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Originally Posted by Sea Demon
(Post 1080353)
No, but in our political reality, with the people who have been elected, it's a darn good excuse not to do something. Cost efficiency surely is a big consideration that goes into all US systems regardless. Always has been that way.
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Well, then the question would surely have to consider whether a massive amount of nuclear warheads is the best way to ensure America's security. Sure, the cost factor is helped that most have them have been built, but they still aren't free to maintain.
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You pretty much make my point with your response here that 1,000 warheads are not enough. You derive something you feel is workable with numbers of active warheads greater than the Obama plan of 1,000. You recommend 1,200 warheads to be active in SSBN's (200 more than Obama), with no consideration to any other active warheads remaining in other parts of the triad. Yes, Obama's plan of 1,000 warheads is not cost effective, nor realistic. You make this point quite well despite your lack of insight into other factors in thinking about this issue.
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I find it cute that you are using a casually drawn example to try and win a point. Fine, permit me to correct it to 60 warheads on 10 subs. Now can we get to the next turn?
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You don't speak for Iran, Russia, China, or North Korea. As an American taxpayer, I don't particularly believe unilateral disarmament against these people is a wise move. And since you definitely don't speak for America, you'll just have to live with it.
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Since Obama is currently the closest to being the speaker for America, you'll just have to live with it.
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A waste of a tired old argument. Plus the Russians had an ABM. People often don't know that or have conveniently forgotten it. Although the Soviet ABM system would have resulted in a self imposed EMP attack against itself. In regards to our planned BMD system, it is not planned to be robust enough to stop an attack from Russia.
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The limitations of that ABM system is arguably a good deterrent in itself, which the current, more efficient American NMD system will lack (heck a lot of its interceptors are in other people's territory, so if someone tries to counterstrike them it isn't like the radiation is going directly onto American soil....)
The destabilization effect of a BMD system, especially if it is one sided, goes far beyond its ability (or lack thereof) to stop a full-scale strike. Consider how it narrows the options of other powers should the US decide for a limited nuclear strike.
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Strategic nukes are primarily for other major states. But of course, maniacs do run Iran, and North Korea. And neither have pushed too far. Islamic terrorists not representative of any nation state requires another approach altogether. Deterring hostile nation states from using WMD against us and our allies, and dealing with terrorists are two different things. This shouldn't have to be explained to anybody.
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All right, now let's consider specifically Iran and North Korea. Why do you need more than 1000 nukes for these two nations?
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You do actually need quite a bit, especially when dealing with many potential combinations of enemy force structures, and targets needing elimination. Russia and China alone both have hundreds of targets of both counterforce and countervalue. And redundancy is a part of deterrence, to those who know how it actually works.
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If you want to get them all, true. If you just want to get enough of them that it will hurt?
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Nope. It all proves just how important it is that every American understands issues of prime importance to us, like nuclear deterrence. So they can perhaps make good decisions at the polls, or lobby the correct people as an organized voter coalition for policy action. Just a few voters in these elections have changed significant outcomes of many things. Your spin on it is rather curious though.
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Actually, it is you that are spinning. I completely support the idea of Americans (or citizens of any other nation) being savvy about world affairs, be it economic, military or political. But I do disagree with the idea that those "few voters" have very much power. You could have picked any other "few voters" out of the millions that voted in that direction, and called them critical by your standards.
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Originally Posted by Aramike
(Post 1080369)
Excuse me, but if we're allowed to have, say, 1000 high-yield nuclear warheads (enough to practically destroy the civilized world), what exactly is the difference if we have 10,000 warheads instead?
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Aramike and Sea Demon, please coordinate between yourselves. One of you are saying that 1000 warheads aren't enough to destroy everything you want blown up, so you want more. The other is saying 1000 warheads is more than enough so it doesn't make a difference if we go to 1 million. How much are 1000 warheads worth to you?
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Originally Posted by Sea Demon
(Post 1080403)
A standing ovation to Aramike. You have shown great logic against a tide of unrealism. There is a great reason I don't listen very hard to non Americans about this issue. Not just the fact that they have no voice in our nuclear deterrent policies, or defense postures.
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As a practical matter, neither do you. Stop inflating your ego.
I suspect that the real reason you don't listen very hard is that most of us are discussing global nuclear THEORY - whether deterrence really works, how many warheads does a country really need for deterrence, while you are arguing from a narrow, national
strategy viewpoint that's mostly aimed towards improving the correlation of force, no matter what that does to the overall security of the entire global system.
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But it's also because alot of them seem to have the attitude that ......"Oh, if only America would disarm itself, we could have world peace". My answer to these types will remain the same. They are wasting their breath. Go and convince Russia, and China to give up theirs first in a definite verifiable fashion. Tell Iran and North Korea to give up any remaining ambitions to achieving a nuclear weapons capability. Then we'll talk.
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Well, I don't particularly want America to disarm. What I'm unconvinced, however, is that reducing the number of nuclear warheads will seriously endanger America's security, other than in fringe scenarios that could be stretched towards justifying an infinite amount of warheads, or managing to piss off the entire world rather than just the rogue states...
If nothing else, redirecting the manpower and cash that's used to maintain all those nuke systems to something more conventional could arguably be a better boost to America's overall security.
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Until then, we should be able to eliminate all counterforce and countervalue targets in multiple hostile nations with no way for them to acheive any type of neutralizing of our arsenal. It should be unfathomable to them that they could attack us without response. And they shouldn't be able to think of any possibilities to neutralizing of our arsenal. I make no apologies for my belief that the USA should be the last man standing when it comes to nuclear arms and BMD's. We should absolutely be the last nation holding onto a nuclear arsenal and the first and most advanced to field credible hit to kill BMD's. There is no doubt about it in my mind.
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Please justify this.