FBHthelizardmage wrote:A question from someone just starting (now just into Crusade.) There's a mention of Chipan having balistic missile subs and long range bombers and that US defence are capable of defending against those subs and bomber. I was wondering how? Is this hunting them down before they launch defending, or MAD defending, or some form of Anti missile system?
The US Order of battle is given
HERE
The appropriate part (dealing with the US defense system) is
North American Air Defense Command (NORAD)
Regular.
8 Fighter Interceptor Groups with F-106A, 54 aircraft per group
2 Fighter Inteceptor Groups with F-112B (forming)
9 Fighter Ground Attack Groups with F-105D, 54 aircraft per group
6 Fighter Ground Attack Groups with F-110A, 54 aircraft per group
Air National Guard
20 Fighter Interceptor Groups with F-106A, 54 aircraft per group
10 Fighter Interceptor Groups with F-101B, 54 aircraft per group
50 Fighter Interceptor Squadrons with F-104C/D, 12 aircraft per squadron
335 Nike missile batteries each with 12 launchers for Hercules anti-aircraft and Zeus anti-missile missiles.
Total, 1,512 F-106A, 600 F-104C/D, 540 F-101B, 486 F-105D, 324 F-110A.
Basically the system is organized as three rings of fighters. The outer ring consists of very fast long range fighters intended to intercept inbound formations as far as possible from their targets, if possible, long before they launch their air-to-surface stand-off missiles. They break up formations, depriving them of mutual support and create maximum possible attrition. Closer in are the medium-range heavy fighters. These stress endurance and multiple target capability. They are tasked with actually bringing down the bulk of the inbound raids, by now consisting of penetrating bombers armed with gravity bombs and air-launched stand-off missiles. Finally, there are short-range point defense fighters intended to protect specific targets against aircraft and missiles leaking though the first two rings. Finally, NORAD also has a relatively small force of fighter-bombers that are tasked with general-purpose duties. These include conventional air-to-ground strikes and swing fighter roles.
The fighter defenses are supplemented by missile defense batteries. These ring the major cities and are tasked with anti-aircraft and anti-missile duties. In the former role, they have Hercules missiles, in the second they have Zeus missiles. Both have a nuclear warhead and are effective. The Zeus screen is efficient enough to make a ballistic missile attack unlikely to succeed.
Like most of the TBOverse "stuff", very little of this is imaginary. The fighter defense system is simply a modernized version of the system that existed in the 1950s. The difference between @ (our universe is denoted @) and the TBOverse is that there is no large US tactical air force. The USAF has a strategic attack force (SAC) and a strategic defense force (NORAD) but effectively no tactical air force. This is an inevitable outcome of the TBoverse USA being very much an isolationist power. The US Army is very weak for exactly the same reason. Both are deliberate policy; weak tactical forces means no temptation to get involved in tactical situations.
The missile defenses are also very real. They are an implementation of the plans that existed for an organization called ARADCOM (Army Air Defense Command) in the 1950s. In @ the strategic defense plans were effectively cancelled by McNamara in order to free up manpower and funding for the creation of a relatively large army (which was then used in Vietnam). In TBO, the missile defense plans go through and, as a result, the USA has a relatively effective defense against both air and missile attack. By the way, the suggestion that its difficult to hit ballistic missiles or that penetrating an ABM defense is easy are ridiculous. We solved the problems involved forty years ago; there is no problem involved in shooting down inbound ballistic missiles (they are much easier targets than manned aircraft) and penetrating an ABM defense is very hard (most of the tricks used by manned aircraft to get through air defense systems don't work when used by missiles facing an ABM system. Believe me on that one; I've been working on the design and systems integration of both anti-aircraft and anti-missile defense systems for over twenty years.
I worked out the costing of the TBOverse US military machine in great detail using the same methodology used to calculate the @ US defense budget (something else I'm professionally involved in) and the incredible thing is that the TBOverse force structure actually costs less than the one adopted historically - by a quite-substantial margin. The reason is that the things that really cost money in the 1960s (the development of large conventional US forces, the switch from bombers to missiles that involved the construction of an elaborate command control network etc) just didn't happen in the TBOverse.
The TBOverse force structure is what the US would have had in the 1960s if certain decisions had been made and others not taken. It offers different capabilities and has different limitations (some of which feature in Crusade) but it is as practical and "realistic" as the @ defense structure of the 1960s.
In the case of ballistic missile submarines, they would indeed be hunted before launch; that's the primary role of the US Navy's SSN force (in fact its virtually its only role - dealing with the enemy surface fleet is the role of the carriers). MAD (mutually assured destruction) doesn't exist in the TBOverse. The US does assure its enemies that they will be destroyed if they try anything stupid but there's nothing mutual about it. SAC makes sure the enemy is destroyed, NORAD attempts to make sure the US homeland is not affected by enemy action.
By the way, to clear up a misapprehension, MAD is not now and never has been US defense policy. US strategic policy was, is, and is likely to remain, the retention of a secure and effective nuclear deterrent force. MAD was actually a term invented to describe the effects of certain specific policies and it was not intended as being a compliment. MAD is an obscenity. One of the reasons for writing TBO was to highlight what "assured destruction" actually meant in nuclear terms.