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MOAB story
On Sun, 16 Apr 2017 13:15:10 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: Why would we send our kids into a war we had no plans of winning? Ask Truman and LBJ. Both Bushs learned the lessons of Vietnam. Once a decision was made to wage a war, it was done so in a manner to win. Harry will yak about third rate armies, but a Russian tank is a tank regardless and Saddam had a bunch of them. Both excursions into Iraq weren't even close in terms of "not winning". The problem in Iraq is we did not know what a win looked like. We beat the army and hanged Saddam but nobody asked "what's next"? We have the same problem in Syria and to some extent Afghanistan, except we never beat anyone there. We killed a lot of people but there was never a decisive win. We actually accomplished more in Vietnam by admitting defeat and getting everyone out. When Ho moved south, he could not maintain the lie he perpetuated in the north because the people knew better and the country immediately moved into the 20th century. It makes me wonder what would happen if Kim had to assimilate 50 million 21st century South Koreans into his closed society and still have them believing he shot 10 holes in one in a row. |
MOAB story
On Sun, 16 Apr 2017 13:20:21 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: On 4/16/2017 10:50 AM, wrote: On Sun, 16 Apr 2017 08:37:05 -0400 (EDT), justan wrote: Thats a dumb plan. Throwing away potentially good explosive devices. The old stuff still can be dropped and cause blunt force trauma even if the explosivefails. Waste not want not. It may be a dumb plan but it is how the military operates. This comes down to chemistry more than politics. Explosives definitely have a shelf life and beyond that they become unreliable. They may just be less effective but they can also become more sensitive and that is a worse problem. The exudate that oozes out of shells loaded with TNT can be very dangerous. Military explosives generally have longer shelf lives than commercial explosives but that is simply more than a few years out to 20 or so. You keep saying that and I don't disagree with you when it comes to cheap, WWII era ordnance or .45 rounds that you apparently had some experience in disposing of in 1965. But, what makes you think or what evidence do you have that today, 52 years later (half a century) that the same policy exists for $15M a pop weapons? Because TNT is still TNT? I did a lot of reading on this but I can't find anything like the CG "282" manual online that defined storage and classification of ordinance. I did see references to explosives like Semtex and RDX saying they were only at their prime for 10 years. (by a company selling a replacement) I also heard the actual production cost of the MOABs was $170k or so and you get to $16 million by dividing the $340m program cost by the 21 bombs they built. If you recycled the guidance package and just demilled the barrel bomb it guides, no doubt that would still be cheaper but I bet there is a better guidance package out there now too so it is likely to be chucked. This is DoD, a billion here, a billion there and pretty soon we are talking about real money. (Proxmire) Do you really think they are worried about a couple hundred grand? How many multi billion dollar weapons systems have we built that were designed, built, deployed and then scrapped without ever firing a shot in anger? (and I don't just mean ballistic missiles and nukes) |
MOAB story
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MOAB story
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MOAB story
On Sun, 16 Apr 2017 11:00:29 -0700 (PDT), Poco Deplorevole
wrote: On Sunday, April 16, 2017 at 1:03:17 PM UTC-4, wrote: On Sun, 16 Apr 2017 10:24:06 -0400, wrote: On Sun, 16 Apr 2017 09:20:57 -0400, Keyser Soze wrote: I think the solution lies with the muslim world. We're not getting the kind of help or leadership from any of the Muslim countries that we need. === You're absolutely right about that. Pakistan is arguably one of the more advanced Muslim countries and they're still stoning people to death for blasphemy. So what? Why do we care what they do in their own country? There are plenty of western europeans who think we are barbarians too. I can't believe you said that. Why? For the same reason you'd get ****ed if the guy across the street from you was kicking the **** out of his dog! If it was the guy on my street I would be upset but I am not going to Korea and tell a guy he can't eat his dog. Different culture, different rules. It is not our place to tell people half way around the world how they treat their dogs or their people when that has been their culture since the fall of Rome. |
MOAB story
On Sun, 16 Apr 2017 14:10:48 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: I found Greg's comment a bit weird also. I don't think he really believes it and would be very disappointed if he did. He's a better man than that despite his Libertarian ways. :-) It has nothing to do with my virtue, it is my understanding that other cultures have different rules. As I said, Europe thinks we are pretty barbaric too. How many homicides did we have last year? How many executions? How many people are incarcerated? If we were talking about guns John, Jim, and the rest would be telling those nancy boys in Europe to mind their own business. |
MOAB story
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MOAB story
On Sun, 16 Apr 2017 17:06:41 -0400, wrote:
On Sun, 16 Apr 2017 12:55:45 -0400, Poco Deplorevole wrote: Thats a dumb plan. Throwing away potentially good explosive devices. The old stuff still can be dropped and cause blunt force trauma even if the explosivefails. Waste not want not. I'm thinking his 'old stuff' was *accidentally* left to begin 'oozing'. The Army, at least the units I was in, would use the older ammo for training as opposed to dumping it in the sea. I can't believe the Coast Guard would purposely let ammo get so old it began 'oozing' unless someone f'ed up big time. At least you admit ammo has a shelf life. I already said the 3 classes are ready service, training and trash. We had limited ability to actually shoot live ammo and it was seldom new when we got it anyway so disposal was pretty common. You also pointed out why it was pretty much free to drop this bomb. I doubt they "train" with an 18,000 bomb. What was your typical cycle time on your large caliber rounds (105-155 etc)? How long was it class 1, 2 and 3? Looks like 20 years is the magic number. But, the rounds don't get trashed. http://www.army-technology.com/featu...ition-4583575/ |
MOAB story
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