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dan/california

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Everything posted by dan/california

  1. Except that we are literally at the point where a couple of people skipping their flu shots, eating some bad crab cakes, or losing their ability to tolerate the endless stupidity could flip the chamber to the Democrats. A two vote majority isn't really.
  2. Biden has somewhere between 2 and five billion in remaining presidential drawdown authority. Think of it as the final reserve of approved aid. Clearly he felt he had to use some of it
  3. This is also the perfect form factor for the final layer of a defensive onion. a vehicle could mount MANY launch tubes for this, and a fair few of them would not overburden a squad. So if they can work out a seeker head that tracks other drones it would be by far the best last ditch CUAS option I have seen. More broadly it is the very leading edge of what is coming. We haven't seen anything yet.
  4. Not a military vehicle, but I suspect about 85% of the tech would be same for a military UGV.
  5. it has been an obvious target for forever.They must have decided they could finally put a big enough strike together to saturate the defenses
  6. This surely violates the laws of war doesn't it. I mean you are assaulting their digestive system, their mental health, and their will to live at the same time.
  7. They will be absolutely critical for recon drones going forward though. The stuff that is basically a smart RPG round needs to leave its launcher/mothership with a fully autonomous AI . It will still be very useful if the mothership can send an immediate BDA and any other useful information it acquired in real time. Or maybe it is the relay station for the mothership that gets the full communications package, or, or, but there is a point in the drone TO&E where being able to phone home will always be important.
  8. Stated range on the current models is enough to threaten ships from one side of the Mediterranean or the North Sea to the other. When some clean sheet of paper engineering is applied I can easily see that doubling. Taiwan needs thousands of these things in distributed basing arrangements. The Baltic is already a NATO lake, but USVs are vastly cheaper way to maintain that status.
  9. Yes probably, but everyone of those things represents time, attention, and resources that would have to been diverted from the suicide charges at Avdiivka, and the Czar was demanding Avdiivka NOW. So maybe now the Black Sea Fleet will get some competent help, but the drones are going to keep getting better, too.
  10. I mean it is a Hollywood scene, but it does point out rather nicely that a true semi autonomous drone swarm is the ultimate expression of The_Capt's expression that massed precision beats everything. This is also true on the naval side, the Ukrainians are steadily sinking the Russian Black Sea Fleet with attacks of at most ten of these USVs. The USVs in question are McGyvered together from civilian off the shelf tech, and 30 year old cold war leftovers. Imagine a cargo ship dispensing a couple of hundred or more of them just over the horizon as your naval task force is trying to transit a choke point like the Red Sea of the Straights of Malacca. Imagine they are better ones that can run almost or comepletely underwater.
  11. Everything discussed would be some level of improvement in sea drone capability, but it is a combination of drones launching torpedoes, and drone becoming torpedoes that will cause the real nightmares. I propose two types of sea drone, The first carries torpedos that home on the ships propellers and at least make it slow down, if not stop. The second type of drone, carrying much larger explosive charges then submerges and make the final few kilometers under water and sets off several hundred kg under the keel. With the ship already slowed they don't have to be crazy fast.
  12. I don't think I have heard of this system before.
  13. Not an ally, but perhaps deciding that whatever the Chinese are offering is worth tilting a bit. If Singapore doesn't come up in the Ukraine related news for the next six months, perhaps it is random coincidence. If there are two more things out of there that advantage Putin in the next month...
  14. Article is from RT, so credibility is not presumed to be great. If Singapore actually said that, it is possible that China is using assets and connections in Singapore to throw Putin a bone. The Taurus conversation intercept originated from Singapore as well. It feels like the beginning of a trend.
  15. I read it, and you may be correct that I over slanted my review a little, but publishing this now is just a blatant attempt to lean on Ukraine harder. The headline is literally BE AFRAID. It also claimed to have some sort of new information, and we discussed every single thing they even mentioned eons ago. NYT has been doing this for weeks, looking for the worst possible spin in four articles out of five about Ukraine. My opinion, worth what you paid.
  16. The NYT is just shamelessly spouting Putin's talking points. "He waved his magical nuclear stick, we must surrender" Edit: Of course if it works Putin will wave it at Poland next week, and Japan will be a declared nuclear power by May. The South Koreans may or may not beat them to it. Twenty other countries will be at least starting crash programs.
  17. Results were almost perfect, for the Ukrainians.
  18. This is an outstanding example of getting the little stuff right.
  19. edited to add headline verbiage from article. Unfortunately this number wasn't enough. Ukraine needs the munitions to double or triple it, if we don't want to be having this discussion two years from now.
  20. These are probably to few and to expensive to be used for front line air defense, but if they could park fifty kilometers back and start swatting Russian Orlan and Zala class UAVs they would make a difference, maybe a big difference. Especially say just to the safe side of the Dnipro. in support of the amphibious operation we have been discussing at length. In regards to the the overall state of the war, we started with a positive loop in terms of attention, foreign assistance, and morale in both Ukraine and Western capitals, that lasted about eighteen months. Now that feedback loop has mostly gone negative. So we have Western politicians pointing to declining Ukrainian morale and recruitment as a reason to send less aid, and that becomes one of the major factors driving Ukrainian morale and recruitment lower. The obvious way to break this doom loop is to pass the U.S. aid package and carefully coordinate it with a revised recruiting campaign by the Ukrainians. I suspect that there is no more effective way to recruit more Ukrainian recruits than announcing more Bradley equipped brigades are being stood up. If a couple of more A-50s were to have unpleasant experiences with long range drones, and the F-16s made their first public sorties at the same time maybe we can get this whole thing headed back in a positive direction.
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