Vehrec wrote:Is there any active anti-torpedo system in the entire world? Some sort of Anti-sub rocket or depth charge launched out towards an incoming torpedo? Probably, you could use another torpedo for this, but that gets expensive and impractical fairly fast I would imagine.
The basic problem with a torpedo to torpedo defense system is the screw on the enemy torpedo is pretty damn quiet compared to all the other noise in the ocean, not the least of which is the noise of the ship under attack and the self noise of the anti torpedo (endless torpedo seeker problem). The scale of the challenge has been compared to trying to hear someone talking normally 25 feet away in the middle of a rock concert. The Russians do have a operational anti torpedo system intended specifically to counter wake homing torpedoes, which can attack them by releasing floating mines and firing barrages of time fused depth charges from RBU launchers, but against wake homers the fire control problem is simplified by the torpedo always approaching up your own wake! A regular active or passive or wire guided torpedo can come from any direction including swimming vertically up below the ship, so its vastly harder to cope with.
cosmicalstorm wrote:
One question about their subs in relation to the US forces-- Can Iran really hide their submarines?
I suspect that at this point the entire strait area is one big US owned acoustic array?
I doubt it is wired for sound by the US, it might be by one of the local powers. The US does have deployable seabed arrays that might quickly go into place, but its still very hard to detect an SSK on battery power by passive means. Once they snorkel they are going to be dead; which is why really the midget submarines are a bigger deal then the Kilos as they are simply more numerous and would be less distinctive snorting. It'd also be much easier to physically conceal them in bases and within other shipping traffic. Iran's Kilo fleet isn't that active, likely because they are just to big and demanding for Iranian crews. Its hard to sustain a submarine program for anybody when you have just a few boats. I suspect the worst damage Irans Kilos would do is quickly and covertly laying mines. Once they fire torpedoes... well we just found the general location of the Iranian sub now didn't we! Then the sub gets hunted to death or battery exhaustion which is also death. The gulf is small enough that minelaying missions could be conducted more or less entirely on battery power.
I've also heard rumors about exotic tech for submarine detection, such as shining blue and green lasers and using massive computing that can detect a submarine's underwater wake. And when they are detected, killing them ought to be routine. I would bet that the entire Iranian submarine fleet is being actively tracked by the navy as I type this and that they will all be gone within hours if not minutes of the initiation of any hostilities. I wonder if they would have time to start an attack after hostilities commenced?
The laser method seems to be paper only, at least in terms of providing wide area coverage. You can detect submarines from satellites within limited circumstances via the wake when the submarine runs shallow, both from the surge in surface height it creates and the mixing of colder deep water with the warmer surface water being visible on IR photos and FLIR (this also works for ASW aircraft). Also bubbles are created even by a deep running submarine which can be detected by various means, Soviet nuclear submarines had a wake detector sensor for this for a long time, but it literally only works if you actually sail through the enemy wake (rather like placing a wake homing torpedo seeker on the sub). Wake sensors can work multiple ways some of which are laser based.
The massive amount of civilian traffic in the gulf is likely to make any such methods less then highly. Its literally a big mass of ships from the very smallest to the very largest, and any submarines within it are likely to move only very very slowly minimizing the signature on any kind of sensor. Also the gulf has so much trash and debris in it, while also being shallow that MAD won't work well, though the US largely abandon MAD anyway because the search area is so small and false alarm rate so massively high (iron ore on ocean floor = bad). All that debris ect.. also helps degrade sonar performance.
"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