Star Wars 888 wrote:
Since when would infantry and armored divisions have to use railroads? Heck, even supplies could be prepared and readied at, say, town and such.
They have to use railroads because you can only supply an armored unit via truck for about 400 kilometres. In a terrain that's conductive to this sort of operations: in dense jungle, mountains, etc. the distance grows shorter because your trucks become completely road bound.
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.
Not to mention...that you may just plain
not have enough trucks. Germans had this problem a lot during Barbarossa.
Star Wars 888 wrote:"rough terrain" - the imperials will be on the same rough terrain, have MORE logistical problems and no way to refuel their vehicles and starships. The international force would be marching through friendly territory with a sustainable supply line and with the ability to resupply their vehicles and airplanes.
The Imperial force is composed mostly of light infantry, which is not road bound as it doesn't require massive amounts of supplies: Soldiers can carry a week's worth of food and ammo with them more if they load up extra on their transports ; That's assuming they simply *poof* appear there and have no additional means of moving their supplies with them, which makes your OP really badly phrased (and, incidentally, vastly increases the amount of fuel available, since the limited number of transports have to move the supplies a vast distance to supply an army fighting in the Yucatan...)
Now, you see, when you combine the basic facts about the terrain: the dense, rough jungle and mountain areas, the extremely poor roads and lack of railways, you see that light infantry is the
perfect fighting force. It's not road bound, it has light supply requirements (food and ammo and batteries) and Imperial light infantry can annihilate XXth century light infantry with trivial ease.
Furthermore, they're
already there. They can undertake combat operations as soon as they do basic recon, if they want to: the international coalition, on the other hand, will have to make the decision, stockpile supplies, ship their soldiers in theater and then march across a thousand kilometres of poor roads in order to engage the Imperials.
Do you get it
now, jackass, or will I have to repeat it again?
Star Wars 888 wrote:That depends largely on the speed and durability of the tie fighters, which still hasn't been quantified.
It has, you just refuse to acknowledge it: even your 1200 mph figure is
mach 1.5, which combined with the TIEs' operational ceiling is more than enough to avoid any threat we can throw at them. Their approach vector is going to be very steep, they can descend from orbit, slow down, strafe their target and zoom back to unassailable altitude before any of our weapon systems can engage.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Actually, in that case they'd still have the logistical advantage. No military force of a national size is guarding Antarctica and supplies there would be slim. A blockade of ships could starve out a force a surrender to whatever defenders are there.
Yes, my analogy isn't perfectly identical to the situation it is illustrating! Do you want a medal for discovering that?
Star Wars 888 wrote:Um, no. Wooden boats are not beyond our capability to build (or we could build metal versions), nor are the cannons they used.
See above. You are an idiot if you think I meant "we never could build a wooden ship again", rather than "we currently have no infrastructure to build and maintain large wooden fleets"
Star Wars 888 wrote:Yes, but that would not take years in a war.
Why? Modern weapon are extremely time consuming to design,
Star Wars 888 wrote:Making a NEW fighter takes years. We've already made non nuclear ICBMS.
And real life is not an RTS game: if you only made a short run of a certain technology, you can't just click on the shiny button again to make more. Materials have changed, the missile types in use have changed, factory procedures and design rules have changed. You need to make new designs, produce prototypes, test them on actual missiles, design the tooling,
make the tooling, install it in factories, then make the warheads at a certain rate and deploy them on ICBMs.
For an analogy, I know how to shovel dirt. I have shovelled dirt before. Unloading an container of dirt took me the entire day last time, and it will take me an entire day in six months when I will have to do it again.
EDIT: Also, please show me an operational ICBM type equipped with a non-nuclear warhead.
Star Wars 888 wrote:What about long range missiles from South American countries and US military bases in South America? What about cruise missiles from the sea?
I was talking about those. Only the US has a sizeable arsenal of long-ranged cruise missiles, and they are only good for use against entirely static targets you can pinpoint very precisely, because the missiles strike at given coordinates, not a given target. They can't track tanks: they are told where the tank repair depot is and go there and explode. If the depot was moved in the meantime, tough luck, they will hit empty space.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Actually the invasion force would often times be pretty stationary, or at least slow. AT-STs aren't very good at moving over forest like terrain. Stormtroopers would have to walk on foot (100 AT-ATs cannot carry 500,000 stormtroopers).
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.
Also, you can shoot down cruise missiles with simple weapon systems, like the Shylka.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Stormtrooper armor would not deflect a direct hit from an artillery shell. Their defense against shrapnel may be good,; well, sort of. In the EU their armor is pretty darn uber, but in the movies there's a part in ROTJ where the armor cracks when a stormtrooper falls.
Did you even read what I wrote?
Star Wars 888 wrote:Um, that's pretty much speculation.
Why? Every army in the world can fuck with enemy communications ; Russians could knock out individual encryption units out of alignment so that they could track and target unit command posts. To think an Imperial army will have no EW capability when EW is a standard part of warfare in Star Wars is moronic ; To think they won't be able to jam radios is even more moronic.
(Hint: If SW tech was unable to jam radio and radar, everyone would start using radio and radar again really quickly)
Star Wars 888 wrote:Oh that one. Well, it isn't specified that it can take out shielded starfighters, but it probably can if it's used as an anti air device in Star Wars. However, particle shields on starfighters do not appear to be nearly as durable as their ray shielding. This seems to be common on their star destroyers as well.
Yeah, that would probably do quite a bit of damage to our aircraft, but how many stormtroopers out of 500,000 would actually carry one of those?
Let's do a little math, okay?
A single stormtrooper can easily carry the launcher and a spare magazine for it ; That's twelve missiles total. Let's assume half this loadout will be anti-air ordnance of some sort, and that their PK against modern planes (with their primitive EW suites...) is a measly 50%.
That means a single stormtrooper equipped with a PLX can engage and destroy three airplanes. Since the launcher can engage starfighters, the usual limitations of MANPADs do not apply: the PLX could engage low-flying attack aircraft as well as heavy bombers.
A Nimitz air wing consists of 90 airplanes total, fixed-wing and helicopters. Let's assume stormies would also waste missiles on helicopters (though with blasters, they could easily bring them down with small arms fire). So wiping out a Nimitz air wing would take a conservative estimate of 30 launchers. Less if we assume (not unreasonably...) stormie squads can carry more reloads amongst the squad.
Wiping out the air wings of the entire US carrier fleet would consequently take 360 launchers, or one launcher per brigade, while destroying every single aircraft in the US air force would take about 1860 launchers, or one launcher per company (again, less if we assume more than one reload per launcher). While leaving plenty of missile unfired to bust bunkers and other fortifications.
So...how is that air supremacy looking now? Or are you now going to say an Imperial army half a million men strong doesn't carry one guided missile launcher per company?
Take note that the actual amount of aircraft attacking the invasion force won't be anywhere near the full force of the USAF (I counted all the transport and trainers, too, just to make the numbers even more conservative), since they can't be based in theatre due to unsuitable airbases.
Star Wars 888 wrote:That would depend on a lot of things, such as how big the building was.
I honestly don't remember, Solo was expecting to blow apart an imperial prefab outpost with it.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Really? Oh, I don't remember them saying that. Still sort of begs the question as to why the stormtroopers didn't, like, check those compartments.
Yeah, I wonder why they didn't check the
hidden smuggling compartments they couldn't detect.
Star Wars 888 wrote:How about to actually detect those ewoks? They clearly failed to do so.
Really, they failed to detect small animals moving through a dense forest full of small animals, or they did but did not interpret their movement as an ambush after operating a base inside that forest for months and never being ambushed by them?
Holy shit, their sensors must really suck.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Actually, there were some that advocated that, but that's beside the point. In the long term this invasion force would be a far greater threat than Cold War China (which still wasn't a threat to the world or the United States) or the USSR if they manage to set up a nation.
You keep going in circles. The US believed Communism was a dire threat to the world. A horde of Chinese communists engaged US armed forces directly and threatened to overrun a small South Asian country.
The US could destroy China utterly with neither China nor Russia being able to retaliate. At all.
They didn't, therefore they are not guaranteed to resort to mass nuking to save a South American country from being overrun.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Is the Brazilian government simply going to sit there and let them pass through?
If they decide to move over the border to Bolivia, what can the Brazillian government do? Magically block the border? Build a fence? Ask them nicely not to? We already covered the difficulty of getting troops there.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Wiping out the entire satellite network is hardly anywhere near the threat level of wiping out the human race.
First of all, Imperials are humans. At worst, they are a threat to national sovereignty, not humanity. Second, wiping out the satellite network will destroy most of our advanced communications, collapse the economy and remove much of our military power which is dependent on GPS.
In exchange for that, we can go and liberate some South American countries. Yay! I'm sure Joe Voter will be sooo satisfied!
Star Wars 888 wrote:If they set up a nation and get it going, they'll have the knowledge of technology thousands of years ahead of us. Once they get the proper resources and industrial capability they'll be able to field Star Wars era technology and supply their forces.
By the time they can produce SW level tech, it would've disseminated throughout the world, and their descendants won't be anything like the original Imperials who arrived here.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Since when are snipers mechanized infantry?
Snipers are worthless for destroying a half-million man army. You need lots of weapons that can engage the stormies directly and with sustained fire to cause an appreciable amount of casualties, and that means vehicles to carry them and their ammo.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Well maybe, the depends on whether or not you would replace the AT-STs with scout vehicles like humvees or tanks.
AT-STs are light scouts, so they should be pitted against light scouts.
Star Wars 888 wrote:How will they know any of that stuff? If they want to keep out of a war would they be flying tie fighters as recon over the USA?
Jesus christ...just roll into a random craphole of a town and tune into CNN via satellite. They could probably do it with their standard equipment, too.
Star Wars 888 wrote:They weren't moving at supersonic absolute speeds either, or not at mach 9 or anything like that.
Irrelevant ; Relative speed is not indicative of absolute speed (or, more precisely, speed relative to the atmosphere)
Star Wars 888 wrote:Again, their in atmosphere speed still hasn't been quantified. There are sources that list their in atmosphere speed at far lower than what the ICS's claim.
It's between mach 1.5 and mach 9, which is enough to know that can't be engaged by anything, due to the fact they'll be coming in for an attack at that speed, from orbit. Large SAMs won't be able to engage them due to the small engagement window, light SAMs won't be able to engage them because of their high speed, AA guns for the same reasons. Fighters won't be able to vector in and intercept the strike before the TIE is again too high to chase down.
The TIEs are untouchable, even with the lower speed.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Says who? They might not be ideal, but they can still fit tanks and supplies.
Just...no. You don't just run a ship marked "supplies" into a port and magically have a supplied division. You need a proper
amount and
throughput of supplies, and that means ports capable of taking ships of a certain size and unloading them in a certain amount of time and
the infrastructure to move those supplies further inland.
A fishing port with no concrete quay, no cranes and a single dirt road coming out of it is worthless. Same for a large port that can't take and unload tankers, or that has no rail siding.
Any halfway competent Imperial supply officer would be able to pinpoint the correct ports after a month or so of researching Earth weapon systems. Or they can just ask a captured South American supply officer who will probably have a list memorized.
Star Wars 888 wrote:I thought that we were talking about a hypothetical naval invasion.
Yes, we were. Again, how are you going to force a landing when a single stormtrooper can take an LCAC out of action with his standard sidearm, and PLX launchers can blow apart helicopers with contemptous ease?
Star Wars 888 wrote:We've been in Iraq through several elections.
Iraq doesn't cost you thousands of men daily, and promises some nebulous gain in the future (cheap oil FTW!)
Star Wars 888 wrote:Air supremacy (once their tie fighters run out of fuel) might not win the war for them, but it would certainly be a big factor against the imperials.
It didn't work against the Germans in WWII ; It won't work here because the USAF could very well lose all its planes to shoulder-launched missiles.
Star Wars 888 wrote:As to how powerful stormtroopers are, it varies. Some times they are incompetent fools, other times they are uber powerful elite shock troopers.
As long as they can shoot straight and take cover, they're vastly superior to earth light infantry.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Actually, you simply have to capture or kill one stormtrooper and take their equipment.
And then watch the Hoover Dam get blown apart, their aircraft carriers taken out of comission and largest commercial ports heavily damaged.
Star Wars 888 wrote:If they are a threat to humanity, then yes.
They're human themselves. A threat to democracy, maybe, but so was communism.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Technologically advanced by thousands of years.
Yes, and? It doesn't mean they are threatening to wipe humanity out. They're a dictatorship ; Big deal, the US deals with plenty of dictatorships with a smile.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Actually, they may be able to mass produce advanced Star Wars tech if they set up a functional nation. Your analogy would be more accurate if it were whether or not a modern day military force could in 19th century Britain make superconductors.
They couldn't, because the materials science and machine tools with proper tolerances did not exist at the time and can't be easily recreated. The Imperials won't be able to, either, not in a single generation.
Star Wars 888 wrote:That wasn't the point.
Then what
was the point?
Star Wars 888 wrote:That's contradictory. On one hand you make the USA seem to be indifferent to morals by helping the imperials, and then on the other hand you make the USA seem moral by making them not want to send people to die.
And you're an idiot. A country can help out bad people for its own gain while not wanting its own people to die, there's nothing contradictory about that: see my laundry list of US-supported asshole dictators.
Star Wars 888 wrote:And then run out of fuel.
As long as they make the counter-invasion untenable, it doesn't matter.
Star Wars 888 wrote:If left alone for a very long time, they could in theory becomes a threat to humanity.
After a very long time, they won't resemble SW Imperials ideologically at all.
Star Wars 888 wrote:No, but it would whittle down the non replaceable (short term) stormtroopers.
It won't, because Imperials can just send local troops to do the guerilla-hunting.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Since when? Guerrilla warfare is a valid military strategy. The imperials learned it the hard way.
No, the Imperials lost in a direct war with a well-equipped enemy. No guerilla force in history managed to defeat an organized army by guerilla tactics alone: they always have to come out from hiding and fight directly to throw their enemy out of his cities and strongholds. The purpose of guerilla tactics is to sap the enemy will to fight and hopefully either incite popular rebellion, or make the strong and powerful army leave.
Star Wars 888 wrote:Do those paper maps have maps of the worlds' satellites?
What? We were talking about ports...
Star Wars 888 wrote:Well, maybe the AT-STs are scout vehicles. Still not an excuse for their pathetically though.
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Hit a hummvee in the side with a large log. See if it will drive afterwards.