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this post was submitted on 14 Feb 2024
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What's the point of a navy when interceptors are expensive and limited while drones are cheap and limitless? While this use of resources is arguably productive in a land war, Ukraine has once again demonstrated the folly of deploying a navy against a land-based opponent.
If Ukraine can do this to Russia in Russian waters, what could China do to a US carrier group off it's coast, thousands of kilometers from the US?
The Russian navy is a bunch of rusting hulks crewed by glorified conscripts. People have been trying these tactics in the mideast against the US for decades, and they haven't worked since the Cole.
As for interceptors, they are meant for ballistic or cruise missiles, which are also expensive. Ask the Houthis how effective they are. CIWS or RAM/ESSM should be able to handle drones easily, it's just that commanders don't want to take the risk.
But yes, the Pentagon is asking a lot of the same questions you are. Their answer is to put a lot of money into lasers
Inherently, naval targets are vulnerable to saturation attacks from a ground-based opponent, particularly when isolated (like the Caesar).
Because as we all know, ground based batteries are immune to saturation attacks because of their tiny magazines and inability to move, and battlegroups don't exist.