Star Wars 888 wrote:
Ancient armies were able to travel more than 400 kilometers (albeit with difficulty) without the use of railroads.
You realize it's really hard no to laugh at you, right? Travelling somewhere is one thing ; I could hike 400 kilometres in a week or so. It's when you want to be fighting a half million man sci-fi army at the end that things start to get hard.
Now, your OP said the Imperials start "in the middle of South America".
We can determine the middle in several ways:
By running two lines between extreme points of the continent, like so:
Or (more likely within the spirit of your OP), we chose a point that lies the furthest away from any shore, or the "geographical centre": that's a town called Chapada dos Guimaraes, located
here.
The coordinates are -15° 26' 48.71", -55° 44' 33.66", if anybody wants to find it by themselves.
Let's take a look at the terrain: the Imperials start right in the middle of the province of Mato Grosso. They only have 400 kilometres to go towards the border with Bolivia ; There's only four large paved roads leading into the province, and no railway lines. The nearest large port town (for a certain value of large...) is Santos, Brazil, nearly
1700 kilometres away by road.
So...the Imperials are instantly in control of a province by virtue of *poof* appearing there, control all the roads leading into it, and the nearest port with significant loading/offloading facilities is 1700 kilometres away. Nearest railways terminus? Corumba, 674 kilometre by road. And it's a single line, easily cut, with limited capacity.
A WWII leg infantry division consumed about 100 tonnes of various supplies on the march, 200 tonnes when engaged in combat. So...it would need 20 trucks of various kinds (actually more, since cargo doesn't perfectly fit every available bit of space) to reach it daily, 40 when it comes in contact with Stormies.
Over 500 kilometres (to ease calcs), with an average marching speed of 30kmph, it's a 16 hour drive one way. Igoring loading and unloading time (big concession!), you'd need to run about 60 trucks daily just to march the leg division from the railway terminus in Corumba. The number goes up rapidly if stormies decide to cut MT-060, which they can do with trivial ease (the distance goes up 2x if you can't use that road)
On the other hand, stormies never have to go further than about 150 kilometres from their supply dump in order to maintain control of the roads going into the province. If we assume a Stormie division has the same requirements as one composed of Earthlings (not unreasonable: they need the same amount of food and water, their ammo and batteries are about the size and weight of ours, except they get more bang out of them), they'll be able to get away with using around
five trucks (since one convoy could do two trips in a single day) outside of combat.
Of course, one light Earth division is going to get brutally massacred by the stormies in defensive positions. Armored divisions have orders of magnitude higher supply requirements.
Star Wars 888 wrote:PeZook wrote:
Logistical costs of Iraq stemming from underdeveloped railway lines is part of the reason why that war is costing the US so much. Every bit of supplies, every litre of oil, spare tank engine or set of tracks will have to be trucked to the forward depots and then trucked again to the tank. These trucks need fuel, too: eventually, you have to run trucks to refuel the trucks which refuel the trucks that run the supplies. Costs skyrocket, vast snaking truck convoys clog up the roads, a single mechanical breakdown can hold up an entire army and one TIE fighter can annihilate your entire supply collumn in one strike.
I didn't claim that it wouldn't be costly.
There is a hard limit on the amount of force you can supply over a pipeline ; After that, throwing money and trucks at the problem only makes it worse. You'd be literally throwing men into the meat grinder a few divisions at a time.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Or maybe we DO have enough trucks.
It was just a possiblity, you will probably have enough organic transport to march a division or two. Sustaining them in combat is another thing entirely, of course.
Star Wars 888 wrote:They'd have AT-ATs to transport supplies. However, the invasion force would have a big of a logistical problem, if not more, than, say, the USA.
No, they wouldn't: Stormies would have a vastly shorter supply line with less stuff to move around compared to heavy units. And if AT-ATs are expected to move their supplies around, this means they have fuel to march tends of thousands of kilometres, which is
excellent if you limit your ambitions.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Stormtrooper armor is generally white though. That makes it rather easy to spot them. Not exactly the ideal camouflage color for a forest terrain.
Camouflage armor is readily available with minimal preparation ; Yoda received his orders to go to Kashyyk hours before his departure, and his entire force was outfitted with camouflaged armor.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Yet if they are to set up this little empire that you claim they could, they'd still have to expand.
Since their entire supply dump is already in theatre, and their entire force is light infantry, they could do it with significantly more ease than a heavy, armored force that would have to be shipped into the theatre.
Star Wars 888 wrote:
IDK about that. Although their operational ceiling is far greater than that of any space craft we currently have, if we use the 1200 kph (not mph), missiles may be able to catch up with them before they can ascend beyond the missile's range. Although that would bring in the question as to how durable the tie fighters are.
Which missiles? If they strike an invasion force from orbit, they'd need to be engaged by SM-3s, which are not deployed in large numbers and are designed to deal with ballistic targets. By the time other systems could engage, the ships would already be under attack with laser guns, and probably on fire. They'd strike the escorts simultaneously, while another group kills the transports. Before land-based or carrier-based aircraft could be vectored in for an intercept, the entire force would be on fire and out of action.
The problem is that modern ships are simply not laid out to handle attacks by orbital spacecraft ; Their defences and sensors are simply not oriented properly for that kind of threat.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Actually, there's a really big difference between the two analogies and it isn't proportional, basically, your Antarctica to South America invasion force logistics analogy was flawed.
You still don't get it...it was an analogy. Supposed to
illustrate a point. Of course it's not identical!
Star Wars 888 wrote:That would depend on what "large" would be.
More than one or two replicas.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Yet industrial capabilities seem to scale linearly or possibly even faster than the resources required of producing new products does.
First, it doesn't work that way with hi-tech products, second, design times are only getting longer.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Sherman tanks were mass produced a year after a prototype was developed.
Sherman tanks are not re-entry vehicles, you can't ignore the entire prototype development phase, and you need to run the cycle several times for
each ICBM type you want to rearm.
These very articles say it took the Navy a
decade to develop and deploy non-nuclear warheads for some of its Tridents. The Minuteman force is still entirely nuclear, so you'd need to run the cycle for them as well (the warheads are completely different).
How does it feel to shoot yourself in the foot like that?
Star Wars 888 wrote:The invasion force wouldn't always be mobile. They'd have to take breaks, and AT-ATs aren't exactly hard targets to spot (stormtroopers and AT-STs would likely hang around the AT-ATs because the AT-ATs would provide defense and would be carrying the supplies. Unescorted AT-ATs can also be vulnerable due to their relatively vulnerable underbellies and "necks").
Heh...you think a "mobile target" is one that is
always moving? Jesus christ...
Star Wars 888 wrote:PeZook wrote:Doesn't matter if they're slow ; They'd be impossible to track with enough accuracy to fire Tomahawks at them. The missiles would only come into play once the Imperials have a presence in a country they chose to take over.
Weren't we talking about a counter-invasion?
Yes, we were. It's not my fault you can't understand simple concepts. Let me spell it out for you again: the invasion force would only become vulnerable to cruise missiles if it settled down and conquered a territorry, and even then only fixed targets like structures, bridges, etc could be struck at all. Without GPS (wiped out by TIEs in the first 10 minutes of the war), you'd be unable to track combat units well enough.
Star Wars 888 wrote:What's that?
Other people already handled that question.
Star Wars 888 wrote:
What did I miss?
Everything. Like the fact I never claimed stormtroopers could survive direct hits by artillery shells.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Did typical stormtroopers have radio jamming equipment? In FOTJ: Allies the Mandos and GA troopers laying siege the Jedi Temple had to bring in specialized jamming equipment, implying that jamming equipment isn't standard fare for typical Star Wars infantry.
So...the Mandos and GA troops required to use EW equipment, so they called for some and got it.
This is supposed to be evidence SW armies don't conduct EW?
It's like saying a Soviet armored unit couldn't do electronic warfare because it had a specialized detachment to handle it, rather than equipping every tank for EW. Come on!
Star Wars 888 wrote:According to Wookieepedia the PLX-2M's tracking system works by tracking the gravity distortion fields that repulsorlifts make. We don't use repulsorlifts at the moment.
No, according to Wookiepedia, it has a
dual guidance system. Also, according to the same page, the missiles are universal, cutting the number of required launchers by half.
So...your half a million man army doesn't have one launcher per batallion?
Star Wars 888 wrote:Except that it was a relatively huge ewok force coming rather quickly, and yet none of the stormtroopers seemed to even be suspicious or notice it.
And, in that case, wouldn't stormtroopers with their sensors mistake snipers for wild animals?
Ewoks were primitive savages native to the forests of Endor. Humans are not native to the rainforest, and they have guns, so they'd be treated seriously.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Yet the Chinese army did not pose any real threat to the US mainland at that time.
Neither does this force. At the time.
Star Wars 888 wrote:
The US could destroy China utterly with neither China nor Russia being able to retaliate. At all.
???
What, is it too hard to understand? The US had crippling nuclear superiority over Russia at the time. They could've wiped China out.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Well, to be honest I didn't specify where in Brazil the invasion force starts off in, but are you saying that the Brazilian military has no national guard or some other emergency force?
As Serafina said, national guard or emergency volunteers would be just swept aside.
Star Wars 888 wrote:To world sovereignty.
Yes, that's what I meant.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Why would the invasion force do that if they want to avoid a war?
For fuck's sake, I was talking about deterrence! They have the
capability to do so, therefore making the world wary of pissing them off or otherwise menacing them.
Star Wars 888 wrote:The "New World Order" is viewed pretty negatively by most people.
Negatiely enough to accept hundreds of thousands of casualties?
Star Wars 888 wrote:Bowing down to the invasion force would pretty much be surrendering to an invasion force that the world could defeat if they tried hard enough.
The question is not "could we defeat it if we took enormous costs to do so", it's "does it pay to fight them?"
The US could've defeated the USSR if it tried "hard enough". The price was just too high to even try.
Star Wars 888 wrote:
Possibly, but the nation that the invasion force could set up might still be a threat.
And, again, how is it different from any other advanced nation? Several nations are a threat to the US ; The world just lives with the idea.
Star Wars 888 wrote:I'm not an expert in snipers, but although they may need to be transported, I doubt that they need vehicles to carry their ammo for them.
If I didn't know better, I'd think you are deliberately getting me to explain simple concepts at length.
Again: you need heavy weapons to kill stromtroopers. You need
large amounts of heavy weapons to do so in any appreciable numbers. Because of that, you need vehicles to move them and their ammo.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Fair enough, but they're light scouts from Star Wars. Star Wars is supposed to be (and is in most cases) very advanced.
Yeah, so?
Cavemen would be able to set up a trap to take out an HMMWV, it doesn't mean it's not an advanced vehicle.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Because surely the USA would broadcast their military movements to the press.
They obviously wouldn't announce it, but they couldn't hide it, either. Besides, all the Imperials would have to do is know the force is unloading somewhere in South America, and then do a single TIE flyby to know where.
Star Wars 888 wrote:"high speed" - 1200 kph isn't that fast compared to the max speeds of modern day missiles and jet fighters.
The right missiles need to be in the right place on the right platform in order to engage ; The fact TIEs can swoop in from orbit at will makes this impossible.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Since when are they going to be invading fishing ports?
We were talking about guarding ports that could unload heavy equipment and supplies ; My point is that there aren't many ports in South America that can do that, and they'r easy to identify.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Because stormtroopers are still limited by human range and accuracy, and would be outnumbered. Attrition would wear them down.
How is "being limited by human range and accuracy" going to stop them from hitting and crippling LCACs trying to deliver tanks to shore?
Star Wars 888 wrote:If the USA succeeds, they get access to a lot of Star Wars era tech and possibly Star Wars era engineers and scientists.
And in exchange, they cripple their economy and suffer hundreds of thousands of casualties. Hardly a good deal when you can just trade for the gear.
Star Wars 888 wrote:The Germans had lost air superiority by the later parts of WW2.
Aaand...again, you have no idea what I'm talking about. The Germans lost air superiority a
year and a half before the end of the war, and they still managed to put up a fight.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Because one stormtrooper gets killed? Since when did Vader care?
No, because deliberately killing somebody's soldier means war, and wrecking all that stuff is trivial for the Empire. If they wanted to send a message, that's what they'd do.
Star Wars 888 wrote:A threat to democracy, communism, and pretty much any other political system other than a totalitarian (although communism and totalitarianism often times overlap)
Yes, and? They're a threat. Lots of nations are a threat to each other. If the nation threatening you is powerful, the answer is usually to not fuck with it, rather than trying to destroy it at all costs.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Yet in this case they're dealing with a dictatorship that could actually be a threat to them.
So they will deal with them grudgindly, rather than with a smile. Grudgingly and very, very carefully.
Star Wars 888 wrote:They'd have multiple generations, and they would get a huge technological advantage over the rest of the world. Long term they would be a significant threat, hence why it wouldn't make much sense for the Earth to leave them alone.
Actually, it would make a lot of sense, because technology disseminates. The gap would be closing with each year the Imperials trained people and developed infastructure. Possibly, we could eventually go to war with them without being slaughtered en masse.
Star Wars 888 wrote:To be honest, I'll have to go back and check.
Please do.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Good point; what is the laundry list you came up with?
*sigh*
Marcos, the Shash, Pinochet.
Star Wars 888 wrote:That's debatable.
It's virtually a given, actually, since they'd be mingling all the time with locals.
Star Wars 888 wrote:And local troops won't be as formidable of stormtroopers would.
Yeah, so? They'd be good enough, and they're repleceable.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Guerrilla tactics can also whittle down the target's resources, and in this case they are not renewable in the short term.
Unless of course your enemy doesn't play by your rules and uses expendable resources to fight the guerillas.
Star Wars 888 wrote:In this section of the post we were talking about paper maps.
We were talking about
locating ports. Paper maps were just one proposed mean to do that.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Maybe a humvee would get badly damaged by that, but what about an APC or bradley (I don't think that it's a good idea to test that in practice, so unless if somebody has the mathematical calculations for the energy behind those swinging logs it's hard to tell).
What about an APC or Bradley? Since AT-STs are clearly not an armored infantry transport, it's completely irrelevant.
Destructionator wrote:Do you know what escape velocity is?
TIP: the space shuttle can not achieve Earth escape velocity.
Which is, um, why Batman's estimate a ridiculously conservative number? I don't get what you're trying to do here ; Since the TIEs not only achieved orbit when pursuing the Falcon, but effortlessly broke it with sheer engine power alone, it means they have tremendous delta-v. If Bespin is similar to Jupiter, that's at least 59.5 km/s achieved in minutes. And the pilots were obviously not worried about running out of fuel even then.
Star Wars 888 wrote:IDK if it was you with whom I was discussing those assassin dudes killing a bunch of stormtroopers with, but whoever I was discussing that with claimed that the assassins (who used pre industrial age technology) avoided the sensors because they were "really good at sneaking" or something.
You know, you should stop harping about that situation: Noghri warriors managed to kill stormies because, you know, Vader marched straight into their village and thus they could, well...do the obvious thing and hide amongst civilians?
You cold very well ask how a rag-tag bunch of Polish partisans could kill Kutschera, since the SS was so well armed and dangerous...this must mean Nazi soldiers sucked, right? Or perhaps the partisans simply decided the time and place of the engagement because the Germans couldn't just shoot every civilian in a five block radius?