacks, the statement in the documentation was, "and it works". It worked when I tried it. Why is this news? When demand exceeds capacity, your capacity is overloaded. End of story.

    What is more intriguing from a Math P.O.V. is that interception may require solving a routing problem first. Which, without more information, only yields to brute force computing.

    --
    putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
  114. 21st century warfare doesn't rely on missiles by howlingfrog · · Score: 2

    Plenty of people have already pointed out the idiocy in the details of TFA's argument, so I won't go into that. The core assumption underlying the whole thing is wrong too: wars are not fought with missiles any more. The nations that can afford enough missiles to pose any kind of threat at all to each other are the wealthy, highly populated ones. All the wealthy, populous nations are economically interdependent now, and always will be. Economically interdependent nations don't wage war on each other. All wars for the foreseeable future will be started by second- or third-world rogue states using terrorism and guerrilla tactics, and ended by first-world superpowers using espionage, tactical bombing, and drone strikes.

    Nobody capable of launching ICBM's at us could conceivably ever want to. There is nobody we'll ever need to launch ICBM's at ourselves.

    --
    The original Howling Frog is a fictional character and has no UID.
    1. Re:21st century warfare doesn't rely on missiles by joe_frisch · · Score: 1

      One could imagine a small state with the resources to launch a few ICBMs - North Korea may be almost there. A defense against a small launch might well make military sense even if the cost of the interceptors far exceeded the cost of the ICBMs.

      As almost everyone has pointed out, the original article's use of "math" is completely incorrect. Most things called "science" aren't most things claimed to be "mathematically impossible' are no such thing.

    2. Re:21st century warfare doesn't rely on missiles by techhead79 · · Score: 1

      Mutual destruction > economic stability . Don't let economists get into your head to much. Last time I checked the USSR and the USA didn't destroy each other in the 50's,60's,70's,and 80's because they didn't all want to die...not because they were worried about the common folk's 401k.

    3. Re:21st century warfare doesn't rely on missiles by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If there is a really bad global economic crisis, then the trade volume may go down and a trade war may start, which would make the world economy much less interdependent. Also, if a nation loses a lot during such a crisis, then a more nationalistic government may come to power and they may not care about foreign connections at all.
      Such events preceded WWII.

    4. Re:21st century warfare doesn't rely on missiles by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      Do you honestly think the assumption of sanity is justified?

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    5. Re:21st century warfare doesn't rely on missiles by howlingfrog · · Score: 1

      I disagree. The Cold War needed mutually assured destruction to keep the peace because the capitalist countries and the communist ones weren't trading with each other. And it didn't even do that good a job of keeping the peace. USA and USSR never spilled each other's blood, but Korea and Vietnam were more proxies for USA and China to make unofficial war on each other than anything else. There's no reason to believe we wouldn't have kept finding excuses to get involved in opposite sides of Asian civil wars if we hadn't started trading with each other.

      MAD keeps people who want to fight each other from throwing the first punch, or maybe just from escalating after a punch is thrown--shared economic interests keeps them from wanting to fight each other at all. MAD is a last line of defense, nothing more.

      --
      The original Howling Frog is a fictional character and has no UID.
    6. Re:21st century warfare doesn't rely on missiles by howlingfrog · · Score: 1

      Good question, but short answer, yes, I do.

      Long answer, the degree of insanity required to make a ruler sabotage their own nation by attacking an economic ally is pretty high, and the bigger and wealthier a country is, the harder it is for someone that out of touch with reality to come to power. Think about how far away Michelle Bachmann was from becoming President, and how far away she is from being crazy enough to start a war with China. It would take someone way crazier being way more politically successful to cause the kinds of problems we're talking about here. Ultranationalist looney toons can become dictators of small poor countries relatively easily, but those are precisely the ones who will use guerrilla warfare and terrorism rather than high-cost high-tech high-manpower 20th century warfare.

      --
      The original Howling Frog is a fictional character and has no UID.
  115. OMG Tower Defense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    so....I guess this is what all those tower defense games were training us for.

  116. Re:Yes, before you fire 100 missiles we've killed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bollocks. The Americans can be fought off with no more than sticks and stones, a few old radio parts and a little patience. Proven, a number of times now.

    What would really happen

      Fire 6 "cheap" missiles

    Do not go to any weddings, do not stay in small shacks in the middle of the desert, avoid caves for a couple of years as a bunch of 21 year old kids who can't get through the day without posting on facebook blow up random indiscriminate targets in the wrong country, designating the dead donkey as a "suspected militant" or "Al Qaeda leader".

    Wait till 999+1 Americans die.

    So long as you can withstand around 100,000 deaths (so a little over a million in population): Profit.

  117. Watch them squirm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Arguing against missile defense in a world of Iron Dome must be very discouraging.

  118. Lots of questions, no real answers by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 1

    Truth be told, this is a very simplistic way of looking at the classic missile vs. missile-interceptor game.

    Oh, right. Thanks.

    --
    systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
  119. Re:Idiots can't do math, so they think math says n by careysub · · Score: 1

    Because it defends a $2 trillion US carrier group.

    $20 billion. The maths are important.

    --
    Starships were meant to fly, Hands up and touch the sky - Nicky Minaj
  120. Zerg Rush! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OMG Zerg Rush!

  121. "Math" = "relatively larger numbers"? by Sloppy · · Score: 1

    Am I pedant, or just a bully, for wishing harm upon anyone who uses the word "math" to mean relatively large numbers?

    If player A scores 4 points and player B scores 6 points, I say player B won because he has a higher score. But this fuckwit says player B wins because of math. And that makes me want to kick him in the face. Is it just me?

    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  122. I can't provide the details by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Any missiles with nukes on them will no be allowed to detonate at their targets. No matter who launches them. Look what happened when we tried to launch one at the moon. They won't allow it.

    A project similar to A119 was attempted but an outside influence prevented the nuke from ever detonating.

  123. Missile Defense's Real Enemy: Math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In April 1960, few people in the world knew what a U2 was, or that it even existed. But in May the world did because one got shot down, and the Ruskies made political hay out of it. The point is there are a lot of secrets we don't " have a need to Know". That said, if the military brass hasn't thought about this (agonized) by now, then we (whoever/whatever country) should make it a point to ensure they are gone in the aftermath.
    In the fifties and sixties, there was a Nike Hercules system deployed around most major cities in the United States. This exact scenario was contemplated - a squadron of enemy aircraft incoming en-mass. The solution - a tactical nuclear device, one missile to get the cloud. The Salt treaty negotiated it out of our inventory, BUT! (read - what replaced it?)

  124. Decoys by catchblue22 · · Score: 1

    I think the real problem with missile defense is that the enemy could split the missile into numerous parts, only a few of which would contain actual nuclear warheads. I think this would be a viable strategy as decoys are likely to be far less expensive than nuclear bombs. Thus, in order to preserve existing nuclear warheads, the enemy could flood the sky with relatively cheap decoys, overwelming the defense network.

    --
    This and no other is the root from which a tyrant springs; when first he appears as a protector - Plato (423 to 327 BC)
  125. this is a stupid example by jafac · · Score: 1

    The Navy has known they've had this vulnerability for 30 years. They've known they're sitting-ducks, and they have KNOWN it's just a matter of time before the enemy ups the sophistication of their game to where they can sneak something through the defensive posture of a typical battle group. Iran caught us unawares with a cruise missile. (this won't happen again - because we learned a lesson). Al-Q caught us unawares with a speedboat. (honestly, I don't know how you prevent this from happening all the freaking time). Back in the Revolutionary War - 1776 the US planned a primitive submarine to go under British ships, drill into the hull, and/or plant explosives. Had this actually been technically feasible at the time . . . well, THINK about the implications!: https://lh3.ggpht.com/_j_Bcf_6uMS4/RrlFv_jQYdI/AAAAAAAABRk/MX0ia2MCkb8/s400/alg_turtle.jpg ) - there was no defense against this thing, and it was aimed straight at the heart of the British Superpower's Navy.

    This is why the Navy is investing in learning ways of changing tactics, changing to different types of vessels, and exploring completely different concepts in how to prosecute naval warfare. They've been thinking about this since the invention of the airplane.

    That said; I have had some interesting conversations with an elderly gentleman (retired) who used to work for *a big defense contractor who shall remain unnamed* who, in the 1980's, worked on solutions for tracking incoming ballistic missiles (from an outgoing response vehicle; designed to relay targeting information to interceptors). And he certainly acknowledged that it was obvious to all, (except maybe the politicians), that it was always a numbers-game, and it would always be in favor of the attackers. Smart interceptors (like Iron Dome, today) are always going to be way more expensive (like $90k) than the incoming warhead (Palestinian Shahab, like $300). Try to solve that with Directed Energy weapons, and you have many other problems (not just economic) to solve. (how to get enough power, deal with line-of-sight, weather, atmosphere and haze, recycle time, etc).

    It's a problem worth addressing, because it's better than sitting there helpless while the enemy pounds away with ballistic missiles. But in my view - we are still looking at problems that we were looking at in the 1980's. We've come a long way, but some of this stuff is just really hard.

    --

    These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    1. Re:this is a stupid example by mark_osmd · · Score: 1

      Smart interceptors (like Iron Dome, today) are always going to be way more expensive (like $90k) than the incoming warhead (Palestinian Shahab, like $300).

      One thing the Israeli's do is only expend an Iron Dome if and only if the incoming Kasam or Shahab is heading to a populated area. When the adversary is going as cheap as these Hamas rockets are, they have pretty poor accuracy and frequently land in empty areas.

  126. I call bull by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Electronics have shrunk to the point that a guided missile should only weigh a few pounds more than non-guided. I would say ounces except the actuators would have significant weight.

    1. Re:I call bull by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      Improve the electronics all you want, it's not going to make the fuel any lighter or more energetic.

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
  127. Re:Real enemy: It just doesn't work by jafac · · Score: 1

    Another thing is;
    Absolutely nobody has ever once even TESTED a missile that does evasive action.

    The US and Russia have tested (but not fielded) warheads that can maneuver on reentry - it is questionable whether they retain any accuracy.

    The earlier in the flight-path a missile tries anything dodgy, the more difficult it will be to retain any sort of accuracy.

    There ARE folks who have fielded hack-jobs on ballistic missiles to try to alter trajectory. The result, is a vehicle that delivers it's payload way off target. Saddam did it in 92 with some poorly modified SCUDS. And the Palestinians are apparently trying to do it with their junkyard-wars rockets. You ever wonder why they never hit anything?

    The biggest actual problem for Ballistic Missile Defense is decoys.

    --

    These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  128. Dying from crippling money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Money is debt. The problem was exaggerated inflation (money/debt creation) due to the housing bubble.

  129. Re:Yes, before you fire 100 missiles we've killed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's is just a minor bug in the plan that we are in the process of working out, which is why we asked the question in slashdot: hoping to get some ideas, since at this point we are kinda stumped.

  130. sarc by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you can't stop 100% of the damage, why bother trying to stop any at all?
     
    Sarcasm, you probably are used to it by now.

    1. Re:sarc by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you can't stop 100% of the damage, why bother trying to stop any at all?

      Because if you only stop 99% of the missiles, the remaining one destroys your ten billion dollar aircraft carrier and the billions of dollars of aircraft on board.

  131. NEWS FLASH by sanitycrumbling · · Score: 1

    Imperfect system not perfect. That doesn't make it worthless.

  132. Re:Yes, before you fire 100 missiles we've killed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't underestimate a canuck with a trawler, eh?

  133. PEW PEW PEW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Over the horizon firing systems are getting longer, and longer range.
    1)Railgun.
    2)Laser.
    These are in our near future.

    Watch out for teh powerd armor suits.

  134. Re:Real enemy: It just doesn't work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If it was in any other context -- splitting a meteor say, or high speed photography of colliding pellets, instead of missile defense -- would you find the engineering challenge at least a little bit interesting? You sound like you find the notion distasteful for political reasons.

    > ... we can't seem to get two object moving faster than bullets to collide.

    If there was a breakthrough where missile interception was found to work (iron dome or phalanx ciws perhaps?) would you continue to condemn the implementation of missile interception as practically impossible?

  135. What the article calls math... by cyberfunkr · · Score: 1

    What the article calls math, I refer to as "Zerg Rush"

  136. Yes, of course. History proves it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does math win? You bet it does! It sure did in world war 2. German tanks were precision crafted machines built by Porche. They were well finished and Germany could field 104 new ones per month at their peak production. They also won on specs. They had better firepower, range and capabilities than their Russian counterparts. There were two things that Russians had that were better: 1) The Russian tanks had wider tracks, so could go through fields/swamp/forest without digging in and getting stuck as easily. It made them slightly harder to turn. The other thing was math. As previously stated, the Germans could field 104 Tigers per month in April 1944. In 1943, Soviet T-34 production had reached an average of 1,300 per month. Not quite as capable as the German Tiger, not nearly as well finished (describing them as rough would be accurate). Some left the factory unpainted and went to the battlefield rusting. What they lacked in polish they made up for in sheer numbers. By the time a Tiger sighted a T34, two other T34's had shelled the Tiger. Maybe they only knocked off the tracks, maybe they disabled the turret. And maybe the Tiger got off the first shot. But one T34 for the loss of one Tiger, meant that the Russians had 1196 more T34's per month after destroying all German tanks. Math wins.

  137. Math Ignores The Human "Deterrent" Factor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While overwhelming numbers (and our friend Math) would say numbers alone would disadvantage an insufficient arsenal – in the end (or should I say at the beginning of an assault) aggressors would be concerned with retribution and would probably seek an early kill to mitigate their own unfortunate circumstances. (One long sentence – posted as Anonymous first post to Slash – and obviously a Coward).

  138. My simplistic idea about the West European front of the WW2 is that the Germans had better weapons (rockets, submarines, jet planes, radar,...) but the American kept shipping "liberty ships" or other cheap equipment. Some of them would sink on their own but enough of them managed to attack the Germans that they were overwhelmed.

    --
    __
    Men with no respect for life must never be allowed to control the ultimate instruments of death.
    GW Bu
  139. That's Not Really Math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To exceed an amount, isn't the same thing as using math. It's size. Math can be used to reach the size, but, the outsizing someone else -- simply isn't mathematics (unless you have an average United Statesian's education).

  140. Math isn't the factor anymore by techhead79 · · Score: 1

    http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/futureoftech/boeings-new-missile-takes-down-electronics-without-touching-them-1C6663618

    I'm under the impression the above technology could reset electronics in flight. What good is a nuclear warhead that doesn't know when to go off or is no longer armed?

    If you turn that around though, what good is a ship that can't see because all their electronics are shut off. While it's certainly interesting to consider this conversation, I believe there are other technologies unknown to the public that both aid in defence and offence that seriously make any number consideration pointless.

  141. Sheer numbers can and will prevail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Russians knew this in WWII and used sheer numbers of technically inferior
    T-34 tanks to defeat smaller numbers of German Panzers and Koeningstigers.

    Sure, a lot of T-34s were destroyed, but those that remained just kept coming,
    and the Germans were overwhelmed.

    The same thing will happen if the US tries to win with technology. It already DID
    happen in Viet Nam, and it is happening now in Afghanistan and Iraq.

    All of you who claim the US will prevail are either defense company shills or outright
    idiots.

    1. Re:Sheer numbers can and will prevail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Iraq

      Been out of Iraq for over a year. Civilian casualties are under pre-invasion levels

      Are you not aware of these facts or are you lying?

  142. That's weird by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Math also happens to be the enemy of Space Nutters.

  143. Old false left-wing argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anti-science, anti-technology leftists have used various phony arguments against defense for decades. Only people with political agendas and blinders on claim the "math" says defense does not work because it can be overwhelmed by offensive missiles ..... since the reverse is also obviously true: Any set of offensive missiles can be overwhelmed by a larger number of defensive missiles.

    It all comes down to one question: Do you have faith in science and technology or not? If you do not, then no arguments will change your mind... you will be convinced missile defense is not workable (and you'll probably also think cell phones and power lines cause cancer, etc... )

  144. Re:Real enemy: It just doesn't work by gatzke · · Score: 1

    They have been able shoot down plenty of missiles, despite your nice bold text statement. The US has had many tens of successful intercepts over the years. The DoD deserves credit for these amazing feats of science.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aegis_Ballistic_Missile_Defense_System#Flight_tests_to_date

    Evasive action can potentially make this more difficult, but most of the time evasive action is difficult in terminal phase ballistics.

  145. Re:Real enemy: It just doesn't work by jrumney · · Score: 1

    TRANSLATION: We've been trying to get it to work for 50 fucking years but we can't seem to get two object moving faster than bullets to collide.

    That's not at all true. AEGIS has been proven to be very effective against the threat posed by commercial passenger jets.

  146. The question is more do you see the irony? by Paul+Fernhout · · Score: 1

    "It all comes down to one question: Do you have faith in science and technology or not?"

    http://www.pdfernhout.net/recognizing-irony-is-a-key-to-transcending-militarism.html
    "There is a fundamental mismatch between 21st century reality and 20th century security thinking. Those "security" agencies are using those tools of abundance, cooperation, and sharing mainly from a mindset of scarcity, competition, and secrecy. Given the power of 21st century technology as an amplifier (including as weapons of mass destruction), a scarcity-based approach to using such technology ultimately is just making us all insecure. Such powerful technologies of abundance, designed, organized, and used from a mindset of scarcity could well ironically doom us all whether through military robots, nukes, plagues, propaganda, or whatever else... Or alternatively, as Bucky Fuller and others have suggested, we could use such technologies to build a world that is abundant and secure for all. "

    --
    A 21st century issue: the irony of technologies of abundance in the hands of those still thinking in terms of scarcity.
  147. A shocking discovery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Defeat a military opponent by using overwhelming force?

    Nobody's ever thought of that one before.

  148. Not if the counter measures are cheaper than ICBMs by atticus9 · · Score: 1

    A ballistic missile is going to cost a ton of resources to launch, and if the counter measure are relatively cheap I don't think numbers will win. Kind of like saying you can beat guns by throwing wave after of wave of people at them until the enemy runs out of bullets.

  149. I don't see any math, just talk. by boddhisatva · · Score: 1

    It costs money to keep the old stuff up and working, and then you're going to develop new, more accurate stuff and put that on line and keep the whole thing up and working with Perl and duct tape? And of course you have your super-accurate counter-measures system going too. What do you think put the Soviet Union out of business. Unworkable and stupid. I can think of a dozen better ways to wreak havoc for less money.

  150. Math wins but that's not the point by johnwerneken · · Score: 1

    Quantity has a quality all its own. But as no one REALLY wants to use these things, being able to spend one's competitors into the poor house is almost as good as winning an exchange of weapons, and far more environmentally sound...

  151. stupid rant by Crass+Spektakel · · Score: 1

    the whole article is stupid to the bone.

    1. todays active defense systems are already capable of only engaging objects on a dangerous course and ignoring all others.

    2. spamming thousands of missiles over days wouldn't go unnoticed by the target of the attack. in other words, the attacker will get taken out before he has done any relevant damage.

    3. there is no nation on earth able to spam thousands of missiles for extended periods.

    Now lets discuss how many cute kittens one must throw against an AEGIS cruiser to overwhelm its defences.

    --
    "Life is short and in most cases it ends with death." Sir Sinclair
  152. Diplomacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I submit that the correct solution to concerns of a sheer mass of incoming missiles from a huge coalition of enemy nations is diplomatic rather than technical.

  153. Wait a moment. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A genuinely smart missle shield could discriminate between real threats and chaff meant to exhaust it. By looking at the trajectory and composition of incoming ordnance (necessary for interception in any event) decisions could be made in microseconds waste could be avoided. It's a computational problem in the end, and it's always going to be easier to blow up a missle than a city.

    While the math that the computers have to do are hard, it is not impossible. And we will get there.

  154. Missile Deffence works for assymetric warfare by iceco2 · · Score: 1

    Even after taking into account that not every incoming missile will be intercepted
    It requires a more advance more sophisticated more expensive weapon to shoot down a cheap missile.
    a Vulcan Phallanx is more expensive than a mortar unit and you need many of them to protect even a smallish area.
    An Iron Dome interceptor is more complicated and expensive than a Kasam or Grad rocket.
    An Arrow missile is likewise more advanced and more expensive then a Scud or even a Shihab/Sagil missile.
    This is why such defense makes sense for Israel vs Terror organizations
    but make little sense for USA vs USSR.
    Israel has a budget much larger than Hamas and can afford expensive solutions.
    Some argue the cost for the enemy is irrelevant, it is only cost for the protective side vs potential damage from the threat
    And when you add to the potential damage not only the direct damages of a missile attack but the ability of the population to continue living
    a normal productive life during a time of conflict, you quickly see the cost of expensive Iron Dome interceptors is well worth it.
    The trade-off becomes less favorable for the larger missiles, unless you fear unconventional weapons or are protecting strategic sites.

  155. Re:Real enemy: It just doesn't work by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

    The capability to outspend the Soviets appears to be what worked, but was that actually the plan from the beginning? It seems unlikely to me. Any reliable reference?

    --
    Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
  156. Re:Idiots can't do math, so they think math says n by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

    Defense does not always cost more than offense. In the case of land forces, the offense has the problem of long supply lines. It's easier to build a tank trap than a tank.

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    Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
  157. You're not supposed to just sit there taking hits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're not supposed to just sit there taking hits. The system is designed to be used with an automated counter-offense:
    OPFOR fires projectile;
    projectile detected;
    basic math;
    air to air counter-measures and air to ground retaliatory measures are fired to general location;
    more math;
    OPFOR projectile intercepted;
    more math;
    OPFOR location is triangulated;
    OPFOR launchers are destroyed.

    Since the defense system has multiple launchers, you need to out-do those numbers and get in range undetected since the other guys aren't sitting there waiting for you to rack up your missile offense.

    So, as long as the defending aren't just idly sitting and waiting, the system works.

  158. Wrong by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

    First of all, the US has had missile defense via missiles since the 1960s with Nike-Zeus/Spartan and Sprint

    "AEGIS" is the combat system, the US Navy's missile defense is - Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense System, a subset of Aegis and on some ships

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

    Overwhelming the system with missiles isn't going to happen, the primary threat nation (the Russian Federation) has nuclear capable cruise missiles, ICBMs and SLBMs limited through treaties, when China has enough to be a threat there will be a treaty with them too.

  159. Outdated by CEC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Co-operative Engagement Capability was developed to deal specifically with this issue.
    http://www.fas.org/man/dod-101/sys/ship/weaps/cec.htm

    tl;dr - kind of like a hypervisor for a bunch of ships.

  160. Your business case is incomplete. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, the Israeli business case for Iron Dome is that the costs of the physical damage and resultant economic disruption significantly outweighs the costs of the interceptors.

    This is why Defence is a classic example of a public good.

    Also, the Israeli response is significantly restrained by international opinion. Israel could very well respond to any rocket launch with an MRLS salvo (or other available counter battery system) before the rocket had even landed - after all, that's what MRLS was originally designed for. I'm not sure any other country is as restrained in responding to such attacks.

  161. Re:Real enemy: It just doesn't work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The technology in a cheap $10 toy Chinese helicopter and a dozen $1 laser pointers is whats missing, add a $60 Chinese smart phone with GPS, plus unpublished precision guidance solutions, so called secret patents. Add a NZ mans rocket out of stainless steel exhaust pipe and a few programmable logic chips and you are good. Finished product has USB plug, and steered by say an iphone app. There is no appetite to build shoestring devices, lest someone improves on dumb rockets. The scuds did not have perfectly balanced turbo boosters, so vibration and harmonics made them hard to hit , like when the V2 nosecone got super hot and caused problems - variable friction and heat issue. As the ESA did gravity mapping - there is a solution, and its not so expensive, because having a supersonic rocket with explosives steered by an iPhone with a high gain antenna off ebay, is unthinkable to US designers, but poorer countries might one day consider this, as well as using same approach for decoys.

  162. Math Wins by rally2xs · · Score: 1

    Yeah, any missile defense system can be overwhelmed. But, its not for that. Its for pissant little countries with a handful of rockets that think they can influence the world with their pop-gun style weaponry. Any massive attack would have to come from major players, who will not do such a thing because they know that they will personally get fried in a nuclear counter-attack. MAD lives.

  163. Sardaukar86's REAL ENEMY = math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And himself: Hahaha Sardaukar86 had to "eat his words" -> http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3417867&cid=42756893 outnumbered by a ratio of 243++:1

  164. Lame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I thought this was going to be an article on the chances of an ABM hitting a ballistic missile and not some silly childish observation that ignores the fact this "problem" has been with us since man threw the first stone. Read a book on modern naval tactics and you'll see this scenario has long been planned for and will very likely occur in the Taiwan Strait and possibly in the Strait of Hormuz as well.

  165. Dumb to fire expensive things at cheap missiles by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Enemy shoots 100 to 1000 $10K missiles at you. You attempt to swat them down with $1M anti-missiles. You also fire back with counter-battery missiles. Problem is missiles are so expensive you can't hope to afford to have enough to hit everything. You won't get all of the missiles and you won't get all of the batteries. It is too cheap to to build offensive missiles and time is too short to get them all with expensive defenses.

    Why play this game? SInce the 1980's we've had big lasers capable of striking missiles out of the sky. Lasers are expensive, but you can build a lot of them, and they're reusable. Fire them again and again for the cost of electricity. Shoot at everything -- missiles, decoys, ducks and geese. No need for fancy buggy software. Now you've given the artillery and counter-battery missiles time to take out the enemy launchers.

    People who look at current day lasers and think they're impractical are like the people that looked at early cars and said "Get a horse!" We were successfully shooting down anti-tank missiles and Sidewinders in the 1970s, so the real question is why are we still working on missiles?

    http://gizmodo.com/5949983/the-army-finally-put-a-giant-laser-cannon-on-a-truck

  166. Really? by solidraven · · Score: 1

    Did some political science major come up with this or something? This is nothing new.
    It's been a well known weakness of any defence system. The moment you run out of bullets/interceptor missiles/... you're done for. Another tactic is simply overloading it with targets. You can only fire interceptors at a certain rate. If you exceed that rate for long enough you'll get through. Again not a very complicated tactic that's fairly easy to execute given sufficient time to build a large quantity of dumb missiles.

  167. Re:Real enemy: It just doesn't work by Uberbah · · Score: 1

    Israel has to "deal" with gunpowder rockets that even the IDF admits are a psychological, not military weapon. You're more likely to die in an accident with a passenger bus in Israel than die from a quassam rocket.

  168. APK's show us his brain isn't working quite right. by Sardaukar86 · · Score: 1

    Hahahaha Sardaukar86 has to "eat his words" -> http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3417867&cid=42756893

    You are the most feeble 'opponent' I think I've ever had; nobody else would walk themselves into world-class hypocrisy for all to see: http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3427061&cid=42771179

    Keep up the good work APK!

    --
    ..Mullah or Pope, Preacher or Poet, who was it wrote: "Give any one species too much rope and they'll fuck it up"?
  169. More Math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is a case of "I don't need to outrun the Bear, I just need to outrun YOU."

    All we need is enough interceptors to defend until our missiles reach THEM. They can't launch what isn't in one piece. You're forgetting your Cold War math: Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD), except now they can't be sure a quick first strike will do anything to prevent a counter strike. I think we got safer when we figured out how to intercept them.

    Of course all of this is premised on the idea that the U.S. won't launch first against an undefended aggressor. A careful President, mindful of his or her poll numbers, will prevent that.

  170. Easy defense against launch of cheap missiles. by ozogg · · Score: 1

    - Surely this is an argument based on Economics, not on Maths? The side that can implement : "the best kill-ratio per dollar" will surely "win". Frex, if one side implements Laser Missile Killer Guns, with low cost per gun, per "shot", per man-hour $, then it can just keep on shooting down whatever appears in the skies, oceans, wherever. One doesn't need a very big "bullet", or "mortar", to bring down a giant missile. And they don't have to be very accurate "bullets" or "mortars". One can launch a veritable "wall of metal" at any air missile (like the Phalanx Gun does) see: http://www.defenseindustrydaily.com/a-laser-phalanx-03783/ Similarly underwater. What do others think ?

  171. Re:APK's show us his brain isn't working quite rig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You had to eat your words Sardaukar86. Accept you failed. Do the math. 250 people proved you wrong and they're our fellow slashdotters.

  172. Re:APK's show us his brain isn't working quite rig by Sardaukar86 · · Score: 1

    1. Lies on your part help my case, not yours.

    2. They are some of our fellow Slashdotters. The rest clearly think you are a tedious, childish bore, judging by many of the replies you receive.

    --
    ..Mullah or Pope, Preacher or Poet, who was it wrote: "Give any one species too much rope and they'll fuck it up"?
  173. Re:APK's show us his brain isn't working quite rig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Math doesn't lie. You had to eat your words Sardaukar86 http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3406867&cid=42701491 and you're vastly outnumbered by your fellow slashdotters opinions opposed to yours, that of a known troll here, with nothing to show to disprove that list on your part.

  174. The Feeling of Power by tmjva · · Score: 1

    Seems I've heard this kind of story before: Automated weapons systems versus automated weapons systems.

    See:

    THE FEELING OF POWER
    by Isaac Asimov
    Worlds of Science Fiction, February 1958
    Copyright 1957 by Quinn Publishing Co., Inc.

    http://www.themathlab.com/writings/short%20stories/feeling.htm

    --
    Tracy Johnson
    Old fashioned text games hosted below:
    http://empire.openmpe.com/
    BT
  175. Re:Yes, before you fire 100 missiles we've killed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Making missiles en-mass that can go half way around the world isn't cheap.

    Yet.

  176. obligatory Schlock by WhiteDragon · · Score: 1
    --
    Did you mount a military-grade, variable-focus MASER on an unlicensed artificial intelligence?
  177. Yes, Mr Murdoch, I did glance at you. by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    The problem becomes the majority of people who don't meet that threshold are still smart enough to figure out they are stupid and which end to hold a weapon by.

    This is one reason why you don't stop them voting. Rather, you let them vote but tell them who/what to vote for.

    The other (perhaps more subtle) reason is that while you don't want the oiks voting against your interests, getting them to vote in your favour is even better than them not voting at all; you can swarm the few informed dissenters with electoral cannon fodder.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  178. False flag operation / Joe job by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    HOW would you carry to, install at and fire 10K long range missiles from your ENEMY?

    You don't. You fire his missiles from his territory at the superpower. There are various methods - bribery, infiltration, blackmail, perhaps even hacking - that could be employed.

    You'd have to take out Ben Affleck first, though.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  179. Re:APK's show us his brain isn't working quite rig by Sardaukar86 · · Score: 1

    Math doesn't lie. You had to eat your words Sardaukar86 http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3406867&cid=42701491 and you're vastly outnumbered by your fellow slashdotters opinions opposed to yours, that of a known troll here, with nothing to show to disprove that list on your part.

    You have no understanding of even basic math or you wouldn't post your list as evidence. As it stands the list is only good for evidence of your incompetence.

    Prove I'm outnumbered - show me how the list of upmods you have is greater than the downmods you get.

    That's right, you can't, so all you'll do is post your stupid list again and show the world what a failure you really are. Keep it up you stupid old fuck, you're proving my argument for me every time you open your yap.

    --
    ..Mullah or Pope, Preacher or Poet, who was it wrote: "Give any one species too much rope and they'll fuck it up"?
  180. Re:APK's show us his brain isn't working quite rig by Sardaukar86 · · Score: 1

    that of a known troll here

    Only a troll to losers like you, cunt.

    with nothing to show to disprove that list on your part.

    You've had it explained to you plenty of times, fuckwit.

    If you were diagnosed as mentally ill by a professional you wouldn't accept their diagnosis because you simply know better than anybody. Hence, no evidence will get you to see how pathetic your arguments are.

    You're just too arrogant.

    --
    ..Mullah or Pope, Preacher or Poet, who was it wrote: "Give any one species too much rope and they'll fuck it up"?
  181. Oh, it's jolly deadly, old boy. by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    For example the Zulu overwhelming the British with spears.

    I presume you're referring to Isandlwana, 22 January 1879.

    It wasn't until the machine gun was introduced that the British won that.

    Rorke's Drift, 22-23 January 1879. Martini-Henry rifles (and bayonets). Prepared (albeit improvised) defensive position, but no machine guns.

    Are you getting confused with Omdurman? An easy mistake, the bally darkies all look the same, what?

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  182. Re:APK's show us his brain isn't working quite rig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    250 to 1 says otherwise. Do the math. How'd yer words taste since ya hadda eat 'em http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3417867&cid=42756893 Sardaukar86? You don't have 251 downmods of his so your point is moot. Now eat those words! LOL!

  183. Re:APK's show us his brain isn't working quite rig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You lost 250 to 1. Do the math. How'd yer words taste since ya hadda eat 'em http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3417867&cid=42756893 Sardaukar86? Do you like to eat the profanity based ones too?? Seems so, lol!

  184. Re:APK's show us his brain isn't working quite rig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's right, you'd ignore them completely. Just as you're ignoring the reality that your list is toilet paper. Keep posting your boilerplate text, you've got no reason or logic to back you up, fool.

    Just a month or two on Slashdot and you get downmodded more than the total of your 250-odd strong list

    Pity you're too dumb to see that (cue the list again)

  185. developed for... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, atomic bombs were developed to ensure that we would not have an enemy that would out-gun us, if they were successful in somehow building a weapon based on the new atomic science. We did not know exactly how powerful such weapons would be, or how to build them - but we wanted to be sure not to be at a disadvantage.

    Any tool once built may be used, or may have unintended consequences. Malware and anti-malware is another arms race that started as experimenting at tool-building for the sake of learning and exploring what could be built.

    Ooo! I like being labeled Anonymous Coward. Cool.