Its what you would excpect the rah rah rah, bombs away type rhetoric. But some interesting comments can be found around the web. You can find them yourself. ;)

  • happybadger [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    10 months ago

    https://www.reddit.com/r/Military/comments/1aft47l/houthi_cruise_missile_comes_within_a_mile_of_a_us/

    https://www.reddit.com/r/navy/comments/1afqrts/a_cruise_missile_launched_by_the_houthis_into_the/

    Also with a missile that slow, that’s probably two misses with an SM-2. Depth of fire and all that.

    With as long as some of these destroyers have been on station, I imagine they have to be running low on SM-2s by now.

    90~ missiles on a destroyer. This is where I think the breaking point will be for Operation Amazon Prime. They can’t effectively resupply these ships and they’re burning expensive missiles on cheap drones/less advanced missiles. At some point the Houthis are going to get a lucky strike when stocks are depleted or the US will be forced to exhaust more ships it can’t maintain/staff/train.

    • jabrd [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      10 months ago

      Man multipolarity is going to come at gun point if nothing else. If you can’t enforce shipping lanes and regional powers have to that’s the end of the hegemon. It will be interesting to see if the the US continues to not even attempt a diplomatic solution in Palestine if they’re forced out because the occupation becomes untenable or if we somehow do war communism again to beat the Nazis. iirc I read that it would currently take two years production time to fully restock the navy with missiles at current rates let alone the cost to do so

      • Tankiedesantski [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        10 months ago

        I read that it would currently take two years production time to fully restock the navy with missiles at current rates let alone the cost to do so

        “But don’t worry Taiwan, we totes have your back. Pinky promise.”

    • Awoo [she/her]@hexbear.net
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      10 months ago

      90~ missiles on a destroyer. This is where I think the breaking point will be for Operation Amazon Prime. They can’t effectively resupply these ships and they’re burning expensive missiles on cheap drones/less advanced missiles. At some point the Houthis are going to get a lucky strike when stocks are depleted or the US will be forced to exhaust more ships it can’t maintain/staff/train.

      I’ve been saying this since the start. These ships have to make port to resupply, there is no aerial or naval resupply method during operation.

      The limits of the US navy are its ammunition capacity. If you exhaust the on-board stocks, you have effectively defeated it.

        • Awoo [she/her]@hexbear.net
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          10 months ago

          It’s effectively like deploying a squad. In most troop to troop combat if you can pin down the enemy and exhaust their supplies you can defeat the opponent by way of making them use up all their ammunition, effectively rendering them unable to fight back. At that point they effectively have to either retreat or surrender. The difference with a front line though is that you can have supply lines keeping them operating.

          The same applies to these ships, except there’s no resupplying them while in operation, so you don’t have a frontline+supply lines scenario, you just have to exhaust them to cause their withdrawal.

          I’m not sure where they would resupply… Maybe Cyprus or Malta is a viable place? Malta has a US base while Cyprus has a UK base. I think it’s reasonably likely they would use C130s to transport missiles to one of these bases for resupply.