


At least point that WRETCHED PENINSULA of his AWAY from me!

I swear, Skimmer. I'll play nice. If you do so too.
It's YOUR FAULT that you let Khitan break away!Shroom Man 777 wrote:Zor will hate you forever![]()
I REALLY don't feel comfortable with such a HUEG Japanistan looming there. AND we've got Bean's Khitan so close by, who knows what schemery might go on betwixt the two!
Fuck it, I might have to increase my amounts of submarines and other patrol vessels. My water! They will not break my water!
I do believe they are banned, in the sense that "All major nations have forsworn their use, and will kick your ass if you start making/using them."Stas Bush wrote:i need to know, are nuclear weapons banned or not?
Moderators please? The REF thread says nuclear industry, but no nuclear explosions.
Yeah, I joined the group thinking I'd have a lot more to talk about then I actually do. I probably haven't made more then ten posts there, at most.RogueIce wrote:I don't think that's exactly unprecedented in reality.Setzer wrote:Well, the MESS does seem to have quite a lot of powerful members. Somewhat unbalanced, power bloc wise.
Besides, Phong was telling me about some of the ASVS STGODs where there were the hyperpowers, and then there were the little "powers" that just prayed none of the big boys got bored and decided to crush them one day. So apparently this isn't the unusual by STGOD standards, either.
He is, and is even a part of the usergroup, though not terribly active in there.Fingolfin_Noldor wrote:Doesn't Setzer happen to be in the Navy?
The Old Dominion respects the rights of all nations to seek the tools they need for their national defense.KlavoHunter wrote:
I do believe they are banned, in the sense that "All major nations have forsworn their use, and will kick your ass if you start making/using them."
No nation in the modern day could hope to land an entire division by sea. You're more likely to be landing the actual combatant third-to-a-half of the division with assault transport vessels (LHDs, LSDs, LPDs, LSTs) and bringing the rest in vessels like the Bob Hope-class AKR or by air.Sea Skimmer wrote:That division is big…it can take heavy losses and keep fighting, and by the time the Marines finish adding all the support elements it needs to become a Marine Expeditionary Force and not just a division, it would have over 30,000 men. That’s what it takes to bring a whole army in miniature, not just some fighting men, across a beach and onto shore.Fingolfin_Noldor wrote: That division is huge. How many ships will it take to transport all of that? I would say easily 2 Wasps, and a few other LPDs like the San Antonio or the British Bay/Albion class.
In terms of shipping, way more then you’re thinking. In 1991 for the projected amphibious landing in Kuwait the USMC assembled 17,000 men to mount the operation, but this actually only amounted to two brigade landing teams plus one separate battalion landing team, not even a complete division. 31 major amphibious ships carried the force. At the time it took every amphibious warfare ship,in the USN, about 50 at the time, to transport one combat ready Marine Expeditionary Force!
Today’s amphibious ships are on average bigger, and Marine units are a bit smaller but your still looking at 30 ships to transport the division, probably close to 40 to transport it with all its attachments and air support. That means a divisions worth of life means buying a new amphibious warfare ship ever year to keep up numbers because each ships hull life isn’t longer then 30-40 years
If you only used big ships amphibious assault ships like Wasp, you could get 20,000 men into just 6 expensive ships… but you wouldn’t have nearly enough space to transport all the marines equipment, supplies and the necessary landing craft to move all that stuff onto the beach.
Now a dozen mixed amphibious warfare ships (buy 1 new one every 3 years) will let you assault land something like a very big brigade against the enemy, thats a pretty potent force for making a landing on any coast you want. You can bring in follow on forces MUCH more cheaply by packing them in RO-RO freighters and flying in the manpower.
Actually, that's not true: The Moon programs had the goal of a Moon landing in mind from the beginning, and thus development of the superheavy boosters commenced right at the start of the manned launch programs. You can see it easily if you read up on the American program and check out the launch vehicles they used. It was pretty much known from the start you'd need 120+ tonnes in orbit thanks to the Rocket Equation, so it was obvious you'd need a big enough booster. It's just that developing rockets takes a long time, so it was done while testing smaller (Mercury) and bigger (Gemini) capsules, the procedures, docking systems etc.Shroom Man 777 wrote:Why are we looking at moonbases when we probably haven't even a man in space? The US and NASA and the Russians built many kinds of rockets, they didn't go straight for Saturn Vs or those Russian super-rockets.
Skimmer said before he claims airspace up to 30 000 kms over Japanistan, but that he's willing to share it in the interest of science, so I think we can negotiate permissions for overflight of Selene missions.Fingolfin_Noldor wrote:Before we start launching, can we at least expect a fairly reasonable policy from Skimmer regarding airspace or something explicit?
I don't care. be advised that Shep is going to stick some disputed Islands off the coast.PeZook wrote:
Lonestar, Shep: Are you okay with the idea of appending the New Continent to the southern tip of MESSarica?