@gambit
When I criticize the U.S it is on a high level and then mainly the defense industry not the services. I also must say that you are spoiled for your previous conflicts, while I talk more on the technological side.
Irans military has transformed 180° from desert storm to now.
If you would have been on the sober technological side of things you would have questioned that bullshit of "4th strongest military" in 91.
You would have known that Soviets gave Iraqis 1950's vintage pure steel penetrators for their tank guns.
You would have known that their static ground based air defense, despite being modeled on Soviet role model used compromised French systems because again: Soviets wanted to sell them early 1960's vintage C2 in the late 80's.
No. Everyone with such knowledge would have predicted a deep generational discrepancy that would end very sad.
And still they shot down more than 50 aircraft...
The Americans did a good job there and had good tactics and training. But don't sell be such hero stories, at least not to me here.
When Iraq attacked Iran they did not manage to take a single city. While Iran was just a few year old military with war experience and total lack of gear, it managed to cut of Iraqis from the sea from which they exported their most vital resource.
All this despite the west provided it with all possible intelligence from AWACS data to satellite and U2 imagery.
So Iran did this to the "4th best military in the world" and Iraqis could only break that siege via unprecedented (since WWI) use of chemical weapons, with the OK from the west.
So yes, don't sell me those story and Iran knows what a total war means, without any limits.
DS was a impressive show of firepower and how several generations of technological gap between adversaries can lead to total obliteration of the obsolete side. It was the first "modern" war.
Look at China's PLA today for its reforms. Got American signatures all over. The PLA leadership presented to the Politburo its analysis that while the US and allies would win, the Iraqi Army would inflict thousands, if not tens of thousands, casualties thanks to and in large part of Soviet/Chinese weapons and tactics. It ended we were more in danger of fratricide than of those Soviet/Chinese weapons and tactics.
I have absolutely no respect from pre mid 90's PLA conventional capability. The gap between them and Soviets was very large and they just tried to copy their role model. So sorry, absolutely unimportant what 1991 conventional PLA thought or not.
The Soviets do make excellent, not merely good, hardware. But the centralized ground control and command doctrines that they, and the Chinese, exported proved inadequate in large scale at Desert Storm. Tactics, or poorly designed tactics, crippled whatever good features of the hardware. That was one major hard lessons of Desert Storm. And it looks like that lesson was missed in this forum.
It's not the Soviets fault that Saddam was stupid.
You can't have an proper ground based IADS if all components are not available and redundancy is to low.
The Iraqi or even PLA IADS of 91 were not flexibel or powerful enough to win a war against U.S airpower. The Soviet IADS was on the other side, but they kept it for themselves, never thought about exporting it.
Was it immune to terrain masking aircraft? No, but who in the world back than had such a capability? Nobody.
Was it capable to detect and kill F-117? Certainly..., probably the only military back then that could do that.
So yes, that was a hard lesson about 'stealth' for the Soviets and their clients who bought their hardware and uses their tactics. So yes, I have no problems saying that if it was the Soviets, they would have been 'shocked and awed' by the F-117 and everything that flew that night.
This kind of hubris, makes me wonder how much of the technological side was present in the U.S fighter community.
Yes, Soviet clients with second and third grade gear were probably pissed. Soviets themselves probably thought, damn, now we need to make systems like the Nebo, export items, without heavy downgrading.
But they certainly knew one thing: Those high flying subsonic F-117 will be a nice snack for our interceptors once or large P-14 or Nebo network start to detect them...
Absolutely credible. His 'traitor' accusation had nothing to do with the technical data that he gave to US. When I was on the F-111, at every arms reduction negotiations, the Soviets demanded that we remove the F-111 from the UK basing. And each time we told the Soviets to STFU. Tactics is where you exploit any gap, be it technological or human caused or both. Tolkachev confirmed just one of our many suspicions. Your slur of him revealed an emotion bias, not objectivity as you should have been.
Rather not emotional bias but wondering how someone can think a technology leak in one field would mean the U.S would have "known it all" about Soviet gear. What information did he provide you about the Nebo? Did he work on it too?
No, he had limited knowledge about a limited amount of systems.
Terrain masking is up until today something that is extremely difficult to counter. Exploiting a physical effect (LOS) is easier than designing something that creates a physical effect (F-117).
I remember one excellent night air refueling training sortie and I was fairly new on the jet. It was a four-ship flight. After refueled, lead was contacted and asked if the flight was willing to help the French with their new experimental air defense radar. The flight split into two attack elements, approaching from north and west. The pilot asked how low can we go over the Channel and I, in the WSO seat, said about 50 ft or about 20 meters. Both flights did pop ups within a few seconds of each other. If it was a nuclear delivery, it would have been over for the target area. The French air defense radar never picked up the F-111s because the approach altitude was too low.
Do not tell US what we 'need' to do based upon your inexperience.
Good example. For nuclear delivery terrain masking can almost always guarantee reaching within 20km of the target which might be sufficient.
What was your conventional plan against Tor and Tunguska protecting a war deciding asset? Hoping that they are junk?
Look at your "Do not tell US what we 'need' to do" hubris. What I see is a highly trained military which does not make as good decisions on equipment as the Russians/Soviets and it's mainly due to your defense industry.
NATO flew over 30,000 sorties over Yugoslavia and lost only two jets: An F-16 and an F-117.
That is not an air defense combat record to boast at the bar.
We are on the technological side of things. Yes Iraqis had a 100 times larger air defense force and shoot down 50 coalition aircraft... Completely unimportant.
What is important is the case of 1950's and 60's P-18 and SA-3 shooting down a 80's "superweapon". Plus the hubris to think that this "superweapon" would then have shock and awed 1991 Soviets.
Am going to ask you again: Do you really believe that we do not know of basic radar principles, at all bands, when we designed our 'stealth' platforms, and that we do not know how to counter them, either with technologies or tactics or both?
Your avoidance of those questions reveals much about your fear -- that you really do not have that much confidence in what the Russians and Chinese claimed.
Answer: Americans know very well about the long wave problem of their VLO assets. They think the extra benefit against fire control radars is well worth the extra financial effort. They are also wise enough to know that the F-117 would be ineffective against a near-peer opponent today and is a very cost inefficient system.
They also know that their stealth is highly effective against all the countries, except for those who are at near-peer level.
So in total: Stealth is a very expensive but certainly good to have capability and still you will never attack a asset like the S-400 due to it.
Btw. Chinese only became mature in IADS in the 2000's if you ask me.
Yes, you have underestimated US in this debate. War is not a boxing match where both contestants fights within boundaries. We do not care if people mock US for using outsized quantity of X weapons against a target. If a fly needed to be killed and all we have is a rocket, we will use that rocket to kill that fly if such an action will help win the war.
Ok if this is your explanation of the 70 CMs on one building complex issue, good for you. I believe the Russians here: At best 20 were for that target, the rest were shot down when they attempted to target more critical targets protected by Buk an Pantsir. This is the wake up call for the U.S, the first such case, just like the F-117 was the first such case back then.
@BlueInGreen2
Mesbah-2 is the designation for the 8 barrel variant, as far as I remember.