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As I said earlier, the US has the reconnaissance capability to find them and the offensive capability to strike them wherever they run. Since they started this more general assault on shipping, the US should have always been giving them no moment of rest. This is the one way I respected Reagan. He'd say, "Do what's necessary to make them stop. Brief me when you're done."Iran, eager to disrupt U.S. and Israeli interests in the Middle East but wary of provoking a direct confrontation, is privately urging Hezbollah and other armed groups to exercise restraint against U.S. forces, according to officials in the region.
One Iranian-backed group has given no indication of standing down. The Houthis in Yemen have disrupted global trade by harassing commercial shipping through the Red Sea
Interestngly, the wire was just long enough to cover the distance between towns in the Fulda Gap in W. Germany. German reservists in each village had TOW missles. It was a major concern for the Red Army, in the event of a general war in Europe. The Fulda Gap was the one spot in Germany that had "tank friendly" terrain for a massive armor attack.I was surprised to learn (about a year ago) that TOW missiles were wire guided.
Yes. TOWs have a long wire. Maybe I'm just enough of a military nerd that none of this is new to me.What? Really? Do they trail a wire behind them when flying to their destination, all the way back to the launch site?
I have to admit that the idea of a missile streaking a wire several kilometers long behind it hadn't occured to me. It still seems a bit unreal. What happens to that wire after the missile hits? Do they wind it back up? Is it just lying around?Yes. TOWs have a long wire. Maybe I'm just enough of a military nerd that none of this is new to me.
Yep.What? Really? Do they trail a wire behind them when flying to their destination, all the way back to the launch site?
I believe it's generally just left there. If the firing platform is multi use, it's disconnected from that as well.I have to admit that the idea of a missile streaking a wire several kilometers long behind it hadn't occured to me. It still seems a bit unreal. What happens to that wire after the missile hits? Do they wind it back up? Is it just lying around?
It's just left there. I wonder if civilians have been scarfing it up after exercises.I have to admit that the idea of a missile streaking a wire several kilometers long behind it hadn't occured to me. It still seems a bit unreal. What happens to that wire after the missile hits? Do they wind it back up? Is it just lying around?
Something I didn’t see when I looked last time - how does the operator see where it’s going? Does it have a camera?It's just left there. I wonder if civilians have been scarfing it up after exercises.
Radar tracking.Something I didn’t see when I looked last time - how does the operator see where it’s going? Does it have a camera?
It would not be difficult or expensive to install. Mobile phones have cameras.Something I didn’t see when I looked last time - how does the operator see where it’s going? Does it have a camera?
There's a video feed from the munition to the operator so they can guide it. If you want to look up Taistelukenttä 2020 (Battlefield 2020) on the official Finnish Defense Force YouTube channel, it's a short video/movie about how modern conflict might start and look like. There's a part where a hovercraft is destroyed by a coastal Jaeger group using a guided missile and it shows the video feedback in it for a few seconds.Something I didn’t see when I looked last time - how does the operator see where it’s going? Does it have a camera?
Radar tracking.
My question was less about the cost and more about the responsiveness. The missiles fly fast, low to the ground, and for a fairly short travel time. That’s not a lot of time for the operator to steer it.It would not be difficult or expensive to install. Mobile phones have cameras.
Cruise missiles , which have been around for decades, used radar to scan the terrain and referred to on-board maps. These days they probably just have a version of satellite navigation similar to cars. Again, familiar and cheap technology.