Vympel wrote:
What? 4 million dollars for one missile? Have you got a link or something for that? That sounds completely insane.
No, insane is the ability of THAAD to cost 40 million apiece for the preproduction rounds, though this is essentially paying for them to build the factory. These missile prices do include certain pieces of test and support equipment, that’s not really a large fraction of the price tag. It’s the lack of really mass production that does it. R&D funding is counted separate too.
http://www.defenselink.mil/comptroller/ ... ystems.pdf
Vympel wrote:The appropriate thing to do is to make sure the S-300/ S-400's best missiles aren't wasted on inappropriate targets - they can either use their 9M96 'small' missiles to do the job of defending themselves at range, or use a Pantsir-S1 (or a similar system) to perform close range defence.
Small is relative, those missiles are still getting close to 1,000lb apiece as I recall. Given the active radar guidance they are not likely to be overwhelmingly cheaper then the big missiles. In fact it is entirely likely that one of the older TVM guided big missiles is cheaper then new production small missile. However that only helps out Russia, which is the only nation on earth with a large stockpile of older S-300 missiles.
Pantsir-S1 is nice for close defence, but the costs of adding systems like that to every SAM firing battalion spiral very quickly especially when the very relevant costs of then needed logistics and maintenance units are considered. Not to mention that everyone else will be screaming to deploy the things to defend other key targets like command bunkers and airfield dispersal areas.
Simon_Jester wrote:What about AA guns?
If the AA guns have modern radar fire control like Pantsir-S1, they’ll be effective but costs start getting very high very quick while effective range is still very short. Automatic AA guns also have limited ceilings, usually less then 5,000 feet and many pieces of cheap enemy UAV spam may fly higher then this. This is especially true of decoy drones simulating a conventional air raid.
AA guns with no modern fire control, or only simple night vision devices are much cheaper (basically free, anyone likely to deploy AA guns alone probably already has the guns themselves) but the crews are large (read expensive) and you’re stuck as a primarily daylight only system. Finding suitable firing positions in modern friendly urbanized areas can also be difficult, particularly if one wishes to retain mobility and thus cannot simply have a crane lift the guns onto the roofs of apartment blocks.
More generally, it occurs to me that most of the countries trying to use UAVs against enemy air defense networks are richer than their enemies. That should probably affect our calculations.
Yes this is very true, the US has no need to spend less money destroying an air defence system then the air defence system cost, and even a country like Germany spends far more money then say Iran does. Also in the end, the air defence system is not a objective in and of itself. Its destruction is only a means of opening the way for attacks on strategic infrastructure and military forces. It might cost 30 billion dollars to destroy 5 billion dollars worth of SAM hardware… but you can make that back up mighty quick by then blowing up bridges and oil refineries with cheap JDAMs or cluster bombing mechanized infantry battalions.
The goal of the air defence system is to ensure that by the time it dies the enemy has no assets left with which to conduct those strategic attacks. This is very hard to do if the attacker sends out only very low value assets like UAVs, and very hard to kill assets like F-22s for the SEAD role.
"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