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posted by Fnord666 on Tuesday November 17 2020, @08:26PM   Printer-friendly
from the but-did-it-mock-it-first? dept.

Pentagon shoots down mock intercontinental missile in sea-based test

In a first for the Pentagon's push to develop defenses against intercontinental-range ballistic missiles capable of striking the United States, a missile interceptor launched from a U.S. Navy ship at sea hit and destroyed a mock ICBM in flight Tuesday, officials said.

Previous tests against ICBM targets had used interceptors launched from underground silos in the U.S. If further, more challenging tests prove successful, the ship-based approach could add to the credibility and reliability of the Pentagon's existing missile-defense system.

The success of Tuesday's test is likely to draw particular interest from North Korea, whose development of ICBMs and nuclear weapons is the main reason the Pentagon has sought to accelerate its building of missile-defense systems over the past decade.

Also at Bloomberg and DefenseNews.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday November 18 2020, @09:19AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday November 18 2020, @09:19AM (#1078729)

    I expect that in modern war carriers would become an anachronism. A giant, isolated, slow moving target worth potentially hundreds of billions of dollars, to say nothing of its tactical value? Even if you can manage to deal with ICBMs it seems like something that's probably an unsolvable problem. There are so many possible angles of attack for something that has too high of a value. For instance another recently declassified weapon from Russia was 'tsunami bombs.' Nuclear torpedoes that can create artificial 500 meter high tsunamis. While the main purpose of these would be to annihilate coastal cities while sidestepping anti-missile defenses, it seems something similar would also be more than sufficient to devastate naval fleets.

    Like in many tactical games, it's simply magnitudes easier to attack than to defend. To accurately defend you need to anticipate every single possible angle of attack and create effective defenses against them all. And you need to do that with absolute perfection. To successfully attack all you need is a single mistake, or a single angle of attack that was not properly guarded. This is why, for instance, insurgent groups in the Mideast have been able to effect tens of thousands of causalities on our troops primarily using 70 year old rifle technology and some home-made bombs. It's a sort of David vs Goliath scenario, except in this case David gets to hide wherever he wants, use whatever weapons he can come up with, and Goliath gets to stand in the middle of a stadium with his thumb up his ass, just hoping he can stop whatever's coming.