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#11
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"Paul J. Adam" wrote in message ... In message , Thomas J. Paladino Jr. writes http://www.globalsecurity.org/milita...ina/tu-22m.htm Two part question; first, do you think that China will actually succeed in it's acquisition attempts regarding the Backfire, and if so, how many would they end up with? Say rather, "How many could they support"? Second, what does this mean to the the US? Backfires are a viable threat to the carrier group, Only in sufficient numbers and with good targeting. And good training and with the F-14/Phoenix weapons systems getting phased out with no real comparable replacement, I can't help but think that the US carrier groups may find themselves in an uncomfortably vulnerable position sometime in the near future. The USSR policy was to send several regiments of Backfires against a located US CVBG and try to overwhelm it. AEGIS was the answer and remains in US service. The F-14 and Phoenix missile were designed specifically to counter the long range bomber threat, and when this threat was thought to have disappeared, the AAAM (Phoenix replacement) and the Super-Tomcat upgrades were cancelled. As others have said, if you need a long-range AAM then buy into Meteor. The F-18 can carry a decent number of them, and the E-2 can detect Backfires at long range, and the AEGIS/SM-2 remains the best shipborne AAW in the world. (Type 45 may be better but is yet to appear, and then AEGIS will get an update...) Although there is basically no chance for the F-14 to be brought back to life, should we now possibly be concerned with developing a new long-range missile system for the F-18 and JSF, or do these aircraft already have the capability to defeat the long-range bomber using stealth and smaller, medium range weapons? The enemy has to reliably locate the US carrier. The enemy has to get that data back to HQ. The strike must be authorised. The strikers must take off, form up, and get into launch range without being disrupted by anything from comms jamming to fighter attack. The missiles must reliably tell chaff, floating decoys and offboard jammers from real ships: then tell real escorts from real HVUs: then survive the hardkill defences: then defeat the softkill: and finally inflict mission-lethal damage on the carrier. This is not an easy chain to follow, and if any link breaks the whole thing falls down. If China bought MiG-23s would you panic? The Backfire and its weapons are of the same vintage. The fundamental problem remains that you can only mass a strike against a known target. -- He thinks too much: such men are dangerous. Julius Caesar I:2 Paul J. Adam MainBoxatjrwlynch[dot]demon{dot}co(.)uk |
#12
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"Krztalizer" wrote in message ... Didn't we all know what the outcome would be and just thanked God it didn't seem likely to happen? The CW from the mid-80s was that we would *eventually* win the sea battles, after the Soviets melted a few of our HVUs down to slag. Maybe after they caught John Walker and provided they didn't have any other spies with their paws in our commo. From the SSN standpoint alone, a squadron of six ASW helos (of which 1-2 were always being worked on in the hangar deck) was not going to be enough to counter a Soviet SSN tour de force against Mother. I think we both know how useless the VS assets always seemed to be at real inner-zone ASW, but even if you throw in a bone for them, we all pretty much agreed we wouldn't have a place to land if the real **** happened. My VS duty was with VS-31 on Ike - we re-made our squadron patch in 1981 to reflect the fact that we had gone one entire year without submarine contact. It was one of the real reasons that I went into helicopters; the other main reason was that the VS AWs were just plain snobs - something I have never heard anyone say about us "knuckledragging SAR swimmer" AWHs. Its hard to be full of yourself when you are ****ing in your wetsuit to keep from freezing. Of course, I'm sure you'll agree we knew us AW's would make damn sure a lot of VMF (Voyenno Morskoj Flot) sailors went to ocean floor in the process. Like I said, it would have been glorious -- at least for a little while ) Later, Mike. v/r Gordon ====(A+C==== USN SAR Its always better to lose -an- engine, not -the- engine. |
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"Thomas J. Paladino Jr." wrote:
http://www.globalsecurity.org/milita...ina/tu-22m.htm Two part question; first, do you think that China will actually succeed in it's acquisition attempts regarding the Backfire, and if so, how many would they end up with? Irrelevant Second, what does this mean to the the US? Bugger all ! China needs the USA ( and the rest of the western world ) to trade with. That's how they are modernising their country via a significant trade surplus. Otherwise it's back to the paddy fields. The Chinese have essentially become capitalists today. Just like the Russians too. They just don't like to admit it much. The Cold War is over - or did someone forget to mention it to you ? Graham - who has actually visited the PRC on business. p.s where do you think most consumer goods are manufactured these days ? |
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Pooh Bear wrote in
: "Thomas J. Paladino Jr." wrote: http://www.globalsecurity.org/milita...ina/tu-22m.htm Two part question; first, do you think that China will actually succeed in it's acquisition attempts regarding the Backfire, and if so, how many would they end up with? Irrelevant Second, what does this mean to the the US? Bugger all ! China needs the USA ( and the rest of the western world ) to trade with. That's how they are modernising their country via a significant trade surplus. Otherwise it's back to the paddy fields. The Chinese have essentially become capitalists today. Just like the Russians too. They just don't like to admit it much. The Cold War is over - or did someone forget to mention it to you ? Graham - who has actually visited the PRC on business. p.s where do you think most consumer goods are manufactured these days ? you seem to not believe that the mainland Chinese are going to attack Taiwan sooner or later to being them back under Communist control,and that the US would not use it's carrier groups to oppose that move. -- Jim Yanik jyanik-at-kua.net |
#15
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In article ,
Pooh Bear wrote: Two part question; first, do you think that China will actually succeed in it's acquisition attempts regarding the Backfire, and if so, how many would they end up with? Irrelevant Second, what does this mean to the the US? Bugger all ! China needs the USA ( and the rest of the western world ) to trade with. China needs the USA to have someplace to dump its cheap quality products. That's how they are modernising their country via a significant trade surplus. Otherwise it's back to the paddy fields. The Chinese have essentially become capitalists today. Just like the Russians too. They just don't like to admit it much. Thieving capitalists who invent nothing and simply copy/counterfeit what the rest of the world creates. The Cold War is over - or did someone forget to mention it to you ? Somebody needs to tell that to the USN VQ-1 EP-3 crew who were held prisoner by the Chinese military several days before being allowed to even speak with the outside world. --Mike |
#16
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On Sun, 22 Aug 2004 08:00:50 +0100, Pooh Bear
wrote: "Thomas J. Paladino Jr." wrote: http://www.globalsecurity.org/milita...ina/tu-22m.htm Two part question; first, do you think that China will actually succeed in it's acquisition attempts regarding the Backfire, and if so, how many would they end up with? Irrelevant Second, what does this mean to the the US? Bugger all ! China needs the USA ( and the rest of the western world ) to trade with. That's how they are modernising their country via a significant trade surplus. Otherwise it's back to the paddy fields. Trade isn't the be all and end all of avoiding war. France was Germany's biggest trading partner in 1939. Peter Kemp |
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#18
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"Peter Kemp" wrote in message ... On Sun, 22 Aug 2004 08:00:50 +0100, Pooh Bear wrote: "Thomas J. Paladino Jr." wrote: http://www.globalsecurity.org/milita...ina/tu-22m.htm Two part question; first, do you think that China will actually succeed in it's acquisition attempts regarding the Backfire, and if so, how many would they end up with? Irrelevant Second, what does this mean to the the US? Bugger all ! China needs the USA ( and the rest of the western world ) to trade with. That's how they are modernising their country via a significant trade surplus. Otherwise it's back to the paddy fields. Trade isn't the be all and end all of avoiding war. France was Germany's biggest trading partner in 1939. And from June 1940 onwards, the difference is that the West is unlikely to resume trade with China while a war is going on. Keith |
#19
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Did you guys ever have to fly with a funky "magic box" hooked into AC in
the cargo area and which was supposed to attract enemy missiles toward it (and the helo) and way from Mother? Never flew with it. They showed it to us in HS-10 and the crews basically snickered and walked away. They told us it would deflect the missile path at the last moment.. "No....really." I could never understand why the VS squadrons we did ASW exercises with at the SOAR range never seemed to get sub contact or maintain contact on a target we localized and passed off to them. Was it an avionics thing? It was caused by a tragic inability to hover. I know we were spoiled having active sonar and all that, *Bingo* v/r Gordon ====(A+C==== USN SAR Its always better to lose -an- engine, not -the- engine. |
#20
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Jim Yanik wrote:
Pooh Bear wrote in : "Thomas J. Paladino Jr." wrote: http://www.globalsecurity.org/milita...ina/tu-22m.htm Two part question; first, do you think that China will actually succeed in it's acquisition attempts regarding the Backfire, and if so, how many would they end up with? Irrelevant Second, what does this mean to the the US? Bugger all ! China needs the USA ( and the rest of the western world ) to trade with. That's how they are modernising their country via a significant trade surplus. Otherwise it's back to the paddy fields. The Chinese have essentially become capitalists today. Just like the Russians too. They just don't like to admit it much. The Cold War is over - or did someone forget to mention it to you ? Graham - who has actually visited the PRC on business. p.s where do you think most consumer goods are manufactured these days ? you seem to not believe that the mainland Chinese are going to attack Taiwan sooner or later to being them back under Communist control,and that the US would not use it's carrier groups to oppose that move. There's too much to lose in an actual 'shooting war'. Posturing is another matter. Hong Kong hasn't become or been forced to be 'Communist' btw since becoming a special administrative region. Graham |
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