No, it isn't, but it remains a method to differentiate them. I have no clue how it works, but it may well be that the decoys have a different composition than the RVs, and thus how they interact with the atmosphere causes a different IR signature.Patrick Degan wrote:That's not exactly an insurmountable technical problem.
The person I referenced earlier, Stuart Slade, has been asked more speicifcally about the various ways to filter out decoys. Unfortunately for us, the general public apparently isn't privy to that kind of information.
But if your decoy must be the same size, mass and shape of a normal RV to have a good chance of success, why not just put a real one in? Thus, any smaller decoy would be unworkable; any decoy that could work would be a waste of space.Then that seems rather to confirm my point.
Actually, much of the battle-management seems to overlap, at least how the US is currently doing things. And as for MIRVs, well, that is why I usually refer to RVs rather than actual missiles being fired.For a start, redundancy requires a seperate system to handle ABM battle-management, so you've already got an added layer of expense to begin with. And the problem isn't the actual number of rockets as much as the number of MIRVs they can carry.
They're going to be an issue, yes, but as I noted, the US system is designed to take enormous EMP loads and should be able to deal with it.And that's one of the reasons that concept was abandoned in the first place. And EMP effects are still an issue:
The EMP effects on the satellites in space appeared to be a greater worry than on the ground, hence why we are not deploying a system like Safeguard or Sentinal at the moment. Its effects on the C4I systems don't appear to have been considered that risky.
Oh, of course it's a nitpick, but arguably yours was originally as wellOn that point, I stand corrected. But all they did was subdivide the definition of a countervalue strike, so this really is a bit of a nitpick.