Dilandu wrote:TFLYTSNBN wrote:
Wrongo!
Tactical nukes were never truly useful except against concentrated forces. The most obvious targets were Soviet tank formations. Even then, mild dispersal seriously limited the effectiveness of tactical nukes and those pesky German towns were less than a kiloton apart.
Wrong again.
Tactical nukes are the quick & cheap way to deliver the amount of firepower comparable with several hours of artillery division fire in ONE moment. Which is invaluable on battlefield, because it did not left enemy time to react or counter. And forced dispersion basically means, that the opponent's troops are harder to control & coordinate. Which means, that their striking power is limited.
The NATO doctrine of Cold War wasn't about nuking Soviet tank battalions on the frontlines. It would simply be ineffective - tanks are rather nuclear-resistant. The main idea was, that tactical nukes could be used to quickly open breaches in Soviet defense positions, thus allowing NATO armor to launch flanking attacks. And the time was crucial for that. NATO commanders could not allow to waste time, penetrating the flanks of Soviet advancing armies by conventional means. Even short delay would allow Soviet commanders to pinpoint the direction of planned counterattack, and reinforce it.
The tactical nukes allowed armor to destroy opponent defenses very quickly, and advance through irradiated battleground - WHERE ENEMY INFANTRY COULD NOT STALL THE TANKS. With the advent of portable anti-tank missiles, it became too easy for entrenched infantry to stall the armor attack. And Soviet doctrine since World War 2 put heavy emphasis on protecting the flanks of advancing armies, so the opponent could not launch the counterattack. The tactical nukes were effective solution in such situation.
I will not quibble with the Cold War era, Soviet perspective on tactical nukes.
The major point is that current US doctrine does not envision employing tactical nukes on armor or infantry. Conventional, precision guided weapons have simply become so effective that escalation to nukes is to problematic to be desirable.
One quibble that I have with the Trump administration is that I oppose any proposal that would transform Trident SLBMs into "tactical" nuclear weapons. Trident II should be reserved as a deterrent or may be counterforce strikes against hardened Russian targets such as missile silos. For use against any of the emerging nuclear powers, I would prefer that the US develop some other delivery vehicle, either cruise missile or a shorter range ballistic missile, that is obviously NOT a Trident SLBM or Minuteman ICBM. I do not want Russia presuming that the US is attacking them if we have to attack North Korea, Iran or Pakistan. One possibility would be a smaller missile loaded into the VPM of the newer Virginia SSNs.