Howedar wrote:Sea Skimmer wrote:countdooku wrote:
The Nuclear BGM-109 Tomahawks aren't capable of on the fly targeting. The ship can only enter pre-plotted targets for them due to the need to plot waypoints and the like. This takes months do to, and the ship does not have the ability to do it for a number of reasons.
They can't be used against the AT-AT's. At the range in question, it would be a bad idea anyway. 200 kilotons at 8 miles would fry the Iowa and destroy all fire control gear. Unless ever AT-AT was taken out, it would be quite dead, though it is anyway.
What the fuck are you smoking? Taking months to target a Tomahawk? 200kt destroying a ship at a range of 8 miles?
No, the real question is whats in your pipe.
If you had bothered to actually read my post, you notice that I specified that the electronics and fire control of the Iowa would be destroyed, not the ship its self.
As for Tomahawks, you clearly have no idea what you're talking about. The BGM-109A, the only version with a nuclear warhead, used TERCOM guidance.
The maps used by TERCOM require extensive satellite photography and radar mapping. For the gulf war, it took six months to plot three routes, one each from the Persian Gulf, Mediterranean and Red seas, to the Baghdad area.
Six months and equipment and resources a battleship will not and never has had onboard. And the missiles wouldn't accept the data anyway.
The A model cannot be told to simply fly to a given point and dive into the target. A recent upgrade to the conventional Tomahawks added a GPS receiver, which means TERCOM maps are no longer needed. That’s why in the mid 1990s Clinton could fling that at everyone under the sun, because of an upgrade Nuclear Tomahawks and those used in the Gulf never had.
Even with that, target location and way points still have to come from at least the region command center, as apposed to Washington.
If the half a brain you have left after the crack had worked in the first place, you could have looked all that up at a dozen web sites or in a hundred different books..
"This cult of special forces is as sensible as to form a Royal Corps of Tree Climbers and say that no soldier who does not wear its green hat with a bunch of oak leaves stuck in it should be expected to climb a tree"
— Field Marshal William Slim 1956