Why the US Navy won't blast the Iranians and 'open' Strait of Hormuz

(responsiblestatecraft.org)

112 points | by KoftaBob 13 hours ago ago

269 comments

  • tim333 4 minutes ago

    >The era of carrier-dominated airpower is fading, as cheap, unmanned anti-ship weapons reshape naval warfare, whether US planners are ready for it or not.

    is not really backed up by reality. Pretty much the whole US operation so far, destroying much of Iran's military and leadership was done from US carriers. If anything it demonstrates how powerful they are.

    Also straits being closed to shipping by whatever power controls the shores is not a new thing. The Bosphophorous has been closed on and off by the Ottomans or Turks since 1453 and the allies couldn't break through in WW1. They can send raiding ships, use canons, artillery, naval mines etc. You don't need the new tech.

  • Balgair 10 hours ago

    In chapter 11 of All Quiet on the Western Front Paul and his unit find an abandoned food cache in the middle of no mans land. Instead of secreting away the food back to their lines where they will have to share it, they decide to just cook and eat it right then and there. But a spotter plane from the allies sees the smoke and then begins shelling their position. Cue a terrifying, if hilarious, scene where the soldiers try and cook pancakes as shells explode around them. Paul, as the last to leave, takes his pancakes on a plate and dashes out, timing his escape between bursts, and just barely making it back to the German trenches. Its a rare comic scene in an otherwise horrific and very real look at WW1.

    The scene in the book is just so familiar to the lines in Ukraine these days, nearly a hundred years later. Instead of spotter planes near the dawn of aviation, we have satellites and drones (similarly quite new in the role). Instead of just shells and fuzing experts, we have FPV drones and much more sophisticated shells. Instead of buddies from the same towns all huddled together in cold muddy holes, we have deracinated units spread far and wide in laying in fear of thermal imaging. This results in a no mans land again, but a dozen kilometers wide instead of a few hundred meters wide, and somehow more psychologically damaging.

    My point is that absent any tech that will miraculously be invented and deployed widely in the new few weeks, the Iran war, if it should be a ground one, is going to be just like Ukraine is today, which is somehow a worse version of trench warfare.

    Even casual Victoria II players know that WW1 is essentially the final boss of the game. And the 'lesson' of Vicky II is essentialy: Do not fight WW1, it ruins Everything.

    To be clear: The US is choosing to fight a worse version of WW1 without even a stated (or likely even known) condition of victory. We're about to send many thousands boys to suffer and die for not 'literally nothing', but actually literally nothing.

    • thaumasiotes an hour ago

      > Cue a terrifying, if hilarious, scene where the soldiers try and cook pancakes as shells explode around them.

      In the 1974 movie The Four Musketeers, Athos needs to find a private place in which to impart some information to d'Artagnan. The musketeers are currently deployed battling some French rebels.

      The solution he finds is to place a bet with another soldier that he and his friends will have breakfast inside a fortress that is being bombarded by the rebels. We see a similar comedy scene of five people attempting to cook and eat a meal while under attack. (Athos also struggles to get his information across, since the constant attacks understandably pull a lot of attention.)

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aezX4lxCaCw

      • shawn_w 14 minutes ago

        Movie? That happens in the original book.

        • oniony 10 minutes ago

          Does it not also happen in the movie?

    • narrator 3 hours ago

      Trump already said he was just going to bomb all their infrastructure so the economy of the country couldn't function if they didn't negotiate and then it's just going to be a mass refugee crisis. It would be a mass refugee crisis anyway with a protracted ground invasion, but more Americans would die, so Trump is choosing to get it over with the easy way for America at least if they won't negotiate.

      IMHO, This is pretty much the strategy the Khans used in the 13th century when they encountered arrogant Islamist Sultans emboldened with the bravery of their faith who refused to capitulate. They killed all the islamic people in Baghdad and then proceeded to fill all their canals and burn all their books. This decisively ended the Islamic golden age and Europe was able to survive after a very difficult 14th century where it would probably have been easily crushed by Islamists from the East had the Khans not set them back at least a few centuries. Truly one of the big turning points in World History.

      Oh yeah, we can't do this to Russia because they have nukes, but the Ukrainians are trying to do it piecemeal.

      • RobotToaster 14 minutes ago

        Are we just going to ignore the fact that targeting civilian infrastructure is yet another war crime?

        • free652 5 minutes ago

          That's dual use infrastructure. Its also used for military and goverment purposes, right? The same as China providing weapons components to Russia, masking them as "civilian".

        • SpicyLemonZest 5 minutes ago

          We'll make Hegseth regret it deeply when the time comes, but right now I don't know that there's much to do about that fact.

      • Quarrelsome 41 minutes ago

        What this current administration is doing speaks much more of a lack of strategy than what the Khans did in the 13th century.

        Not having any sort of counterplay to Iran's one big move (the blocking of the straight), in a nation of some of the brighest minds on the planet, speaks volumes of how advisors are clearly not being listened to. The powers of the once mighty Republic have seemingly been vested in the hands of a bunch of incompetent nepo babies.

        • babypuncher a minute ago

          > a nation of some of the brighest minds on the planet

          The brightest minds we had working in government have all quit or been fired in the last year.

        • randomNumber7 33 minutes ago

          > in a nation of some of the brighest minds on the planet

          You mean the people who voted for trump or those who voted for the democrats?

          Are there some causal reasons you think americans are smarter than people in other countries?

          • Quarrelsome 29 minutes ago

            > You mean the people who voted for trump or those who voted for the democrats?

            I'm not talking about plebs, I'm talking about people who know their shit and work at government level. We could just look at the invention of the past century and pluck out relevant events like the moon landing, electronic computer, transistor or ARPANET. Clearly there are smart people living in that nation. They have the talent to draw from to get good advice about stuff like: what Iran's first response might be to an aerial assault.

            > Are there some causal reasons you think americans are smarter than people in other countries?

            I never said that. I said America is home to SOME of the brightest minds in the world. That sentence does not apportion all the brightest minds to that nation. Do you have a chip on your shoulder? What you read is clearly something different from what I wrote, so I'd suggest there's some faulty wiring somewhere.

          • qup 16 minutes ago

            IQ testing?

            Inbreeding as a cultural norm?

            Not smarter than the Japanese.

      • alpaca128 37 minutes ago

        > he was just going to bomb all their infrastructure

        That's usually the idea ever since bombs were a thing. It just so happens that it's harder to actually pull off than to say it.

        • Quarrelsome 15 minutes ago

          and nor does it result in victory without the follow up of a ground assault.

          I'm legit baffled by the US engaging in a war that suffers exactly the same negative properties as the Saudi's war in Yemen. You don't even have to learn from history, the Saudi/Yemeni conflict is still active today. Air campaigns alone are entirely insufficient, especially if your enemy has mountains.

      • jacquesm 2 hours ago

        > Oh yeah, we can't do this to Russia because they have nukes

        Why would the US want to bomb an ally?

    • chneu 9 hours ago

      This just came up yesterday in the sauna with a bunch of dudes. Everything feels unique and special, but we're just repeating history again. Nothing about this situation is actually unique. Change a few names, a few numbers like the year or GPS coords, but most everything today is just history repeating itself.

      Don't let capitalism convince us to do bad stuff cuz it makes us feel like the moment is special. It isn't. There is a tomorrow. It will be yesterday soon enough.

      • FrustratedMonky 39 minutes ago

        "in the sauna with a bunch of dudes"

        The way this reads. I thought the analogy was "i'm frequently in a hot tub with dudes with different names, the faces change, but i'm still in this hot tub"

      • FrustratedMonky 40 minutes ago

        "in the sauna with a bunch of dudes"

        The way this reads.

        I thought the analogy was "i'm frequently in a hot tub with dudes with different names, the faces change, but i'm still in this hot tub"

      • freefaler 7 hours ago

        How is capitalism in the wrong here? Resource warfare is universal trough the history in any society.

        The check and balances of the US President that can start an offensive war is more a political problem, not "capitalism" problem.

        • zardo 41 minutes ago

          It's a contributor factor through the usual pro-war think tanks funded by weapons companies.

          But, yeah the choice of Iran now isn't at all explained by "capitalism".

        • CamperBob2 13 minutes ago

          "Everything I don't like is woke." - Right

          "Everything I don't like is capitalism." - Left

        • ben_w 6 hours ago

          Was this started as a resource war, or as a money-making scheme, or as a distraction from the Epstein files, or just because DJT developed actual old age dementia after purging anyone who might say 'no'?

          To the extent it's a money making scheme, well, capitalism gets blamed for all money making schemes even if it's supposed to be a specific subset of them which is useful for the feedback one can get from open markets.

          (As that's a caveat inside a caveat, I'm mostly agreeing with you).

          • Quarrelsome 36 minutes ago

            > Was this started as a resource war, or as a money-making scheme, or as a distraction from the Epstein files, or just because DJT developed actual old age dementia after purging anyone who might say 'no'?

            We won't know until everyone publishes their memoirs. I imagine absurd reasoning is entirely on the table. Given the administration's blind luck with its raid on Venezuela it assumed that scaling up the same plan would function, without realising how fortunate it was the first time. Reminiscient of Blair and Kosovo leading to hubris on Iraq.

            • sugarkjube 11 minutes ago

              Not sure this was blind luck.

              They had a few people on the inside, who handed over Maduro to the US. May have been internal conflict in Venuzuela using US to get rid of Maduro.

              Maybe US also had people on the inside in Iran, but killed them by accident on the first strike with the "precision bombings".

              • Quarrelsome 4 minutes ago

                I think they were extremely fortunate that their complex plan actually went off without a hitch. Its quite a lot of moving parts and hoping that certain people will react in certain ways.

                > Maybe US also had people on the inside in Iran, but killed them by accident on the first strike with the "precision bombings".

                Yeah but no. Iran isn't Venezuela by a long shot, extremely different properties all round. Its hubris to think what worked out well in one case would apply to a completely different one on the other side of the world.

          • mikkupikku an hour ago

            > Was this started as a resource war, or as a money-making scheme, or as a distraction from the Epstein files, or just because DJT developed actual old age dementia after purging anyone who might say 'no'?

            Or because America is filled with demented cultists who think a two thousand year old property dispute is the key to triggering the Apocalypse so they can all be whisked away to paradise.

  • phyzome 39 minutes ago

    Ooh, ooh, is it because it would be mindnumbingly stupid?

    [reads article]

    Yep, got it in one!

    • Mathnerd314 34 minutes ago

      to quote: "in the Persian Gulf today, the Navy grasps the reality of the circumstances, recognizing that it simply can’t sail into the strait without risk getting blown to smithereens by Iran’s missiles. Today, its carriers are stationed well outside the Gulf and the ranges of Iranian missiles."

    • lotsofpulp 37 minutes ago

      Americans have been sold an image of the US being an omnipotent presence, due to its Navy. It is a legitimate question to wonder why a relatively weak, long embargoed country has the power to control the waters when the US has spent a pretty penny on all these warplanes and aircraft carriers.

      If little Iran can prevent the US from being able to establish security in a little straight, it (ideally) shatters that image and causes some soul searching for what US taxpayers are buying with the military.

      • b00ty4breakfast 29 minutes ago

        You can lose a game of chess to a guy with fewer and less powerful pieces than you if you play like a moron. The US has been playing the Iran situation like a gigantic moron.

        • lotsofpulp 17 minutes ago

          Maybe I am misinformed, but I was under the impression that the US was so capable it is not even playing the same game as a country like Iran. As in they could brute force solutions due to superior technology and infrastructure, because that is how much more the US spends on it.

      • nickff 12 minutes ago

        Iran does not 'control the waters', it is denying access; this is an importance difference. Lacking control means that Iran cannot make use of many of its naval assets, which they have invested in.

  • kashunstva 12 hours ago

    Whether or not professional military strategists and planners anticipated this shift in carrier-based projection of power in the era of low-cost drones, it is nearly certain that the Commander-in-Chief of the United States military has not. And if the Commander is involved in the either the day-to-day operations or the strategic level of planning, I can’t imagine that whatever reasoning about these shifts in power dynamics has taken place will influence U.S. operations.

    • jandrewrogers 16 minutes ago

      An aerial drone capable of materially damaging a modern navy ship costs $1-2M a piece. Anything much cheaper doesn't have the range, survivability, or required warhead to do much more than scratch the paint.

      A cheap drone is only useful against soft targets. It is the reason Ukraine is scaling up heavy cruise missile production even though they already have vast numbers of cheap long-range drones. Being "cheap" isn't of much value if it is incapable of doing meaningful damage to the desired target.

      The US has been designing and building thousands of anti-ship drones since the 1970s. It isn't like they have no experience with the concept and those drones are far more capable than anything Iran has. The US Navy has assumed drone swarms as a threat model for half a century.

    • JumpCrisscross 12 hours ago

      > this shift in carrier-based projection of power in the era of low-cost drones

      Nothing in this war has suggested carriers are obsolete. A carrier that launches drones and fields an anti-drone strike group would be amazing. We don’t have that. (And even what we do have is great in the carrier department, it’s given us air parity to superiority from way offshore.)

      • Quarrelsome 33 minutes ago

        Would it not be preferable to launch drones from less of a big target? The issue is that the carrier is clearly visible and targetable. You could go submersible or just spam much smaller ships with smaller payloads. In those cases you get the benefits of the same level of assault without the potential of a hugely expensive loss.

        At a guess, I assume much of the scale of carriers is tied to the logistics of air power, which are considerably less relevant in drone warfare. Carriers will always remain useful for more accurate strikes and operating aircraft that work at higher altitudes, but this broadside idea of volume might work better on a platform that scales better instead of the huge and expensive carrier footprint.

        • jandrewrogers 9 minutes ago

          Large aircraft are the cheapest and most scalable way to deliver a ton of explosive on target. That's why aircraft carriers exist. Everything else either is too expensive per unit of destruction or sacrifices too much lethality.

          The size of the ship has little bearing on the visibility of it to sensors. You should also consider that it is much more difficult to sink a large ship than a small ship.

          • Quarrelsome 7 minutes ago

            sure but if we're simply delivering drones then it might be better to have 1,000 small platforms than one big one. You can then still use the carrier in its classical role from further back.

        • randomNumber7 26 minutes ago

          I think this strategy is effective for Ukraine and Iran because they fight an enemy that is superior in terms of weapon capabilities.

          If you are the big boy with the bigger gun you don't necessarily need that.

          PS: I will take that back when someone manages to hit a carrier with a low cost drone boat.

          • Quarrelsome 22 minutes ago

            sure but America's ship building doesn't appear to be at the level of being able to cranking out carriers should they start losing them. Conversely I imagine it might have a better shot at cranking out a smaller blue print en-masse.

      • avianlyric 12 hours ago

        If a carrier can launch fields of drones and missiles, then whatever land mass your attacking can launch more, given they obviously have a lot more space.

        The change in dynamic here isn’t a function of carriers or their abilities. It’s a change in the cost of drones and missiles. The cost of a “good enough” drone and missile is now so low that opponents of the US can simply build the thing faster than the US can build and deliver them. In effect the technological advantage is that carriers represented for a long time has been completely neutralised.

        • JumpCrisscross 12 hours ago

          > If a carrier can launch fields of drones and missiles, then whatever land mass your attacking can launch more

          This is also true of airplanes. The point is you choose where you launch your drones from anywhere in the world.

          > change in dynamic here isn’t a function of carriers or their abilities. It’s a change in the cost of drones and missiles

          It's a return to battleship economics. Except instead of direct fire from and onto shores, you have indirect fire via drones. Unlike shells, however, we have anti-drone capabilities on the horizon.

          It's silly to assume the current instability will persist for more than a few years. If the U.S. were paying any attention to Ukraine, it shouldn't have persisted until even now.

          > the technological advantage is that carriers represented for a long time has been completely neutralised

          Really not seeing the argument. Again, being able to build and launch and being able to field drones–alongside other weapons–is night and day. (Note that all of these arguments were made when missiles first dawned, too. Drones are, in many respects, a missile for area denial.)

          • panarky 4 hours ago

            The big lesson from the US/Israel war against Iran is that the power balance has shifted away from strike capability toward defense magazine depth.

            You can't win with stand-off strike capability. You can't seize and control territory, you can't keep strategic choke-points open, you can't change regimes.

            But you can definitely lose by spending two or three multi-million dollar air defense interceptors per incoming projectile that costs 10x to 100x less. Especially when your supply chain can only produce hundreds of interceptors per year and your adversary makes that many missiles per month and 10x that many drones per month.

            • JumpCrisscross 3 hours ago

              > You can't win with stand-off strike capability. You can't seize and control territory, you can't keep strategic choke-points open, you can't change regimes

              To be clear, there is zero historic evidence—going back to the Blitz—that strategic bombing has ever been able to do any of these things.

              Except the one about choke points. That isn’t strategic. It’s tactical. And using artillery or airpower for shaping operations absolutely works.

              > you can definitely lose by spending two or three multi-million dollar air defense interceptors per incoming projectile that costs 10x to 100x less

              Agree. Fortunately, the MIC seems to have recognized this. None of it fundamentally changes the value of carriers. It just means they need to be defended differently from before. Sort of how you can’t sent lone carriers out into the ocean, they have to be escorted.

            • rurp 3 hours ago

              I agree with all of this except the notion that this is a recent change. Infantry being needed to seize and hold territory has been standard military doctrine around the world throughout history. Air power can tip the balance between opposing armies but has never been enough to settle a war alone. I'm confident that every person working in the Pentagon is aware of all this, aside from the SecDef.

              I'm also not aware of a single case in history where a massive bombing campaign from a hostile country resulted in an immediate populist uprising and a regime change that favored that aggressor country. Having your city bombed for weeks on end tends to cause people to shelter where they can, worry solely about how they will survive the wreckage, and bond with their fellow citizens.

              The fact that an air campaign and magical thinking was the complete game plan from trump and hegseth shows how utterly unqualified they are for the positions they have.

          • ethbr1 3 hours ago

            > It's a return to battleship economics.

            The real economics of battleships (and their precursor ships of the line) were:

            Given expensive armaments (cannon), it is cheaper to concentrate these on a mobile platform that can geographically reposition itself than build / deploy / supply equivalent power everywhere, and the former allows for local overmatch.

            Sufficiently cheap and powerful unmanned guided munitions (drones, cheap cruise/ballistic missiles, UAV/USV/UUVs) are a fundamentally different balance of power, especially with enough range.

            What does make sense is a return to cheaper escort carriers, where the carrier should be as cheap as possible (preferably unmanned) as the platforms it hosts are no longer exquisite.

      • citrin_ru 12 hours ago

        Both can be true - carriers and traditional air force are not obsolete but also western armies are unprepared to deal with the threat posed by a large number of cheap drones which can quickly deplete traditional air defense (based on SAM systems).

        • guzfip 9 hours ago

          Wasn’t this the exact sort of reason we were developing laser weapons? I thought at least one US Navy ship was equipped with one now.

          • citrin_ru 6 hours ago

            From what I see in news both the US and the UK are using expensive missiles to shut down Shahed drones and laser weapons are not mentioned at all - either they are too rare or not yet working reliably enough to risk letting a drone to get withing the range or laser weapons (which I assume is smaller than for missiles).

            • jandrewrogers a minute ago

              The US relies primarily on a weapon system called APKWS to shoot down drones. These guided missiles are cheaper than a Shahed. A single fighter jet can carry ~40 of them.

              These weapons have been around since the early 2010s, they aren't new, and have been deployed in the Middle East for many years. They were literally designed for killing swarms of Shahed-style drones.

            • marcosdumay an hour ago

              I dunno about what Israel is doing, but a ship usually has enough power to fire 1 or 2 lasers at a time. It takes 10s of seconds to destroy a drone, and each drone stays in range for 1 or 2 minutes.

              Or, that is their advertised capabilities. Countries that buy them usually complain that they don't work as well on practice.

              • thaumasiotes 37 minutes ago

                Well, assume the advertised capabilities are realistic. Assume it takes 15 seconds to destroy a drone, the drone stays in range for 2 minutes, and you can fire on 2 drones at a time.

                You can destroy 16 drones every 2 minutes. If you get attacked by 50 drones, you'll get 16-20 of them. Did that help you?

                • marcosdumay 20 minutes ago

                  Yes, the scenario makes it clearer.

                  I mean, they are helpful (if they work as well as the marketing material says). Just not transformative or sufficient.

      • khalic 12 hours ago

        Lol carriers were already being overwhelmed by regular missiles, this now means a multi billion dollar ship can and will be destroyed by cheap drones if it's anywhere near its optimal deployment zone.

        • JumpCrisscross 12 hours ago

          > carriers were already being overwhelmed by regular missiles

          Where? When?

          > if it's anywhere near its optimal deployment zone

          What are you referring to? The entire modern carrier strike group is architected around using stand-off weapons to clear threats to make way for stand-in weapons. The relevant ranges are what your stand-in bombers can hit without re-fuelling versus with. The era of direct firing from ships passed ages ago–that doesn't make carriers less valuable, just changes their role.

          • cosmicgadget 2 hours ago

            Did you ever hear the tragedy of USS Plagueis The Unsinkable?

            • 1659447091 24 minutes ago

              > Did you ever hear the tragedy of USS Plagueis The Unsinkable?

              The USS Plunkett? A destroyer, not a carrier, that sustained the best the Germans could throw at her and kept on going; earning 5 battle stars while participating in all the major allied invasions in europe. What part was the tragedy of her? That she was scrapped in 1975 instead of being turned into a museum?

        • panick21_ 12 hours ago

          You have any evidence for this? Because low cost drones can't fly very far, are easy to spot with radar, are slow as hell and can be shot down with cheap intercepters, or even lasers as the US is already deploying.

          Traditional anti-shipping missiles are a bigger danger.

          The optimal deployment zone is far off shore, and there its very hard to reach.

          Is your point that you can put a huge carrier literally in the straits?

          • XorNot 25 minutes ago

            You don't even need to say "lasers" : that's the future. CIWS is already a thing today and Ukrainians have downed Shaheds with ground fire from small arms.

            There's a plethora of various low cost systems being developed for some defence, but the assumption I always see on HN and elsewhere is that for some reason cheap offensive drones will just never have a countermeasure...which isn't how any of this works (exhibit A: massed infantry assaults can sometimes work against emplaced machine guns, but in general the machine gun was the end of that tactic).

            There is absolutely no reason that the current disruption drones are causing should lead to some sustained power imbalance: if you don't have the big laser today that's one thing, but if tomorrow you're scoring 100% intercept rates against the same threat then how cheap it is doesn't matter anymore. And there's no particular reason to think that won't be the case (if a cheap drone can be on the offensive, you'd have to present a very good case why the interceptor cannot be built in similar quantities at which point you're back to high end systems deciding the day).

          • mrguyorama an hour ago

            Also the standard Shahed-136 style drones carry less than 200 pounds of explosives, and deliver that to the surface of a target.

            Antiship missiles carry larger warheads, often double the size, and deliver that warhead deep inside a warship where it is much more vulnerable. A shahed blowing up on a carrier deck will be upsetting but won't do much. With particularly egregious negligence of standard US Navy damage control methodology, you might cause a lot of damage by fire, like what happened to the Ford. Not that I'm suggesting it was hit by a Shahed.

      • mcphage 9 hours ago

        > Nothing in this war has suggested carriers are obsolete.

        What are ours doing during this war?

        • dingaling 4 hours ago

          Adding 70+ strike and AEW aircraft apiece, individually more than most national air forces could muster.

        • cosmicgadget 2 hours ago

          Are you joking? Sending F-18s into the air.

          • mcphage 2 hours ago

            No, just asking—I know they're staying out of the gulf, but I don't know how involved they are, and I figured someone here did.

            • chasd00 an hour ago

              They're the only thing involved pretty much. The gulf nations have not allowed the US to launch from their bases in the region. Maybe that will change as they keep getting attacked but as of now the carriers (and now the base on Cyprus) are where the planes are coming from. The strategic bombers, prior to Cyprus, were taking off from the US and flying all the way to Iran and back.

              • fakedang 8 minutes ago

                > The gulf nations have not allowed the US to launch from their bases in the region.

                This is a categorically false assertion that they have been putting to assuage their local populations - which are heavily opposed to the war and the US support. Maybe not all of them, but some of them, like the UAE and Saudi Arabia, are clearly hosting and allowing the US to prosecute the war from their soil. If they weren't, you wouldn't have had the AWACS aircraft getting turned to smithereens in Riyadh.

    • cosmicgadget 2 hours ago

      How exactly do drones project power globally?

      • jacquesm 2 hours ago
        • cosmicgadget an hour ago

          Clandestine power projection. Neat!

          • jacquesm an hour ago

            Somewhere in the next decade we'll wake up to a large military base, port or airport utterly wrecked by some party spending << $100k.

            • XorNot 21 minutes ago

              Operation Spiderweb was not a power projection exercise though, it was an espionage mission.

              This is like arguing you don't need a military because you'll just have 1 spy turn the enemies own weapons on them.

              Sure...its not that it can't work, but there's more then a few issues with the strategic plan.

              • jacquesm 17 minutes ago

                Fair, it's not an aircraft carrier. But you can turn any container vessel into a cheap rough equivalent. Take the coastline, then maybe 30 km inland and see what installations you could reach. Pearl Harbor on a shoestring budget is a realistic threat now.

        • dmitrygr an hour ago

          >> How exactly do drones project power globally?

          > https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Spiderweb

          "The next country over" != Worldwide

          • jacquesm an hour ago

            You could do this anywhere in the world for a very small amount of money.

            The implications of the Ukrainian war have changed the balance of power for ever. No airport will ever be safe again.

            • dmitrygr an hour ago

              sneaking weapons into some countries is harder than into others, making things that fly long distances gets exponentially harder as distance goes up linearly.

              • jacquesm an hour ago

                That's true, but when things get cheaper you can afford to lose a lot of them. Suddenly every container vessel is suspect. That trick has a lot of potential and harbors are relatively soft targets and easily accessible from just outside international waters. You could do a shitload of damage to most countries by just targeting a few key locations well within the reach of a basic drone and what sub $1000 drones can do is changing by the day.

                Armor and artillery are basically useless against a fleet of seaborne drones.

                • chasd00 35 minutes ago

                  you don't have to do a lot of damage to have a dramatic effect either. Imagine an airport near the coast, you don't have to destroy the airport but if one drone flattens the tires on one out of ever 50 planes on a runway the airport might as well be a smoldering crater. It's like a ddos attack and similar to what's happening in Iran today. All it takes is one drone to hit one tanker and a > 0% of it happening again and no one is sailing because their payload is uninsurable. In the same way, all it takes is one drone to disable one airliner and a credible threat it could happen again and no plane is taking off from that airport ever again.

      • John23832 an hour ago

        If I you can project power globally , but as soon as a human is put on the ground they're disintegrated by a 100 dollar drone, how important was your ability to get there?

  • fooker 12 hours ago

    At the heart of this is the fact that America has lost the capability to manufacture anything at scale.

    High tech interceptors and missiles and aircraft carriers are great, but with China's help these are outnumbered by three (soon to be four) orders of magnitude.

    It's unclear if we can do much other than threaten sanctions and nukes, with not much in between.

    • JumpCrisscross 12 hours ago

      > America has lost the capability to manufacture anything at scale

      We make plenty of stuff at scale. We just haven’t designed any of military around it since WWII.

      > unclear if we can do much other than threaten sanctions and nukes

      We could learn from our allies in Ukraine. Give them capital and manufacturing bases in America.

      • scrubs 24 minutes ago

        We (the US) probably spend too much per munition and do not have manufacturing capacity like China. We're not helpless, but i dont get the sense we have plenty of stock either. Both are problems.

        (1) In this back and forth I'm surprised mines in the straight are not mentioned.

        (2) im having difficulty seeing how cheap drones incapacitates a carrier. They are there to project force well into enemy territory for precise strikes. The carrier can be some distance from the shore. Now, the question turns to strike what? Surely drone manufacturing plants and barracks would have to be on list or ... they'd be less effective.

        (3) if drones are sub-mach speeds why not shoot down with a glorified gattleling gun as opposed to expensive missiles or lasers?

        • beachy 3 minutes ago

          (3) To take down a single drone, you'd probably need a few seconds of fire from a Phalanx CIWS, which fires about 75 rounds per second at roughly 46 dollars each, so about 3,500 dollars per second of continuous fire.

          So call it somewhere in the neighbourhood of $7K to $20K in ammunition alone, depending on how long it takes to hit the drone.

          The big difference from a laser is that the laser has a high up front cost but very low/near zero cost per shot - much better economics for a war of stock attrition.

          There are no single silver bullets though in the anti-drone warfare. Lasers, guns, jamming, taking out the operators, intercetpr drones - they all have a place. Anti-drone warfare is a high tech race.

      • pjc50 12 hours ago

        > We could learn from our allies in Ukraine. Give them capital and manufacturing bases in America

        I think the Ukranians are still unimpressed with the withdrawal of US support, especially from the shells which were being manufactured in the US (now moved to Rheinmetall), and the de-sanctioning of Russian oil: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cm2871wyz9ko

        • NooneAtAll3 an hour ago

          Ukrainians are unimpressed that US no longer supports war to exhaustion. US in unimpressed that Ukraine supported other side in elections

          Problem is that US wants to distance itself instead of ending the conflict

          • CamperBob2 2 minutes ago

            US in unimpressed that Ukraine supported other side in elections

            Considering that Trump literally tried to blackmail Zelenskyy in his first term, why on earth would they have supported him in 2020?

          • Quarrelsome 11 minutes ago

            > US in unimpressed that Ukraine supported other side in elections

            Sorry, what is "the other side" exactly?

          • Erem 34 minutes ago

            Did I miss something? When did Ukraine support any side in elections?

      • fooker 12 hours ago

        > We make plenty of stuff at scale

        Maybe this video of a rather famous YouTuber trying to manufacture something as simple as a grill scrubber with a US supply chain would help you understand how bad it is?

        https://youtu.be/3ZTGwcHQfLY

        • mmh0000 6 hours ago

          TL;DW: skip to 17m55s for the important bit

          [1] https://youtu.be/3ZTGwcHQfLY?t=1075

          • tim333 30 minutes ago

            That talks about how they couldn't find someone US side to make the injection moulding moulds. We used to have a manufacturing business in the UK and got quotes for some moulds in the 1980s. You could get it done in the UK but the cost to get it from China was 1/5 as much. I guess people just went with the cheaper option.

            • nickff 4 minutes ago

              You can still get molds made in the USA, but they are indeed much more expensive than an equivalent one made in PRoC, and options/expertise are often more limited or specialized (depending on how you look at it). It is very difficult, but not impossible to make consumer products in the USA.

          • fooker 6 hours ago

            There are multiple interesting bits, worth watching the whole thing at some point.

            Something that stuck with me was that dude had an uncle that worked at a bolt factory down the road, and now there is literally no way to source domestically made bolts. And that they could find one retired guy after scouring multiple states who could help make an injection mold. I'm sure some of the larger defense contractors have a few guys who can do this, but that makes for a pretty low bus factor.

            • quickthrowman 10 minutes ago

              > Something that stuck with me was that dude had an uncle that worked at a bolt factory down the road, and now there is literally no way to source domestically made bolts.

              US manufactured fasteners are available*, the Build America, Buy America Act created a market for them. You’re not going to find them at Home Depot or your local hardware store, professional supply houses will sell them to you.

              Waivers are available if no US supplier is available, but there usually is a US supplier.

              I assume bolt manufacturing is automated to the point where you load up a CNC machine with steel hex stock and get boxes of bolts on the other end, there’s not a ton of labor involved. The machine cuts the hex stock to length, then removes material to create a cylindrical shaft and then threads are cut.

              * By US manufactured, I mean ‘compliant with BABAA requirements’, which is something like 55% of the materials and manufactured here.

          • rented_mule 5 hours ago

            I saw hints of this ~20 years ago. I was working on software for a consumer device. For manufacturing it, we chose Foxconn. One non-negotiable point from their end was that they had to write some of the software on the device. They didn't care which part or how small.

            The device had a physical keyboard with a micocontroller that managed it and they ended up writing the code that ran on that micro as it was largely independent of the code we were writing, and easy for us to test. The first versions were not great, but they got better quickly.

            As we talked amongst ourselves about why they were so emphatic about this, it became clear to us that they were taking a long term view of the importance of moving into the intellectual property side of things. Dustin points out that, in some areas, they are there.

          • slumberlust 4 hours ago

            No thanks. Watched the whole thing since its a great channel with great content.

      • giantg2 12 hours ago

        "We make plenty of stuff at scale."

        Not the stuff that matters (chips, electronics, metals, etc). We don't even have a primary lead smelter, which we would likely need if we got into a peer conflict.

        It's also important to note that the US lacks the ability to quickly pivot and set up plants. Much of the knowledge to do so has been disappearing as employment in that sector has been steadily declining for decades. Sure we make stuff at scale using automation, but that automation can't be changed to significantly different stuff in a reasonable timeframe.

        • JumpCrisscross 12 hours ago

          We suck at ultra-heavy industry that outputs commodities. We're great at light industry, or specialised heavy industry, which includes a lot of electronics. You're correct on inflexibility.

          • fooker 12 hours ago

            Can you give some specific examples of what light industry we are great at?

            • JumpCrisscross 11 hours ago

              Pharmaceuticals, medical devices and craft food and beverage products come to mind. Guns and ammo, too.

              • giantg2 8 hours ago

                Yeah, even if we can produce them now, we don't have the pipeline to keep them running - steel for guns comes from other countries, we don't have a primary lead smelter in the country, medical devices that rely on electronics rely on foreign components, etc. The only reason pharma can operate here is because of the regulations, and even then many components chemicals are sourced internationally.

                • tcmart14 14 minutes ago

                  Worked as a chemical systems technician for a bit. Can confirm, lots of the chemicals we used (most, some of which were pharma grade but we weren't pharma), had to come from either China or Germany. And we really did try to source as much in the US as possible. So it wasn't even a question of cost, it was simply no one here wanted to make what we needed.

                  Now granted, I'm not naive enough to think we should be able to be self-sufficient and manufacture everything ourselves. I think it is fine to import stuff. My bigger concern is, for some things, there just isn't a lot of options. I think its fine to buy some of the raw materials from Germany and China, but I'd also like to see a few more countries that they could be bought from.

                • fooker 6 hours ago

                  We don't even produce things like bolts, screws, and springs.

                  If we suddenly had to, it would take billions of dollars and several months to spin up any real capacity.

                • hypeatei 6 hours ago

                  A quarter of steel used in the U.S. is imported, and of that quarter, 40% comes from Mexico and Canada; very little comes from China[0]. So, not only does your point fall flat, the people we get steel from are our neighbors so it'd make sense to not sour with relationships with them like the current admin is doing with chaotic trade policy and invasion threats.

                  I really don't understand the FUD around US manufacturing capability, you'd essentially need to craft the greatest conspiracy ever to think that every politician, defense agency, intelligence agency, etc. is asleep at the wheel to not recognize this supposed threat and do nothing about it.

                  0: https://www.reuters.com/markets/commodities/where-does-us-ge...

                  • fooker 6 hours ago

                    > 40% comes from Mexico and Canada

                    Where do you think this originates from?

                    China ships a rather large amount of stuff to these countries to take advantage of the trade agreements. So much that you can find satellite images of large yards in Mexico that are used for this purpose with barely any effort.

                    • hypeatei 5 hours ago

                      Okay, let's assume most of their steel is Chinese (I have my doubts because, yet again, more conspiracies), we only import a quarter of the steel we use. That would hurt losing it overnight, sure, but we wouldn't be absolutely toast like the autarkists are saying.

                      These takes are much more doomer than I'm willing to bet the supporters of "bring everything back" realize. Do you have no faith in the US economy / populace adapting to a hypothetical all out war with China?

                      • giantg2 4 hours ago

                        I have a feeling that China doesn't export much steel. They more likely export their steel in the form of finished products.

      • jacquesm an hour ago

        > We could learn from our allies in Ukraine.

        Should have worn a suit.

        The US is not an ally of Ukraine, it sees Ukraine as a nuisance that should have rolled over long ago but somehow refuses to and because the US still needs Europe for a bit longer (but maybe not that much longer) they're still playing ball as long as Europe pays (as it should, but that's besides the point).

        Allies come to each others aid, the US has all but abandoned Ukraine after Trump came to power and did far less than it could have done early on. Why you would expect Ukraine to be generous after the numerous put downs and actions that were clearly organized to benefit Putin is a mystery to me.

        • pedroma an hour ago

          This sentiment is very popular in Europe. From the perspective of the American, it's like, help was offered for 90% of the time in the Ukraine conflict, then we took a break and suddenly we are more an enemy than China. From my point of view, the pushing away is not one-sided like Europeans like to portray, but has been mutual for awhile.

          • jacquesm 44 minutes ago

            I think when you start to threaten your former allies by wanting to attack/invade them you probably should be dinged in the trust department for that.

            The same goes for when you try to strongarm a country into fabricating evidence to shore up your lies.

            The USA was an ally in 1945 and has since steadily eroded that. In 2001 they briefly regained a lot of sympathy but squandered it just as fast and now we're at low tide. And I wonder how much lower it will go before people with common sense will be back at the helm and reparation of the relationship can begin, but I don't expect the aftershocks of this to be gone quickly.

            And no, help was not offered '90% of the time'. Most of the time it was just business in disguise, altruism did not factor into it as far as I can see.

            • pedroma 41 minutes ago

              Would you say we're worse than China these days (if so, what % of the time did China help Ukraine in the conflict)?

              • Quarrelsome 9 minutes ago

                I would suggest that China are currently a more reliable partner than the US because of their predictability, given that I cannot be sure whether or not this statement alone might result in a change of tariffs for my nation at the whim of America's king. I'm still looking for congress in all of this (did they ever even approve this war in Iran?!?) but idk if the republic is a thing anymore or not.

              • jacquesm 33 minutes ago

                Both China and the USA have made many moves that benefit Putin. I would say neither party is a friend of Ukraine. China plays its own long games and the USA is being run by madmen. Why do I have to prefer one over the other? I don't like the way either is behaving on the world stage, and each for different reasons.

                • pedroma 30 minutes ago

                  >Why do I have to prefer one over the other? I don't like the way either is behaving on the world stage, and each for different reasons.

                  This is the perfect encapsulation of what I mean in my original response to you. This IS the popular European sentiment. And this is what is off-putting to many Americans. The weight of China and the US is not even worth preference, despite the US having contributed positively to the Ukrainian conflict and European defense. We are not even WORTHY of being placed above China, we're either just as bad or worse is the typical response I see.

                  • jacquesm 24 minutes ago

                    You seem to be completely out of touch with the way the USA has been behaving towards the EU as of late, maybe get with the times and then report back.

                    Last I checked China hasn't threatened to take over either Canada or Greenland, has not started any major wars for which they expect the EU to pay for cleaning up their mess, has reasonably sane leadership and on top of that has been a fairly trustworthy business partner that does not engage in whim driven economic warfare. They also have a bunch of very dark sides that I am going to assume we are all familiar with.

                    I really wonder why you think that the USA should be given a free pass for what it has done in the last decade.

                    And that's before we get into human rights issues and other 'details'. Comparing yourself to China is not the flex you think it is.

                    Your bio says that "Farming negative karma is not trolling when you're expressing your honest views." and that's all fine, you have a right to your honest views but if they're indistinguishable from trolling to the point that you feel you need to pre-empt that classification then maybe HN is not the place for you?

                • pedroma 13 minutes ago

                  The reply chain got too long so I will respond here.

                  >You seem to be completely out of touch with the way the USA has been behaving towards the EU as of late, maybe get with the times and then report back. Last I checked China hasn't threatened to take over either Canada or Greenland, has not started any major wars for which they expect the EU to pay for cleaning up their mess, has reasonably sane leadership and on top of that has been a fairly trustworthy business partner that does not engage in whim driven economic warfare. They also have a bunch of very dark sides that I am going to assume we are all familiar with.

                  I'm aware of everything you've said. What I've noticed is Europeans just like to bash on the US given any reason. My original point is (proven by the exact quote of your words) that this type of European sentiment is accelerating a two-sided voluntary parting. Nothing much more than that. I am not defending the US's actions.

                  >Comparing yourself to China is not the flex you think it is.

                  Once again you are proving my point. Europeans are typically not willing to place the US above China. Any attempt to get them to do so will provoke this type of response.

                  >Your bio says that "Farming negative karma is not trolling when you're expressing your honest views." and that's all fine, you have a right to your honest views but if they're indistinguishable from trolling to the point that you feel you need to pre-empt that classification then maybe HN is not the place for you?

                  Calling me a troll is just an attack on me and not my argument. That's ok though, no offense taken. The bio is provocation for people who dig into people's profiles. I don't like to do that. I just take the person's posts as is.

                  • jacquesm 4 minutes ago

                    > Europeans are typically not willing to place the US above China.

                    This is not a scalar, it is a multi-dimensional array with tons of values that all individually can be ranked. One some of these the USA is better than China on others it is definitely not. You may want to collapse that all to a single 'but we're better' picture but that is just not how the world works.

                    > The bio is provocation for people who dig into people's profiles. I don't like to do that. I just take the person's posts as is.

                    And that's not true either because you clearly checked my account upthread to link it to Europe.

          • angry_octet 40 minutes ago

            This is absurdist Russian disinfo. If you're not Russian, your information sources are poisoned.

            • pedroma 39 minutes ago

              Does this mean the person I'm responding to is a Russian disinfo agent?

      • s1artibartfast 8 hours ago

        I think there's very little to be learned from Ukrainian technology. They dont have unprecedented servos, software, or manufacturing.

        What they have is a dire situation that drives efficient and pragmatic proucurement. This is much harder to export.

        • freefaler 7 hours ago

          They have a working operational system and battle tested tactics, not only procurement. It's not the rifle that distinguishes the special forces, but how it's used.

          They built a network centric warefare with starlink and cheap android tablets down to the drone teams in the field.

          They built a network of cheap acousting sensors (old phones) as passive sensors and using ML models to find the drones cheaply and increase the coverage. (Radars are expensive and easy to hit because they emit).

          What they achieved is a "sensor fusion like" distributed system buid on cheap components and updated realtime. And all this is battle tested in the new environment of transparent battlefield (there is always a drone looking).

          Also a lot of real-life electronic warfare stuff and drone applications.

          This is what's missing in the US army. They are optimized for a symetrical 20th century warfare.

          • maxglute 5 hours ago

            UKR = entire country of +40m is on the battlefront so they can do total war mobilized homefront distributed system... so can Iran. But it's very different for force projecting security guarantor US - can't convince paying protectorates to pivot total war defense posture in peacetime, that's what they bribe US not to do.

            And ultimately whatever model of distributed lethality / survivability (which US planning foresaw) is less relevant that US global commitments requires high end hardware that has to be rotated / propositioned selectively, and sustainable only in limited numbers vs adversaries mobilized on total war.

            But the fundamental problem is US adversaries are catching up on precision strike complex. Iran isn't asymmetric warfare, but restoration of symmetry. It's not so much US getting weaker as adversaries getting stronger, and without monopoly over mass precision strike (which naval / air superiority / supremacy is only delivery platform), US expeditionary mode simply on the losing side of many local attrition scenarios. Ultimately all US adversaries will gain commoditized local precision strike (even deadlier if bundled with high end ISR), at varying scales due to proliferation requiring persistence across global theatres US simply doesn't have numbers/logistics for.

            TLDR: US expeditionary model is bunch of goons with rifles in trucks, driving around neighbourhood where everyone had knives that could not get in range. The second everyone else buys guns, then rifles, the expeditionary model breaks.

      • SideburnsOfDoom 10 hours ago

        > We could learn from our allies in Ukraine. Give them capital and manufacturing bases in America.

        That is happening, only with "EU" not "America". Because the EU are Ukraine's allies.

        https://kyivindependent.com/ukraine-to-open-10-weapons-expor...

        https://www.politico.eu/article/ukraine-to-open-arms-factory...

        https://euobserver.com/209049/eu-signs-off-on-e260m-grant-fo...

        As for the US being Ukrainian allies as compared to EU, well: https://kyivindependent.com/us-military-aid-to-ukraine-dropp...

      • generic92034 12 hours ago

        > We could learn from our allies in Ukraine. Give them capital and manufacturing bases in America.

        But Putin would not like that! /s

      • pydry 11 hours ago

        >We could learn from our allies in Ukraine. Give them capital and manufacturing bases in America.

        The soviet union collapsed as a result of military overspending and massive supply chain corruption in an attempt to keep up with an opponent with lower levels of corruption and a far more powerful industrial base.

        Which is to say, inviting the gold toilet brigade from Ukraine to come and build our weapons while showering them with cash would signal that that Christmas came early for Putin.

        • pjc50 11 hours ago

          Reality of course is the other way around: the US defense industry gets to build gold toilets (for the White House ballroom built on the ruins of the East Wing), while the Ukranians absolutely must build stuff that works and is cheap or they get a missile on their heads.

          The US survived spending a trillion dollars to achieve very little in Iraq and Afghanistan. I'm sure they'll survive spending another trillion over a decade to achieve nothing in Iran other than hundreds of thousands dead.

          • justacrow 8 hours ago

            What do you mean "achieve very little"? A lot of American oligarchs made boatloads of money!

          • pydry 10 hours ago

            The reality is that most of the Ukrainian leadership is like Timur Mindich - furiously stashing away cash for the day when they inevitably have to flee to the west like he did. For now they are generally safe in Ukraine as Russia avoids bombing leadership centers for strategic reasons.

            The west tolerates nearly all of the corruption in Ukraine but keeps tight control of two political organs in Ukraine - NABU and SAPO.

            These "anti corruption agencies" will mostly hear and see no evil until a politican in Ukraine deviates from western foreign policy goals. Then they "discover" how corrupt this one individual turned out to be and crack down on them until everybody is once again on the same page.

            Twice they have threatened Zelensky (once when he tried to bring the agencies under his direct control) and twice he has backed down.

            • fooker 6 hours ago

              Leaders being corrupt is not a great reason to let a country get steamrolled by the russian war machine

              • pydry 6 hours ago

                It's inevitable now. If they didn't want to let the country get steamrolled then Zelensky probably should have signed the "keep the NATO war machine out of Ukraine" Istanbul deal from 2022.

                Given the nature of the US war machine and how prone it is to acts of extreme terrorism (as we are seeing in this war), Russia is logically (albeit quite brutally) trying to keep it away from its most vulnerable border.

                • cosmicgadget 2 hours ago

                  Being steamrolled requires Russia have the logistics to drive a steamroller more than a hundred yards. There is a reason it was intended to be a three day war.

                  Bombing a school is unconscionable but its a shadow of Russia's crimes in Ukraine.

                • fooker 6 hours ago

                  It has been inevitable for more that three years, I'm sure you'll be proven right any day now!

                  • pydry 2 hours ago

                    No, three years ago it was inevitable that "Russian economy was going to collapse".

                    Two years ago was the year of the crimean beach party (after the inevitably successful summer offensive).

                    One year ago was "invading Kursk will inevitably achieve... something".

                    And now the story is "stalemate was inevitable".

                    Next year will be the story of "Russia is winning, yes, but at what cost?"

        • JumpCrisscross 11 hours ago

          > inviting the gold toilet brigade from Ukraine to come and build our weapons

          Ukraine is a massive weapons manufacturer. It's a small country holding Russia's entire military-industrial complex at bay. We have a lot to learn from them, even if it's just tactics and industrial organisation. And those lessons don't only apply to fighting pisspot dictatorships like Putin's.

    • petesergeant 12 hours ago

      Sorry, at the heart of this is that the Commander in Chief and Secretary of War are idiots. It's not clear how any of this situation would be any different if America had a dramatically higher production capacity.

      • fooker 11 hours ago

        These are orthogonal problems.

        Getting into this war was stupid.

        Being unable to win it is also pretty bad.

        • pjc50 11 hours ago

          Clausewitz would say they are the same: the stupid war is the continuation of stupid politics by other means. The objectives are unclear, which prevents them being achieved.

        • petesergeant 10 hours ago

          These are the same problem. Getting into this war was stupid because it's virtually impossible to win it.

      • chneu 9 hours ago

        Correction: Hegseth is a crusader. He is a super zealous religious fanatic who very much wants to destroy as many Muslims as possible. He has a crusades tattoo and openly talks about killing heathens in his WEEKLY SERMON. He might be an idiot alcoholic, but he very much knows what he is doing.

        • petesergeant 8 hours ago

          > he very much knows what he is doing

          Nothing about how this war is going suggests he has any idea what he’s doing as SecWar

          • caycep an hour ago

            I mean he's even not that great at his chosen profession which is a television news media personality, although I am sure he knows what he is apparently trying to do, in that regard.

        • mcphage 9 hours ago

          > Correction: Hegseth is a crusader. [...SNIP...] He might be an idiot alcoholic, but he very much knows what he is doing.

          That sound like he knows what he wants to do, but that's not the same as knowing what he is doing.

          • ben_w 3 hours ago

            Indeed.

            One of the contracting things I turned down was someone who knew what they wanted to do was make Uber for aircraft.

            I turned it down because they clearly didn't know enough about this goal to fill an elevator pitch, let alone a slide deck, and I think many of the current US Secretary of XYZ leaders are similarly unaware of how vast a chasm lay between what they wanted to do and a specific, measurable, realistic, and time-constrained plan to actually achieve anything.

          • ryandrake 5 hours ago

            English language ambiguity problem. "Knows what he is doing" has two potential meanings: it could mean competence, or it could mean clear intent. I think OP meant the latter.

    • cyanydeez 12 hours ago

      is china helping ukraine also? The real "force multiplier" is basically the same as it was 100 years ago: fancy advanced tech works great to clear large, unoccupied spaces with no terrain costs; it still won't go into a jungle, climbmountains or fight in the streats.

      Whats compounding existing reality, is how cheap it is to use commercial tech from any of these manufacturing hubs, china included, and turn it into a small but persistent offensive weapon.

      So now Americas got billions of dollars worth of ammo up agains millions of dollars worth of fodder, and that won't clear the way to controlling a large, well defended plot of land.

      America's leaders are drunk and high on their own propaganda, even while Ukraine has demonstrated just how useless the old, bulky and costly tech is.

      • angry_octet 37 minutes ago

        China has been cutting off Ukraine from direct drone supplies, they have to use front companies and middlemen.

      • IAmBroom 17 minutes ago

        My theory is that China is playing wait-and-see. Likely futures:

        Russia survives; business as usual, if much poorer. China doesn't want to poison that relationship.

        Russia falls; China helpfully "adopts" the orphaned Asian lands.

        Iran falls; turmoil follows; the USA as usual (since WWII) has no plans for afterwards. Do nothing until opportunity presents itself.

        Iran survives; the US falters; wait and benefit from the opening that creates.

        I can't see a path where China picking sides in UKR/RUS nor USA/IRAN benefits China at all.

  • forinti an hour ago

    In the movie Thirteen Days, JFK mentions a book titled March of Folly by Barbara Tuchmann. I bought the book on that tip and it has an interesting chapter on Vietnam. I don't think adding a chapter on this "special operation" would even be worth it as it would just be repetitive.

    • trevithick an hour ago

      How does that book fit in the timeline? It was published in 1984.

  • poulpy123 12 hours ago

    I'm always perturbed to see people talk of mass killings so casually

    • sph 11 hours ago

      Number 1 reason why I want to see the United States of America and its very loud citizens get a taste of humble pie in this self-inflicted crisis of idiocy with global ramifications.

      Even when discussing a war that's obviously gone out of hand with no easy resolution in right, there's still this air, this attitude from American commenters that somehow the might and brilliance of the US military will prevail in the end and they can restore their position as leaders of the free world. Meanwhile the rest of the world has waited 50 years for this day.

      Let me have a little schadenfreude with my €2.20+ litre of petrol.

      • recursivedoubts 11 hours ago

        a strong majority of the united states citizens are against the war, despite a full court propaganda press against the right and a no-kings distraction op against the left

        https://www.pewresearch.org/politics/2026/03/25/americans-br...

        don't confuse american citizens with the bought-and-paid talking & tweeting heads we are forced to live with

        • pjc50 10 hours ago

          "No Kings" isn't a distraction, it's very tangible popular opposition, and they're certainly not in favor of the war?

          • recursivedoubts 10 hours ago

            It muddies the waters by focusing on divisive issues like immigration enforcement and de-emphasizing the war, preventing what could be a unified left-and-right antiwar movement.

            Plain anti-war protests could draw significant support across the political spectrum, so divisive issues are inserted as wedges. Same thing that happened in the 60's, when the anti-war movement went from a coat-and-tie affair to a laurel canyon one.

            • zzgo 8 hours ago

              If you think the No Kings movement is preventing a unified front against the war, you haven't been paying attention to the political discourse in the US since the rise of the Tea Party 15+ years ago.

            • platevoltage an hour ago

              There is no anti-war movement on the right. The only time there is, is when a Right-winger is trying to win an election. Once said right winger inevitably starts a war, the pom poms come out.

            • intended 5 hours ago

              There will be no public rapprochement between the right and the left pretty much anywhere in the world.

              They are fed by entirely different media machines.

              If you like, its a coordination problem where the various groups no longer have the commons of a shared reality to coordinate through.

              • platevoltage an hour ago

                It's not just the "media machines". These two sides have completely different moral values.

          • colordrops an hour ago

            They don't even mention the country Iran or the war by name, because it's a DNC op and the DNC also supports war in Iran. They don't mention Israel or Gaza, because the main organizers and funders are Zionist. They have no concrete demands. It's a distraction, a release valve, controlled opposition.

    • JumpCrisscross 11 hours ago

      > perturbed to see people talk of mass killings so casually

      I'm almost perturbed to not see it discussed at all. What are the casualty estimates of blasting open the Strait?

      • Caius-Cosades 10 hours ago

        I'm just going to throw some napkin pointers and rough guesstimate-arithmetics here.

        -At the very minimum you would have to search and secure 130 000 square kilometers in a mountainous region, in a hostile country where you have no popular support, and where most of the male population has had somewhere around two years of military training. To be sure that Iranians couldn't lob anti-ship missiles into the strait, you'd probably need to double or triple that area. -And that's because of anti-ship missiles, with distances ranging from few hundred kilometers to thousand or more. And only one missile needs to get through to cause a mass casualty event onboard of a warship involving hundreds of people.

        So, assuming that troops get to the shore, then there's the slight peculiarity of modern warfighting. Drones. Cheap and plentiful, with FPV drones having the range varying from 30 to 60+km, you can be assured that visitors stay on shore or island(s) will be filled with plenty of activities such as listening to never ending buzzing of drones or trying to find cover from those drones. As good as US electronic warfare efforts might be, wire-guided FPV drones don't really care. So unless the US incursion is going to be anything but a short 30 minute visit to a largely meaningless Tump island we're probably going to be looking at hundreds of casualties if we are extremely lucky. If they really want to open and "secure" the Strait, I think we're going to be looking at Russo-Ukrainian war-tier butcher's bill.

        And since that would be perfectly fine for Israel, I think that's exactly what we'll be getting. I hope I'm wrong though.

    • lpapez 12 hours ago

      The US public discourse is so dehumanized today that anyone who is not "with them" is literally not a human anymore. Even within the country itself "the leftards" are considered an obstacle which can be removed if only enough force is applied.

      Sending armed agents at protesters is seen as being the same thing as sending pest control to clear out beaver dams on the creek. Nobody cares what the beavers think, they are not human, they do not have feelings. They are simply a menace to be dealth with.

      • pydry 12 hours ago

        The supporters of imperialism all about nonviolent protest and democratic principles if it seems feasible it could bring about US foreign policy goals: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47111067

        Or, if an anonymous and uncorroborated source claims tens of thousands of said protestors were allegedly massacred.

        If it doesn't, and the strategy now involves blowing up desalinization plants ( https://apnews.com/article/trump-iran-threat-desalination-pl... ) and invoking a humanitarian crisis on the level of a nuclear catastrophe, well... then they're a bit less concerned about human rights.

      • no_shadowban_5 12 hours ago

        How long will it take in your opinion for the concentration camps (like CECOT) to be converted to Nazi-style death camps?

        • orwin 11 hours ago

          It took 8 years the last time.

    • xtiansimon 11 hours ago

      > “…getting blown to smithereens…”

      Looney Tunes language like this projects an aura of un-reality further in the article, which I like even less.

    • roenxi 11 hours ago

      There aren't a lot of alternatives - the amount of mass killing going on right now is unusually high. People can't spend all day frothing with moral outrage at the horror of it all. If something is routine there isn't much of an alternative than to discuss it as routine.

      This article is actually unusually good, I wouldn't be surprised if the site was generally anti-war. It isn't unusual for the level of analysis to be "we're the in-group, we're morally right, they're the out-group, we can't imagine they're competent, lets kill them it'll be easy". The moment people start doing serious analysis they become well-armed pacifists. As a case study; this war is part of a trend of the US hurting itself in aid of ... nothing useful for the US. The only silver lining is I don't see the Trump presidency surviving this and that might be a lesson to the next guy about trying to start fights.

      • div 11 hours ago

        It’s really quite amazing how the US went in without seemingly an iota of planning beyond “kill ayatollah for regime change”, but at this rate we will see US regime change before Iranian.

        • ZeroGravitas 10 hours ago

          Enough planning for the Secretary of War to buy defense stocks and the son of the president to own a drone manufacturing company.

          Just not planning for anything that might help "make America great again".

          • ryandrake 4 hours ago

            It's really this simple. People seem so confused as to why this administration is doing this and why this administration is doing that, but it's clearly about personal enrichment of leaders. It's not some complex 5D chess game. If you want to know why Trump did this or why Hegseth did that or why Bondi did thus, just look at who placed bets, owns stock, owns companies, and/or will be personally enriched by the decision. That's all there is to it.

    • no_shadowban_5 12 hours ago

      Didn't you read the URL?

      It's not mass killing, it's statecraft.

      It's not casual, it's responsible.

      • ghywertelling 12 hours ago

        James Cameron in Avatar: Fire and Ash makes fun of these Big Picture guys (so called ThinkTank people) towards the end.

    • andrepd 12 hours ago

      "Responsible Statecraft" they call themselves.

  • hn_throw2025 9 hours ago

    “during WWII, the US Navy… winning the U-boat war in the Atlantic”

    Sounds like typical US revisionist history.

    They developed ASDIC? HF/DF? Hedgehog? Even the depth charge?

    No, that was all the British.

    I would say technological development plus the Enigma decrypts were the biggest factor.

    • cladopa 31 minutes ago

      >No, that was all the British.

      And not even British. For example most of the Enigma decryption was the genius work of a Polish man. Britain received the immigration of half the Nobel prices of the world in a couple years as the jews escaped nazism.

    • pjmorris an hour ago

      Yes.

      "When whole squadrons of very long-range aircraft were operating out of bases in the Shetlands, Northern Ireland, Iceland, Greenland, and Newfoundland (and, after mid-1943, the Azores), and when the Bay of Biscay could be patrolled all through the night by aircraft equipped with centimetric radar, Leigh Lights, depth charges, acoustic torpedoes, even rockets, Doenitz’s submarines knew no rest." [0]

      [0] Kennedy, Paul. Engineers of Victory: The Problem Solvers Who Turned The Tide in the Second World War, from the chapter 'How to Get Convoys Safely Across the Atlantic'

  • KingOfCoders 12 hours ago

    I don't get that "Strait" discussion. Where does the Strait begin and end? If somehow the US Navy "opens" the Strait, what stops Iran to attack every ship moving in the direction of the Strait? Where does the "protection zone" start and end?

    • cosmicgadget 2 hours ago

      That's exactly why the tanker escort promises were quickly abandoned.

    • JumpCrisscross 12 hours ago

      > Where does the Strait begin and end?

      Practically speaking, the Musandam Peninsula [1]. Open that to the sea and you make everyone except Iraq and Kuwait happy.

      [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Musandam_Peninsula

      • angry_octet 19 minutes ago

        Much further than that. At least 200nm using drone ISR to cue Shaheeds, 500nm with satellite ISR. (With a 90kg warhead.) There are also many fishing vessels in the region, originating from a number of countries (e.g. Oman, Iran, Pakistan) which can report sightings of VLCCs.

        Once you have sighted the ship it is an undergrad project to implement target classification and recognition using off the shelf algorithms. It doesn't need a fast GPU because naval engagements are very slow, a cheap mobile phone can do it.

    • j_maffe 12 hours ago

      at a range where short-range anti-ship missiles can reach ships from Iranian territory.

      • angry_octet 34 minutes ago

        Not even short range. With a sensor feed from an ally they can project into the Gulf of Oman, and via Yemen the entire BaM.

        Doubtful China would provide that because they want oil, but likely Russia would, because they want high oil prices and American humiliation.

      • marcosdumay an hour ago

        So, the entire gulf?

        Actual short-range weapons can't cross the strait. The ones that can don't care much about the difference on the rest of the place.

      • Terr_ 12 hours ago

        And boats, amd submerged drones, and mines...

  • i67vw3 13 hours ago

    Not every war can be fought from air, there needs to be soldiers on the ground.

    In fight against ISIS, the Iraqi amry, Shia Militias, Kurds and others were ground forces while Allies were in Air. In Afghanistan & Gulf War, US forces were on ground.

    But in these "conflict", no party is ready to send ground forces, ground forces to stop the air drones, ship drones etc. So the "blockade" will probably continue.

    • bluegatty 12 hours ago

      There is no party even capable of doing it.

      The Gulf coastline is almost 1000 miles long, there would have to be a gigantic occupation of an area the size of a small country, at the same time as there would be 'all out war' with Iran, which would be backed by China and to a lesser extent Russia, and whereupon an invasion would provide them with millions of determined fighters.

      We're talking 'Gulf War' scale of operation against a much bigger, more capable country, and of forces willing to fight.

      And the US doesn't even have anywhere to do it from.

      Assuming a Gulf country would host an invasion force - extremely unlikely - there's no magical way for US to cross the Gulf with large numbers of forces, as we can't get capitol ships in there in the first place.

      There's no amphibious capability at the scale necessary on the Arabian Sea.

      Literally just the logistics of large scale landings is almost impossible.

      That leaves the Kuwait / Iran border, and maybe something a bit wider.

      And then fight through the mountains across the Gulf?

      The thought is absurd, it's a 'major campaign theatre' - of which US forces were theoretically capable of fighting in two at once, but that's not pragmatic. That's 'wartime economy' kind of thing.

      It's possible but unlikely that 10K marines and paratroopers are going to be able to do much, because it's very risky and likely won't accomplish much.

      • arkensaw 12 hours ago

        > The Gulf coastline is almost 1000 miles long, there would have to be a gigantic occupation of an area the size of a small country

        If you want to secure even 5 miles inland over 1000 miles, that's 50,000 square miles, or an area bigger than more than half the countries on earth, including North and South Korea,

        Iran is the 18th largest country in the world

        • JumpCrisscross 11 hours ago

          > If you want to secure even 5 miles inland over 1000 miles, that's 50,000 square miles

          If you want to secure the entire Strait, sure. My understanding is you'd only seek to hold the area around the Musandam Peninsula, along with a couple of the islands near it.

          • bluegatty 11 hours ago

            The entire gulf is at risk. Iran can interdict and cause problems from almost anywhere.

            Granted it may not have to be 'the whole thing' but something like it.

            • JumpCrisscross 9 hours ago

              > entire gulf is at risk. Iran can interdict and cause problems from almost anywhere

              Sure, but its effect is far more dilute. In the Strait–in particular, around the Musandam Peninsula–it has unique geostrategic leverage.

              • bluegatty 6 hours ago

                'matsup' is correct.

                Iran only needs to score 'one point' to win the whole game.

                If they can threaten tankers, then the gulf will remain closed, and that's that.

                It's really debatable if the US really has the capability to play 'whack a mole' and get all the moles.

              • matusp 9 hours ago

                However dilute the effect is, if they are able to hit a few gas/oil carriers with drones there, nobody is going to use that body of water.

                • JumpCrisscross 4 hours ago

                  > if they are able to hit a few gas/oil carriers with drones there, nobody is going to use that body of water

                  It’s a lot more feasible to escort tankers after the Strait than it is before, when American warships have to come close to shore. Iran doesn’t have the resources to deny access to the entire Indian Ocean.

                  • ben_w 3 hours ago

                    > Iran doesn’t have the resources to deny access to the entire Indian Ocean.

                    I have what may be a scale issue in my imagination, so bear with me if this is silly.

                    There are reports of international drug transport via seaborne drones in the 0.5-5 tonne range, and of these crossing the Pacific, and the cost of the vehicles is estimated to be around 2-4 million USD each. If drug dealers can do that, surely Iran (and basically everyone with a GDP at least the size of something like Andorra's) should be able to make credible threats to disrupt approximately as much non-military shipping as they want to worldwide?

                    • JumpCrisscross an hour ago

                      > if drug dealers can do that, surely Iran (and basically everyone with a GDP at least the size of something like Andorra's) should be able to make credible threats to disrupt approximately as much non-military shipping as they want to worldwide?

                      Sure. Do you think that means worldwide shipping would shut down?

                      And the point isn't to take the risk to zero. But to a level where military escorts can feel safe.

                      • ben_w an hour ago

                        > Do you think that means worldwide shipping would shut down?

                        I think there's a danger of that, at least if countermeasures are not easily available for normal shipping.

                        Even 1-on-1 rather than 1-v-everyone, there's too many players (not all of them nations) with too many conflicting goals and interests. If Cuba tried to do it, could they credibly threaten to sink all sea-based trade involving the USA? If not Cuba, who would be the smallest nation that could?

                        And the same applies to Taiwan and China, in both directions, either of which would be fairly dramatic on the world stage, even though China also has land options. Or North Korea putting up an effective anti-shipping blockade against Japan.

                        > But to a level where military escorts can feel safe.

                        Are there enough military ships to do the escorting?

        • bluegatty 11 hours ago

          Wow, amazing perspective on proportionality there.

      • generic92034 12 hours ago

        And this was all known for decades. Now everyone pays the price for the US leadership surrounding themselves with spineless yes-men.

      • cyanydeez 12 hours ago

        At some point, there's going to be a dumbenough general to try to paratrooper their way in. They've spent the past year trying to cull "dysloyal" troops, so at some point, the delusion will surface is an absurdly dumb attempt.

        Hard to see it any other way.

        • bluegatty 12 hours ago

          US forces are not partisan and not culled, they're mostly the same entity they were last year, but with a few Generals asked to retire.

          (Edit: highly professional I might add. There are quirks, and obvious hints of 'nationalist bias' - but that's to be expected. They are not the 'cultural problem' we see on the news - at least not for now. They lean 'normal')

          The current Joint Chiefs is a bit obsequious but he's not crazy.

          These are very sane people, for the most part.

          They may be pressed to do something risky, like land troops at Kharg island, but not completely suicidal.

          That 'risk' may entail getting a number of soldiers captured, but that's not on the extreme side of military failure, it's mostly geopolitical failure. It would certainly end DJT as a popular movement.

          Having a ship hit, or a few soldiers captured - and this sounds morose - is normal. That's why they exist. It's the political fallout that's deadly.

          They won't do anything to crazy. The craziest thing they could do is 'full invasion' and Congress won't allow that. It's very unpopular and DJT has populist instinct as well - he's trying to 'find a way out'.

          • pjc50 10 hours ago

            > They won't do anything to crazy.

            I don't know, they've been talking up a lot of crazy stuff, like strikes on desalination facilities and the power grid.

            > The craziest thing they could do is 'full invasion' and Congress won't allow that.

            Genuninely unclear to me whether Congress has control here; don't they currently have a Republican majority who will agree to anything anyway?

            • bluegatty 10 hours ago

              - So I meant militarily. Yes - you're right, they could totally do something as stupid as attack civilian infrastructure. I totally buy that.

              - Congress is in charge. First - they need budget, and the GOP majority has zero appetiate for approving this.

              Remember that most of the GOP dislike Trump, and they also don't like this war, it's risky to the US - and - their own jobs.

              So the GOP finds ways to 'resit' Trump without sticking their neck out. They do this collectively by grumbling and not passing legislation.

              The majority leaders tell Trump 'We just don't have the votes for it!' thereby not taking a position against Trump, more or less 'blaming the ghosts in the party' kind of thing.

              That's very different than passing legislation that reels Trump in, that's 'active defiance'.

              So by 'passive defiance' and not approving $, the majority holds the Admin back.

              Remember that nobody wants this, not the VP, not Rubio. Hegseth is a 'TV Entertainer'. The Defence Establishment and Intelligence Establishment knows this is stupid. 80% of Congress wants it over now.

              If DJT has 65% poularity and 75% for the war, the equation would tilt, but as it stands, there is not enough political momentum.

              But anything could happen ...

              The death or capture of US soldiers could strongly evoke people to move one way or the other.

          • cyanydeez 9 hours ago

            Theyre culling all branches for loyalty. You arnt paying attention or you thinl those who arnt being promoted are more DEI.

            THE rest of your screed follows from inattentive disorder.

            • bluegatty 6 hours ago

              I'm a former service member (of another country) and I have family members in the US forces.

              I'm paying relatively close attention.

              Just FYI, US forces are enormous, and with a very long and institutionalized history, and it would take at least decade to tilt them in such a manner, moreover, it's not even happening in the way you're insinuating.

              Removing certain DEI polices will have a very marginal affect on anything but senior officer promotions, as US forces are very meritocratic in most ways already.

              Removing transgender personnel etc. is arguably unfair in many ways - but will have absolutely zero effect on those institutions overall. None.

              Nobody is getting 'retired' for not being sufficiently MAGA, other than a few select positions in Washington.

              Your comment is uninformed and unwelcome; you'll have to do a bit better than consume Reddit in order to gain actual knowledge and perspective, and save yourself the embarrassment.

        • Caius-Cosades 10 hours ago

          Military does as the Civilian leadership orders them to, there is no other way in the west, and if the civilian leadership demands that they want an ground invasion, then they'll get one, even if it's the most moronic waste of human life in the world.

          • bluegatty 6 hours ago

            It's true that 'civilians are in charge' but it would be an oversimplification to suggest that the military will just 'do what they are asked'.

            Civilian leadership takes a few forms, there is a division between the powers of Executive and Congress. The military won't pursue anything long term without the backing of both.

            There are a lot of legal thresholds, Congressional approval being just one of them.

            There is institutional incumbency, and the military will push back extremely hard on things that it deems impossible, or excessively risky.

            Populism etc. etc..

            There are so many factors.

            If they want to mount a risky 500 000 person invasion of Iran, they'll have to do a lot of 'convincing' and get a lot of buy in from stake holders. There is no chance that the Executive count mount that kind of operation without a lot of institutional buy in.

    • JumpCrisscross 12 hours ago

      > the "blockade" will probably continue

      The part that makes the Strait weird is no belligerent wants it entirely closed. (Maybe Israel.) Iran wants to export. And America wants exports. So you get this weird stalemate where America doesn’t want to actually blockade Iran, while Iran seems to do just enough to keep America from actually shutting the Strait.

      • pjc50 10 hours ago

        America isn't getting exports from Iran, until recently they were sanctioned. More of a problem is that the biggest buyer of Iranian oil is China. I don't think that getting out of the war with Iran by starting a war with China would be an improvement.

        • JumpCrisscross 4 hours ago

          > America isn't getting exports from Iran

          Single market. Every barrel China buys from Iran is a barrel it doesn’t scour the global markets for.

          > getting out of the war with Iran by starting a war with China

          China isn’t getting into a war with America over the Strait.

          • stale2002 an hour ago

            > Single market.

            Not really, they were getting discounted oil prices previously that they are no longer able to get.

            Also, they are a large importer of oil compared to the US, which is an exporter. They have much more to lose from high oil prices than we do.

        • JumpCrisscross 4 hours ago

          > America isn't getting exports from Iran

          Single market. Every barrel China buys from Iran is a barrel it doesn’t scour the global markets for.

      • arkensaw 12 hours ago

        > while Iran seems to do just enough to keep America from actually shutting the Strait.

        Uhm, why would America shut the strait?

        • JumpCrisscross 12 hours ago

          > why would America shut the strait?

          To deny Iran oil revenue.

    • mrweasel 12 hours ago

      There was an article somewhere a few days ago, where the author raised the question: Why buy tanks in a world of drone warfare. Something like that. I see this as much the same "problem". Drones can't really take or hold territory, they can only deny access to it. At some point you need people and armoured vehicles on the ground.

      The US is facing the same issue in Iran. You can bomb all you like, but a bomber, like a drone, can't hold land. Iran can launch drones and missiles towards the Strait of Hormuz from the entire country, denying anyone access, but also without being able to hold it.

      Because they went in without a plan, or even a goal really, the US administration denied itself, and everyone else, access to the strait. The military leadership probably knew this. If not they could have asked Ukraine if this was a sound idea, given their knowledge and experience with Iranian drone technology.

  • mmooss 35 minutes ago

    The United States primary strategy against China, in the even of war around Taiwan or nearby, is the same:

    China's coast is mostly enclosed by the 'First Island Chain', which extends from Japan to Taiwan, through the Philippines and Borneo (look up a map and the situation will be very clear). Imagine strings of islands along the US coasts controlled by Chinese allies and with Chinese and allied forces training intensively there.

    The American plan is to keep the Chinese navy trapped (or under assault) along its own coast by putting Marines (and Army soldiers too, I think) on the islands with anti-ship missiles.

    The northern tip of the Philippines is as close to Taiwan as the Chinese mainland is; the US and Philippines are conducting an essentially endless series of military exercises and the US is placing some of its most advanced missiles there.

  • high_na_euv 12 hours ago

    Brightest minds of US were too focused on displaying ads and making teenagers addicted to tik tokies-like stuff instead of working security, defense, etc

    You couldve seen anti militsry industry sentiment on HN for years, which apparently worked for US adversaries, who knows who was behind that propaganda :)

    Inb4: im from eu

    • YeGoblynQueenne 11 hours ago

      The US no longer uses its army for defense. Nobody in their immediate region dares attack them, they're too powerful ("Godzilla", in the words of John Mearsheimer). All the wars that the US has fought since WWII are nothing to do with defense. Just look at the Wikipedia article on "power projection":

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_projection

      The leader image is ... a US aircraft carrier (the USS Nimitz). That's what the US uses its military power for, to influence events in lands far, far away from its territory.

      But, now, tell me which one of the many wars that the US has fought in after WWII did not end in disaster. Afghanistan? Iraq? Korea?

      There was a meme doing the rounds the other day: "Name a character who can defeat Captain America". The answer being "Captain Vietnam". The US has faced humiliating defeat after humiliating defeat while bringing death and destruction and immeasurable misery to millions around the world.

      That is what HN users seem to have an "anti" sentiment for. If you watch the news you'll be able to tell that this goes far beyond HN. The whole of US society seems to be extremely tired with those "forever wars", those senseless excursions to faraway lands, that not only do not secure US interests but turn world opinion more and more against the US. Even the US' closest allies now fear the US: vide Greenland. Anyone with more than a video game or comic book understanding of how the real world works would do well to be concerned.

      Edit: also from EU, btw. Greek but living in the UK.

      • chneu 9 hours ago

        >The whole of US society seems to be extremely tired with those "forever wars",

        This is the main thing I would disagree with, as an American who rubs elbows with conservatives quite a bit.

        A large amount of Republican and conservative Americans want war. They're primed for a war they haven't had this generation. There are a lot of relatively young conservatives who are eager for war. A weird number of Republicans don't think we lost Iraq or Afghanistan, or a few other wars, so they aren't tired of it yet.

        Like 15-25% of Americans also believe in some form of the end times prophecy involving Israel. I'm not kidding about this. The number really is that high. A lot might not openly state that they believe in it, but they were raised under a religious teaching that says it will happen. Hegseth, literally, has a crusades tattoo and openly talks about eradicating Muslims on his weekly or monthly sermon.

        But yes a majority of americans, like 60%, are extremely tired of ongoing wars. But I can also drive to towns in the western US where trump still has majority support and they will openly say they support the Iran war. America is really polarized and a lot of conservatives only talk about this stuff to family now.

        I grew up super rural and have to deal/work with very religious conservative Americans often enough. There are a lot more of them than people think. They've just learned to self-segregate and keep to themselves and say things a certain way.

    • leoc 12 hours ago

      To be fair, it was bright Chinese minds at ByteDance which worked on getting US teenagers addicted to TikTok videos.

      • high_na_euv 12 hours ago

        Meta, Google did their parts too

    • yomismoaqui 12 hours ago

      I prefer having those minds focused on optimizing ad serving than on optimizing school bombings.

      • 2OEH8eoCRo0 25 minutes ago

        Having those minds eliminate targeting mistakes wouldn't make a difference?

      • polotics 11 hours ago

        That tragedy of the Maven targeting system is very much something that could have been optimized away, so no! Ad-servers optimizing minds could have been better employed on that project. (nothing to do with Java's Maven, look it up) Someone told me: "Think! Who were these girls' parents..." and that's BS it was really a big senseless mistake, now we're clearly in Vendettastan

      • high_na_euv 12 hours ago

        I meant intercepting missiles, drones, etc

    • b345 12 hours ago

      What makes you think what the US, most probably at the behest of occupiers of Palestine, is going to do wonders for sentiment of the general public towards the US military industry? The anti-military sentiment is justified and will probably grow as more people wake up to the terrorising and dual faced nature of the US.

    • bluegatty 12 hours ago

      This has definitely nothing to do with the subject at hand.

      US Forces and Defence Complex have most of the talent they need.

      Even with prevailing capabilities in many areas, it's not possible to do most things. Armies are not 'magic' - we're lulled into a false sense of understanding of capabilities by focusing to much on 'special forces' and other kinds of operations.

    • flohofwoe 12 hours ago

      Would those "brightest minds" want to work for the current US government? Even if they did out of patriotism to the country, the Trump administration would have pushed them out by now and replaced with yes-men.

      • 0x3f 12 hours ago

        The pay levels seem more of an inherent problem than the political winds.

        • giantg2 12 hours ago

          The people I know leaving that sector have been steadily leaving for years due to the day to day bullshit/internal politics and poor leadership that they have to put up with, not the pay nor current administration.

          • 0x3f 11 hours ago

            Right but if you're a lifelong gov worker you are probably used to the pay, and it's hard to switch from gov work to startups or big tech (at least, I would see it as a thing to question). Whereas the GGP talks about people switching from the private sector (adtech, etc.) to public.

            The first thing they are going to see is the salary and run a mile. That's partly why Palantir 'works'; they pay tech salaries and have a tech culture, but do gov work. Booz Allen et al were less advanced prototypes of that as well.

            • giantg2 8 hours ago

              I know people who have switched to gov work despite the pay. Then they left due to the bullshit, without anything lined up.

      • TiredOfLife 10 hours ago

        They also didn't work under Biden and Obama.

    • cyanydeez 12 hours ago

      The brightest minds were systematically bullied out of position, called DEI hires or accused of random crimes.

      They might not have been the best, but lets not pretend we're sending our brightest minds herw.

    • panick21_ 12 hours ago

      What are you talking about? Better missiles dont stop Iran from closing a tiny waterway in their border.

      US weapons are pretty damn good for the most part. But trade protection is just not something fancy advanced weapons can solve.

      Military planners have known this for a long time.

      If anything, if you were serious you would say that the US didnt pay enough tradesmen and technician to build enough of the needed weapons.

    • cicko 12 hours ago

      > im from eu

      Yeah, the ultimate place of military preparedness.

      • raincole 12 hours ago

        It's not "look I'm doing better than you," it's "please don't repeat our mistakes."

  • V__ 12 hours ago

    The U.S. can't win this war. John Kiriakou did a nice analysis on this on his recent podcasts. "Iran just has to prolong the war and survive it to win". Trump on the other hand needs a decisive win fast, or the economic and political fallout will be too big. As long as Iran can launch cheap drones and keep a small but steady pressure there is just no path out of this for the U.S. except to go home.

    • SideburnsOfDoom 12 hours ago

      I have seen the same from other sources

      https://acoup.blog/2026/03/25/miscellanea-the-war-in-iran/

      > This is the second sudden bombing campaign the country has suffered in as many years – they do not want there to be a third next year and a fourth the year after that. But promises not to bomb them don’t mean a whole lot: establishing deterrence here means inflicting quite a lot of pain. In practice, if Iran wants future presidents not to repeat this war, the precedent they want to set is "attacking Iran is a presidency-ending mistake." And to do that, well, they need to end a presidency or at least make clear they could have done.

      Can they do that: yes, keep Hormuz shut until much closer to November, and "the economic and political fallout will be too big."

      • doe88 11 hours ago

        While it can very well be true, I wonder if we don't exagerate the will of the iranian regime and its ablity in the current time to think this far ahead. I see them more in survival mode, I'm not sure they fight for future deterence, maybe the goals align currently but seems to me to be happenstance. They seem resilient but I wonder how much they would be close of falling. Of course, I wouldn't have done this war, and I certainly would stop it now.

        • SideburnsOfDoom 11 hours ago

          > They seem resilient but I wonder how much they would be close of falling

          While neither of us have any special insight into that, and no-one has certainty, I urge you to read the essay linked, as this topic is in fact discussed with historic examples. "There is a frequent mistake, often from folks who deal in economics, to assume that countries will give up on wars when the economics turn bad ... There is a great deal of ruin in a nation."

          You are right that the the Iranian regime's short and longer term goals align. But, happenstance or not, they are aligned and likely will stay that way.

  • jleyank 12 hours ago

    The problem shown by Ukraine was that large, expensive solutions were not effective when cheap weapons were used. The solution, which will take time, is to recreate some of the cheap defensive solutions that used to be available - guns, radar-bearing weaponry, etc. these are quite boring to the high tech industry, who prefer things like lasers, rail guns, etc. but ww ii showed they worked, and I suspect the approach speed of drones is similar to kamikazes.

    There are also fewer ships than in the 80’s, and everything costs too much. F-35’s vs. F16 birds, the gripen argument in Canada or Europe. How to get companies and staff to embrace low tech solutions in a rapid mapper.

    Perhaps they can remember history and make planes that support ground operations rather than high tech birds. Having more, slower birds with cannons would help with drone warfare. Armour also helps.

    And yeah, selling ads vs more interesting tech solutions was a cliche 10+ years ago.

  • metalman 19 minutes ago

    tumpy was/is/might be going to china in a week or so, and there is pretty much no way that can happen while WWIII is launching, and/or things are going mega bad for the marines, as there is no way they are not going find themselves in a real fight. all those islands are owned and operated by the irainian military, who in fact have complete long range artilery superiority,and every square inch dialed in, dont see how it could be done except with a full and total invasion of the wholecountry, which would likely go worse and would require a much much larger force than the one on hand, but tumpy is crazy, so who knows

  • leoc 10 hours ago

    https://www.euronews.com/2026/03/30/what-are-ukraines-new-gu...

    > Zelenskyy also said that Ukraine is willing to share its expertise in unblocking maritime trade routes with the naval drones.

    > “We shared our experience with the Black Sea corridor and how it operates. They understand that our Armed Forces have been highly effective in unblocking the Black Sea corridor. We are sharing these details.”

  • standardUser 12 hours ago

    Iran's deep investment in asymmetric warfare is paying serious dividends. You wouldn't expect a nation that's being bombed day and night, essentially at will, to still hold so many cards. Not only is the US completely incapable of strong-arming the straight open, but the rate of missile and drone attacks out of Iran and its proxies has been accelerating the last few days, as has the rate of successful hits.

    • lnsru 12 hours ago

      My Iranian ex colleague shares very interesting opinion. They trained during his army time to blow everything in the region up. So if things escalate badly the oil and gas importing countries will stay with a fraction of needed oil and gas for years. There is no backup infrastructure anywhere in the world. It will take years to rebuild the infrastructure. It will destroy world’s economy better than nukes.

      • guzfip 9 hours ago

        I kinda expected scorched earth from Iran, or any oil producing state tbh, didn’t Saddam do this retreating from Kuwait?

    • aryonoco 11 hours ago

      Since 1979, every US president has known that the US can send a couple of aircraft carriers and bomb the shit out of Iran.

      And yet none did. Because they listened to their security chiefs and advisors who would tell them, Iran is a highly complex multiethnic geographically complex country. If you can contain it with diplomacy, that’s preferable.

      When listening to “experts” becomes taboo, there will be consequences.

      The inhabitants of the Iranian plateau have been the subject of the ire of the military superpower of their era quite a few times. Alexander the Great conquered them and set their capital and their sacred books on fire and yet a mere 70 years later his Hellenic dynasty was gone. They were conquered by the Arabs and were forced to give up their religion but somehow, unlike Egypt and Syria/Lebanon and many other ancient places, these guys somehow kept their language and distinct culture intact. They were decimated (maybe even worse ) by Genghis Khan and followed quickly by Tamerlane and yet, it was their Turco-Mongol rulers who ended up adopting their language and culture.

      The inhabitants of this land have deep memory of knowing how to suffer, to endure and to survive. It wasn’t that long ago that from Constantinople to New Delhi, the language of the Imperial Court was Persian.

  • bluegatty 12 hours ago

    "Why the the US Navy Can't Blast the Iranians and 'Open' the Strait of Hormuz"

  • meindnoch 12 hours ago

    Could they?

    • JumpCrisscross 12 hours ago

      Stupidly, yes, with carpet bombing. Practically, no, that would be horrible. More horrible, possibly, than taking out the power and water infrastructure.

      • Someone 11 hours ago

        : Stupidly, yes, with carpet bombing. Practically, no, that would be horrible.

        Could that work? It didn’t end well in Vietnam, which is about a fifth of the land area, and, in 1970, half the current population of Iran.

        Also, they’ll pack a bigger punch, but I think the USA has way fewer bombers now.

        • JumpCrisscross 11 hours ago

          > Could that work? It didn’t end well in Vietnam

          We can't carpet bomb to regime change. But we can probably depopulate critical areas around the coasts while ships transit. It's stupidly expensive, both in materiel and collateral cost. But it's feasible. Whether we have the bomb-production is a separate question to which I don't have the answer.

          • angry_octet 13 minutes ago

            Depopulation won't stop the IRGC from digging up a Shahed buried in the sand and launching it. The range is so great you would have to pacify the entire east of Iran, an absolutely impossible task.

          • pjc50 10 hours ago

            > probably depopulate critical areas around the coasts while ships transit.

            (looks at map) the city of Bandar Abbas, population ~500k? It's already being hit as it contains the Iranian Navy HQ, but actually depopulating it is a much bigger project.

      • meindnoch 12 hours ago

        Carpet bombing didn't even break Vietnam. It didn't break WWII Germany either.

        • orwin 9 hours ago

          Nor did WW2 England. Look, Churchill had like 24 approval rate after Dunkerque, and the 'british Hitler' had 18%. Bombing London moved those percentages _very_ fast. 'do nothing, win' people have a point most of the time.

      • arkensaw 12 hours ago

        Trump casually talks about destroying the energy infrastructure, power plants, desalination plants etc. This is one of the most controversial things that the Russians do in Ukraine - attack the grid when it's cold to try and freeze people to death. To willingly deprive a country of 100,000,000 people of water and power coming into summer would surely be a war-crime.

        • JumpCrisscross 11 hours ago

          > This is one of the most controversial things that the Russians do in Ukraine - attack the grid when it's cold to try and freeze people to death

          But the Russians have been doing it. Iran may have targeted an Israeli power plant. The precedent, unfortunately, is set.

          • scott_w 7 hours ago

            They have and Ukraine haven’t surrendered (nor do they look like they will any time soon), so I don’t see how it wit k a in Iran.

            • JumpCrisscross 4 hours ago

              > and Ukraine haven’t surrendered

              Different goals. Carpet bombing to deny Iran access to its coast is maneouvre warfare. It’s tactical. Carpet bombing to force Kyiv to capitulate is strategic bombing. It has never worked.

              • ImPostingOnHN 40 minutes ago

                You can't deny access to a coast that large with carpet bombing, especially in a mountainous terrain. It has never worked. You'd need tens to hundreds of thousands of boots on the ground to do that.

                If you wanted to try it with bombs, it would take continual re-dropping of hundreds of thousands of bombs every few hours to cover (1600km * 8km) to keep people out, even assuming they have 0 shelter or cover.

        • pjc50 10 hours ago

          Iran already had severe water problems. Attacking the water infrastructure would definitely cause huge civilian casualties. Israel is used to that. Not clear whether America is ready to go into the midterms with an official policy of US-flagged genocide.

          • JumpCrisscross 4 hours ago

            > Attacking the water infrastructure would definitely cause huge civilian casualties

            I personally think there is a wide barrier between electrical and water infrastructure. But given water infra has allegedly been hit already, it doesn’t feel like it’s off the table for both sides the way it once was.

  • juliusceasar 12 hours ago

    What people do to distract the focus from Epstein list.

    2nd Epstein war.

  • pjc50 12 hours ago

    TLDR: not going to put the navy within range of shore attacks + have not yet been able to degrade the Iranian strike capabilites.