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kitplane01 wrote:"In the eight months since launching its all-out invasion of Ukraine, Russia has lost more than a quarter of its total in-service fleet of Ka-52 Alligator attack helicopters sent to Ukraine for the war, ... At least 23 of Russia’s Ka-52 Alligator helicopters have been shot down or lost since the Feb. 24 invasion"
kitplane01 wrote:How do you feel about the future of the modern attack helicopter?
According to the Vietnam Helicopter Pilots Association, a total of 11,846 helicopters were shot down or crashed during the war, resulting in nearly 5,000 American pilots and crew killed. Of those servicepeople, 2,382 were killed while serving aboard UH-1 Iroquois, better known as the ubiquitous “Huey.”
RJMAZ wrote:kitplane01 wrote:How do you feel about the future of the modern attack helicopter?
The future looks excellent. The attack helicopter is fast becoming the most survivable platform on the battlefield which is why the US is investing so much money. Militaries around the world are placing large orders of attack helicopters.
RJMAZ wrote:kitplane01 wrote:Do you remember the Vietnam war? This helps put things into perspective.
kitplane01 wrote:RJMAZ wrote:kitplane01 wrote:How do you feel about the future of the modern attack helicopter?
The future looks excellent. The attack helicopter is fast becoming the most survivable platform on the battlefield which is why the US is investing so much money. Militaries around the world are placing large orders of attack helicopters.
More survivable than the tank? A tank with active armor?
More survivable than any tank without trained infantry supportRJMAZ wrote:kitplane01 wrote:Do you remember the Vietnam war? This helps put things into perspective.
No. I'm just not that old. That war was about 2.5 generations ago. A war without manpads, against an non-peer enemy. A war without ubiquitous networking, and very few CPUs. A war with near-zero drones.
GalaxyFlyer wrote:MANPADS weren’t what shot down helicopters, old fashioned riflemen did the it.
GalaxyFlyer wrote:Every enemy is a peer, if they want to be. Ask Russian last January if they considered UKR a peer? Ask them now.
kitplane01 wrote:More survivable than the tank? A tank with active armor?
kitplane01 wrote:No. I'm just not that old. That war was about 2.5 generations ago. A war without manpads, against an non-peer enemy.
kitplane01 wrote:I would think flying Hueys and A-1s over a battlefield against a peer enemy in 2022 is probably quick suicide.
kitplane01 wrote:GalaxyFlyer wrote:MANPADS weren’t what shot down helicopters, old fashioned riflemen did the it.
Manpads are clearly shooting down Russian helicopters. Several examples are available on Youtube.GalaxyFlyer wrote:Every enemy is a peer, if they want to be. Ask Russian last January if they considered UKR a peer? Ask them now.
Peer advisory: Has equipment at about the same technology level, and a force of about the same size.
Not every enemy is a peer. The Vietnamese military was not a peer to the US military because they didn't have the same level of technology. Even if they wanted it, they could not get it. The Afghani military was not a peer to the US military. They just didn't have enough fighters jets to qualify.
Of course one can lose to a non-peer. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asymmetric_warfare
As to the Ukraine being a peer of Russia ... that's surprisingly hard. They clearly don't have the fast-jet capability of Russia, but have enough manpads and drones and such to make the comparison complex.
RJMAZ wrote:Now we have Ukraine with an unlimited number of manpads and we only have a dozen Russian helicopters shot down.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidaxe/2 ... e32b2f1879
Russia has lost 52 of its own, higher-flying helicopters. (…) the gunship crews face extreme risk … and a shockingly short life expectancy.
https://kyivindependent.com/uncategoriz ... 18-minutes
Ukrainian anti-aircraft missile units shot down at least four Russian attack helicopters (presumably Ka-52) in southern Ukraine from 8:40 a.m. to 8:58 a.m. on Oct. 12, Ukraine’s Air Force reported. Ukraine was trying to hit two more Russian helicopters, which means the number of confirmed downed helicopters may increase, according to the military.
petertenthije wrote:Meanwhile, in the real world:Russia has lost 52 of its own, higher-flying helicopters. (…) the gunship crews face extreme risk … and a shockingly short life expectancy.
GalaxyFlyer wrote:Every enemy is a peer, if they want to be.
kitplane01 wrote:Peer advisory: Has equipment at about the same technology level, and a force of about the same size.
GalaxyFlyer wrote:Technology or access to it doesn’t alone describe peers. That is a armchair view, not reality.
RJMAZ wrote:kitplane01 wrote:More survivable than the tank? A tank with active armor?
Definitely more survivable than a tank. A pair of F-35 with small diameter bomb and you have a whole tank.comvoy missing their turrets.
RJMAZ wrote:petertenthije wrote:Meanwhile, in the real world:Russia has lost 52 of its own, higher-flying helicopters. (…) the gunship crews face extreme risk … and a shockingly short life expectancy.
I remember the Russian combat losses being posted by Ukraine in the first 2 weeks of the war. The person fabricating the numbers soon had to reduce the rate of the daily losses as the war continued. If they kept fabricating combat losses at such a high rate Russia would have lost a millions of helicopters and tanks by now.
The high Russian losses massively improved recruitment for soldiers in Ukraine. So it served a good purpose. Now they have lost credibility as a source like the Iraqi minister of information. I loved seeing that man on TV as a kid and he became an internet celebrity.
I wish I screenshotted all of the official Ukraine combat stat's in the first week. Dozens of Russian helicopters were lost in the first week. Yet now it's only 52.
kitplane01 wrote:A pair of F-35s easily kills tanks. It also easily kills helicopters. And it detects helicopters in the air much easier than tanks hiding under a tree.
GalaxyFlyer wrote:kitplane01 wrote:GalaxyFlyer wrote:MANPADS weren’t what shot down helicopters, old fashioned riflemen did the it.
Manpads are clearly shooting down Russian helicopters. Several examples are available on Youtube.GalaxyFlyer wrote:Every enemy is a peer, if they want to be. Ask Russian last January if they considered UKR a peer? Ask them now.
Peer advisory: Has equipment at about the same technology level, and a force of about the same size.
Not every enemy is a peer. The Vietnamese military was not a peer to the US military because they didn't have the same level of technology. Even if they wanted it, they could not get it. The Afghani military was not a peer to the US military. They just didn't have enough fighters jets to qualify.
Of course one can lose to a non-peer. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asymmetric_warfare
As to the Ukraine being a peer of Russia ... that's surprisingly hard. They clearly don't have the fast-jet capability of Russia, but have enough manpads and drones and such to make the comparison complex.
I was referring to Vietnam helicopter shoot downs. Technology or access to it doesn’t alone describe peers. That is a armchair view, not reality. Most wars were won by the non-peer—Britain v. France during Napoleonic wars, America v. Britain during Revolution and 1812; Afghan and Vietnam v. US. Now, one can argue militarily the US dominated both Vietnam and Afghanistan militarily but lost politically.
Kiwirob wrote:GalaxyFlyer wrote:kitplane01 wrote:
Manpads are clearly shooting down Russian helicopters. Several examples are available on Youtube.
Peer advisory: Has equipment at about the same technology level, and a force of about the same size.
Not every enemy is a peer. The Vietnamese military was not a peer to the US military because they didn't have the same level of technology. Even if they wanted it, they could not get it. The Afghani military was not a peer to the US military. They just didn't have enough fighters jets to qualify.
Of course one can lose to a non-peer. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asymmetric_warfare
As to the Ukraine being a peer of Russia ... that's surprisingly hard. They clearly don't have the fast-jet capability of Russia, but have enough manpads and drones and such to make the comparison complex.
I was referring to Vietnam helicopter shoot downs. Technology or access to it doesn’t alone describe peers. That is a armchair view, not reality. Most wars were won by the non-peer—Britain v. France during Napoleonic wars, America v. Britain during Revolution and 1812; Afghan and Vietnam v. US. Now, one can argue militarily the US dominated both Vietnam and Afghanistan militarily but lost politically.
How can you say Britain and France were't peer enemies? They have been peer enemies since 1066.
Kiwirob wrote:GalaxyFlyer wrote:kitplane01 wrote:
Manpads are clearly shooting down Russian helicopters. Several examples are available on Youtube.
Peer advisory: Has equipment at about the same technology level, and a force of about the same size.
Not every enemy is a peer. The Vietnamese military was not a peer to the US military because they didn't have the same level of technology. Even if they wanted it, they could not get it. The Afghani military was not a peer to the US military. They just didn't have enough fighters jets to qualify.
Of course one can lose to a non-peer. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asymmetric_warfare
As to the Ukraine being a peer of Russia ... that's surprisingly hard. They clearly don't have the fast-jet capability of Russia, but have enough manpads and drones and such to make the comparison complex.
I was referring to Vietnam helicopter shoot downs. Technology or access to it doesn’t alone describe peers. That is a armchair view, not reality. Most wars were won by the non-peer—Britain v. France during Napoleonic wars, America v. Britain during Revolution and 1812; Afghan and Vietnam v. US. Now, one can argue militarily the US dominated both Vietnam and Afghanistan militarily but lost politically.
How can you say Britain and France were't peer enemies? They have been peer enemies since 1066.
johns624 wrote:The British Empire put its money into the Royal Navy.
Kiwirob wrote:GalaxyFlyer wrote:kitplane01 wrote:
Manpads are clearly shooting down Russian helicopters. Several examples are available on Youtube.
Peer advisory: Has equipment at about the same technology level, and a force of about the same size.
Not every enemy is a peer. The Vietnamese military was not a peer to the US military because they didn't have the same level of technology. Even if they wanted it, they could not get it. The Afghani military was not a peer to the US military. They just didn't have enough fighters jets to qualify.
Of course one can lose to a non-peer. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asymmetric_warfare
As to the Ukraine being a peer of Russia ... that's surprisingly hard. They clearly don't have the fast-jet capability of Russia, but have enough manpads and drones and such to make the comparison complex.
For most of the last 1000 years, the UK and France when they were enemies have been peer enemies.
I was referring to Vietnam helicopter shoot downs. Technology or access to it doesn’t alone describe peers. That is a armchair view, not reality. Most wars were won by the non-peer—Britain v. France during Napoleonic wars, America v. Britain during Revolution and 1812; Afghan and Vietnam v. US. Now, one can argue militarily the US dominated both Vietnam and Afghanistan militarily but lost politically.
How can you say Britain and France were't peer enemies? They have been peer enemies since 1066.
GalaxyFlyer wrote:johns624 wrote:The British Empire put its money into the Royal Navy.
True, but even at Trafalger it was at a pretty serious numerical disadvantage.
My argument is the entire “peer” or “non-peer” idea is false because a lot more dictates combat outcomes than counting technology. And all of it is very hard to assess prior to the balloon goes up, which is why the balloon goes up-each side misjudges their opponents
GDB wrote:But allies since 1904, not that parts of the UK media would have it though.
UK defense committee calls for thorough Eutelsat/OneWeb review
Eutelsat and OneWeb’s planned merger requires the “strictest possible scrutiny,” a cross-party group of British government officials said in a report warning the U.K has become a “third-rank” power in space post-Brexit.
Combining U.K.-based OneWeb with France’s Eutelsat poses “serious questions about the handing over of critical technology to foreign powers and the need for sovereignty,” said Tobias Ellwood, chair of the U.K’s Defence Select Committee.
...
However, despite spending tens of millions of dollars on exploring options over the last several years, Ellwood said the U.K. is no closer to developing a replacement PNT (Position, Navigation, Timing) network.
He added: “Over this inquiry we heard that the UK is, at best, a third-rank space power, lagging behind Italy."
kitplane01 wrote:GalaxyFlyer wrote:johns624 wrote:The British Empire put its money into the Royal Navy.
True, but even at Trafalger it was at a pretty serious numerical disadvantage.
My argument is the entire “peer” or “non-peer” idea is false because a lot more dictates combat outcomes than counting technology. And all of it is very hard to assess prior to the balloon goes up, which is why the balloon goes up-each side misjudges their opponents
A lot more *does* dictate combat outcomes than technology. I believe this has already been discussed, in this thread, this week.
If two enemies are 'peers' then they likely *can* fight in the same way (but don't have to). If the UK and France go to war next week, the techniques of each will likely look somewhat similar. Meanwhile, when the US went to war with Vietnam, the two sides had to use different techniques because they had different capabilities.
'Peer' is about what you can do, not who will win.
GalaxyFlyer wrote:Even NATO without the US could handle Russia now.
At the beginning of 2022, many would have considered Russia and NATO to be peers, no one thinks that now. It’s a very nebulous idea.
johns624 wrote:GalaxyFlyer wrote:Even NATO without the US could handle Russia now.
At the beginning of 2022, many would have considered Russia and NATO to be peers, no one thinks that now. It’s a very nebulous idea.
GalaxyFlyer wrote:Their air forces--yes. Their navies--maybe. Their armies--probably not.johns624 wrote:GalaxyFlyer wrote:Even NATO without the US could handle Russia now.
At the beginning of 2022, many would have considered Russia and NATO to be peers, no one thinks that now. It’s a very nebulous idea.
Maybe…
johns624 wrote:Too late to edit, so here it is...GalaxyFlyer wrote:Their air forces--yes. Their navies--maybe. Their armies--probably not.johns624 wrote:Even NATO without the US could handle Russia now.
Maybe…
johns624 wrote:GalaxyFlyer wrote:Their air forces--yes. Their navies--maybe. Their armies--probably not.johns624 wrote:Even NATO without the US could handle Russia now.
Maybe…
GalaxyFlyer wrote:Kiwirob wrote:GalaxyFlyer wrote:
I was referring to Vietnam helicopter shoot downs. Technology or access to it doesn’t alone describe peers. That is a armchair view, not reality. Most wars were won by the non-peer—Britain v. France during Napoleonic wars, America v. Britain during Revolution and 1812; Afghan and Vietnam v. US. Now, one can argue militarily the US dominated both Vietnam and Afghanistan militarily but lost politically.
How can you say Britain and France were't peer enemies? They have been peer enemies since 1066.
Britain always, prior to the 20th C, had a much smaller population, thus much smaller armies. They’ve been enemies, but in most wars, Britain started out with at a significant disadvantage, like 6:1 at Agincourt. British diplomacy was its big advantage by assembling coalitions against France. See the 18th century, 2nd Hundred Years War against France.
GalaxyFlyer wrote:johns624 wrote:The British Empire put its money into the Royal Navy.
True, but even at Trafalger it was at a pretty serious numerical disadvantage.
My argument is the entire “peer” or “non-peer” idea is false because a lot more dictates combat outcomes than counting technology. And all of it is very hard to assess prior to the balloon goes up, which is why the balloon goes up-each side misjudges their opponents
kitplane01 wrote:Did you miss the part "without the US"?johns624 wrote:GalaxyFlyer wrote:Their air forces--yes. Their navies--maybe. Their armies--probably not.
Maybe…
The Ukrainian army can fight the Russian army to a standstill. I would expect our army has more capabilities than the Ukrainian one.
johns624 wrote:kitplane01 wrote:Did you miss the part "without the US"?johns624 wrote:Their air forces--yes. Their navies--maybe. Their armies--probably not.
The Ukrainian army can fight the Russian army to a standstill. I would expect our army has more capabilities than the Ukrainian one.
kitplane01 wrote:Same as my thoughts. I was just reading about the new Belgian-Dutch frigates. As a cost-saving measure, the Belgian ones are only going to have an 8-cell VLS, instead of the original 16 cell. This is as of last February, so maybe it's changed. Even though they will have quad-packed ESSM, for a new multi-purpose frigate (their term), that's a bit light on AA.johns624 wrote:kitplane01 wrote:Did you miss the part "without the US"?
The Ukrainian army can fight the Russian army to a standstill. I would expect our army has more capabilities than the Ukrainian one.
Durp. Yes.
I still think European NATO has a bigger and better army than the Ukraine, and the Ukraine is fighting Russia to a standstill.
But I'm not so sure. Every time I read about, for instance, German military hardware readiness rates I wonder if they are funding a show-military or a fighting-military. But I'm super unsure about that.
Kiwirob wrote:GalaxyFlyer wrote:johns624 wrote:The British Empire put its money into the Royal Navy.
True, but even at Trafalger it was at a pretty serious numerical disadvantage.
My argument is the entire “peer” or “non-peer” idea is false because a lot more dictates combat outcomes than counting technology. And all of it is very hard to assess prior to the balloon goes up, which is why the balloon goes up-each side misjudges their opponents
How were the Briitish at a disadvantage at Trafalgar, Nelson was slightly outnumbered, with 27 British ships of the line to 33 of the combined French and Spanish navies, but the Royal Navy were better trained and Nelson was the superior commander. The RN dominated the conflict.
GalaxyFlyer wrote:My point is the “peer” model puts too much stress on measurable technological factors and geek measurements while leaving aside imponderables that win battles and wars. Russian has some great tech which is typically measured, but it’s poor economy, lack of NCO leadership, pre-WW II logistics investment means they’re not peer to anyone in 2022. The Ukrainians are showing us that the old morale to material ratio of 3:1 might in the world of drones, cheap electronics be more like 5:1. No one last winter would have believed COTS quad rotor drones dropping grenades to kill infantry and vehicles.
MohawkWeekend wrote:Speaking of helo survivability - have you seen this video of a Mi-8 shoot down yesterday?
https://mil.in.ua/en/news/ukrainian-def ... elicopter/
What in the world was that pilot thinking not landing a soon as he was hit. Remarkable how much time he had. If this was a armored helo he might have been able to limp home.
GDB wrote:MohawkWeekend wrote:Speaking of helo survivability - have you seen this video of a Mi-8 shoot down yesterday?
https://mil.in.ua/en/news/ukrainian-def ... elicopter/
What in the world was that pilot thinking not landing a soon as he was hit. Remarkable how much time he had. If this was a armored helo he might have been able to limp home.
Yes, the Suchominus channel posted it, with some questions, was it doing a utility mission or being pressed into gunship mode with all the KA-52 losses? Why so close for the battlefield if doing a utility tasking, the lack of training maybe due to crew attrition?
ThePointblank wrote:GDB wrote:MohawkWeekend wrote:Speaking of helo survivability - have you seen this video of a Mi-8 shoot down yesterday?
https://mil.in.ua/en/news/ukrainian-def ... elicopter/
What in the world was that pilot thinking not landing a soon as he was hit. Remarkable how much time he had. If this was a armored helo he might have been able to limp home.
Yes, the Suchominus channel posted it, with some questions, was it doing a utility mission or being pressed into gunship mode with all the KA-52 losses? Why so close for the battlefield if doing a utility tasking, the lack of training maybe due to crew attrition?
Likely troop transport; the chatter I saw was that it was ferrying a number of new Wagner recruits around when it was hit. Roughly 20 people were onboard, only one survivor.
Rafael unveiled a sixth-generation version of the Spike non-line-of-sight munition ahead of Eurosatory, a defense exhibition in Paris this week, where the firm prominently featured the weapon. The new variant has an increased range, pushing beyond 40 kilometers (25 miles) to a range of 50 kilometers (31 miles).
The Spike NLOS was selected as an interim long-range precision munition for the Army’s Apaches, but the service still wants to extend the range of the munition beyond its current capability so it can operate in degraded environments.
texl1649 wrote:The Koreans are the latest to invest in a future attack helicopter, with this news;
https://twitter.com/janesintel/status/1 ... 4735969280
I would say that to me that looks…very busy, visually. Whatever, it should work for the mission.
MohawkWeekend wrote:The Mi-8 must be a pretty tough bird - would have thought the tail rotor would have been knock out immediately.
MohawkWeekend wrote:Speaking of helo survivability - have you seen this video of a Mi-8 shoot down yesterday?
https://mil.in.ua/en/news/ukrainian-def ... elicopter/
What in the world was that pilot thinking not landing a soon as he was hit. Remarkable how much time he had. If this was a armored helo he might have been able to limp home.
johns624 wrote:johns624 wrote:Too late to edit, so here it is...GalaxyFlyer wrote:Their air forces--yes. Their navies--maybe. Their armies--probably not.
Maybe…
air forces---yes. navies...probably. armies---maybe. The inclusion of Sweden and Finland added a bunch of MBTs, which many EU militaries have let dwindle.