SandyCaesar |
10-04-08 02:50 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by Pillar
Given these vulnerabilities what was the expected lifespan of surface fleets in a conflict between NATO and WP? Would it come to a point in any reasonable amount of time where existing assets were destroying ships faster than they could be produced?
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Well, in the most likely scenario--NATO Atlantic convoys vs. Soviet interdiction units--the NATO forces would've tried to blockade the GIUK gap and use carrier task forces and F-15s in Iceland to harass bombers. The Sovs would've tried to run subs and bombers through the gap in order to hit the convoys; any surface force that tried to shoulder through would've been spotted early by satellites and then handled roughly by aircraft, and it wasn't part of Soviet naval doctrine anyway.
Surface-to-surface action would've likely taken place in the North Sea and the Barents, wherein NATO SAGs and CVBGs would square off against Soviet fleets. Here, the underwater theater would be quite crowded: lots of Soviet boats vs. lots of NATO boats (it's within SSK range). Since CVBGs have a larger combat radius than Soviet cruise missiles (the Soviet Forger was considered pretty unimpressive for a fighter), Soviet doctrine was to try to use SSGNs and Backfire/Badger/Bear bombers to attack the carriers and follow up with missile-armed cruisers. Whether or not this would be effective is debatable; ditto NATO submarine and carrier attacks on suface groups. It would boil down to the skill of the men involved, since both sets of doctrines and equipment were keyed to oppose each other.
For a nice study of naval forces in a Cold-War-turned-hot scenario, I recommend reading Tom Clancy's Red Storm Rising; subguru Mr. Bill Nichols has a nice campaign based on it.
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