ORIGINAL: Fidel_Helms
ORIGINAL: golden delicious
ORIGINAL: Fidel_Helms
Of course, you are free to post an account of a cruise missile being "shot down" as a counterargument.
There hasn't been a conflict between two modern forces in the era of the cruise missile.
That actually touches on my point quite nicely. Whatever countermeasures are out there haven't been used and many are likely to remain unused, as a full on conventional conflict between two fully modern armies is unlikely in the near term.
Also, all precision munitions aren't missiles. Many "smart bombs" are just that- bombs. Good luck shooting those down.
I don't get it - are you arguing that because anti-PGM/SSM weapons systems aren't likely to be used in all-out conventional conflicts in the future, they shouldn't be modeled in ACoW? Nuclear/chemical weapons are even more unlikely to be used on the battlefield, yet they are modelled.
I think modern anti-PGM/SSM SAMs should be modeled in ACoW (as should dedicated SEAD). As it is now SSMs are virtual 'super weapons' which can rain down unrealistically high levels of damage at will, with no effective countermeasures, even for forces equipped with systems at least theoretically capable of knocking SSMs down.
Here's an excerpt from an article on the US Patriot PAC-3 on globalsecurity.org:
PATRIOT battalions with PAC-3 fire units were employed in Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) against TBMs. In OIF, PAC-3 interceptors were ripple-fired against ballistic missile threats, a user requirement that was not demonstrated during operational testing. This eliminated the need for a follow-on test to demonstrate this capability. All PATRIOT engagements were conducted in a complex operational environment. There were three instances of erroneous engagements between PATRIOT batteries and friendly aircraft. System performance against TBMs appears to have been highly effective and consistent with expectations documented in DOT&E’s beyond low-rate initial production report submitted to Congress in October 2002. PATRIOT performance during OIF is detailed in the classified FY03 BMDS annual report.
(From:
http://www.globalsecurity.org/space/systems/patriot-ac-3.htm)
This excerpt brings up another interesting and increasingly important phenomenon that is also not currently modeled in ACoW: Losses from friendly fire - ground-to-air, air-to-ground, ground-to-ground, and air-to-air. For instance, I've read anecdotal accounts that dozens of Arab (Egyptian and Syrian) aircraft were downed by their own SAMs during the 1973 Yom Kippur war.