russia is literally putting cope cages on their navy ships, are we living in a satire?
russia is literally putting cope cages on their navy ships, are we living in a satire?
If you can’t physically keep a small (flying OR submersed) drone from hitting your naval ship you shouldn’t be in the business of having a navy lol.
We aren’t talking about a tank that may move through thick brush and complex terrain that could mask threats anywhere, we are talking about a large boat in the water which by definition is a large expanse.
I mean yes whatever works works, but it is undeniably pathetic and a direct admission that the russian navy barely exists as a serious concept the way we typically think about navies.
I don’t think you understand the scale or complexity of drone swarms. They aren’t stopping a flying or submerged drone, they are often fighting dozens of them at once. Even the US is having issues with drones against Iran. Nearly every navy in the world is still learning to combat drones.
Would you have made similar statements a few decades ago about how any navy that gets hit by torpedoes shouldn’t have any business being a navy?
Another example from WW2 where what became the British Commandos purposefully destroyed the only repair base large enough for the German Tirpitz Battleship to be repaired if she was damaged in battle (which is always going to happen eventually) through a small unit incursion/sabotage raid that was unfortunately mostly a one way ticket for many British.
Germany believed they had an Atlantic Surface Navy in WW2 and what Britain did here was point out Germany had not properly set the conditions to build a Navy.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Nazaire_Raid
St Nazaire was attacked because the loss of its dry dock would force Germany’s largest battleship, Tirpitz, to return to home waters if she were damaged. This would expose her to attack by British forces including the Home Fleet in the English Channel or the North Sea.
The obsolete destroyer HMS Campbeltown, accompanied by 18 smaller craft, crossed the English Channel to the Atlantic coast of France and rammed into the Normandie dry dock south gate. The ship had been packed with delayed-action explosives, well hidden within a steel and concrete case, that detonated later that day, putting the dock out of service until 1948.[4]
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The battleship Tirpitz never entered the Atlantic. She remained in Norwegian fjords to threaten Allied shipping until she was destroyed by the RAF in Operation Catechism on 12 November 1944.[82]
The image of the Tirpitz cowering amid towering Fjord walls and a bristle of anti-aircraft gun nests and troop emplacements until her final moment of annihilation is the exact same one as the image posted at the top of this article of russia’s warship with a Cope Cage around the wheelhouse, just reflected backwards in time into a different context of fascism.
False, Childish Power…
I just want to say thank you for the thorough and deeply sourced commentary.
Your grasp on the military history involved, the nuanced literal meaning of the requirements to possess the requisite strategic position to fit a literal definition of a navy, and your balanced point of view on the whole swarms topic (I too agree that a human piloted swarm that is effectively controlled is terrifying, and thankfully not yet quite on display for all that the swarm behavior itself is a well established norm in warfare), and really the whole thing was a joy to read and clear to grasp once the time was devoted to digest your comments throughout the thread.
Thank you for helping make the fediverse a worthwhile place to enjoy even just lurking.