Numerous TLAMs were shot down by Iraqi ZSU-23-4s and SA-8s during Desert Storm
Heard about this one [;)]
TLAM hardly fulfills the definition of A-G munition, and I don't think it is irrelevant in this case.
IIRC Iraqis set up those short-range air defense systems along 109's known flight paths for the exact purpose of shooting them down. A far cry from immobile legacy area defense SAM systems spontaneously shooting down A-G munitions like it would be in their job description. This being the situation we currently "enjoy" in CMANO.
And I am sorry if my previous post was misleading, but I am mostly concerned about the performance of longer ranged legacy area defense SAM systems (read: SA-2, SA-3, SA-4, SA-5)
IIRC there has been at least one case of a Delilah small cruise missile being shot down by Syrian defences (though it was not clarified if this was from a Pantsir system or an older kit).
(from CMANO's standpoint) Rather poor performance. If CMANO would be anything to go by (the topic of this discussion), SA-5 SAM system (Reminder: SA-5 was specifically designed to engage massive strategic aircraft like B-52 or B-58. A far cry from small A-G munitions many times smaller than the already small tactical aircraft deploying them.) should have absolutely no issues successfully engaging Delilah-style cruise missiles from literally dozens of nautical miles away.
I'm not even mentioning any of the other air defense systems Syria has.
Please don't get stuck on this particular example.
I am not saying that this is what should've happened, but how come we never hear about this kind of engagements (
incl. outside of Syria) considering that Israel has been conducting airstrikes on Syria for pretty much as long as IAF exists?
Now this is the very essence of the notion I'm trying to bring forward here: Maybe it's just me, but I have never heard about legacy Soviet area defense SAM systems shooting down A-G munitions being any sort of major operational, strategic or tactical consideration. IIRC (I might be wrong here; don't have the book anymore) Diane T. Putney's 2004 Airpower Advantage; Planning the Gulf War Air Campaign, 1989-1991 doesn't even really mention legacy Soviet area defense SAM systems shooting down A-G munitions as being any major consideration.
Whereas in CMANO it is
always one of the major considerations when conducting airstrikes against enemy with even those not-so-obsolete-after-all legacy systems. Even when deploying something like HARM against SA-5 which is capable of shooting it down. It turns almost any kind of mission into saturation-style attack. Something I would think would be reserved for more modern air defense networks.
Antiquated triple-A was even bringing down V-1s in WW2. I'm sure others can bring up more examples.
Not really relevant to the discussion at hand, is it?
...for example, we'd have to model Aegis/SM-2 as completely ineffective (except against airliners)...
Are you talking about deployment against maneuvering targets? If not then as an example:
https://news.usni.org/2016/10/11/uss-ma ... les-attack
Lots of Typhoon and Spitfire pilots knocked V1s out of the sky during the London Terror Bombing in WWII.
Not really relevant to the discussion at hand, is it?
Israel has engaged hundreds of rockets with Iron Dome.
Not really relevant to the discussion at hand, is it?
DISCLAIMER:
I am really sorry if any of my statements come off as being passive-aggressive or presumptuous. I try to be nice to everybody on this forum [:)]
Cheers