cthia wrote:Like I said, I'm not sure about GA tactics, but I am under the impression that LACs accelerate ahead of the Fleet to engage the enemy. I do recall that they are hard targets to acquire, but is that in general? Or when they are still with the Fleet during salvos? Certainly smaller targets are ignored then. And I think during their final run towards the wall, point defense may find them harder targets??? At any rate, I was thinking escorts can carry bigger missiles as specialized anti-LAC weapons. And LACs shouldn't be so hard a target when their formation is the only thing being targeted.
Depends on their mission. When it's anti-missile patrol I believe the RMN/GSN LACs normally try to position themselves around 3-5 million km down the threat axis towards the enemy. That gives the wall and it's close escorts time to see which incoming missiles the LACs killed and avoid wasting CMs on missiles that'll die before the new CMs reach them.
So if the SLN was looking to clear that screen out they could come up with a longer ranged missile. Katanas' Vipers can only reach 3.6 million km from rest, while the Shrike and Ferret missiles can reach the full SDM range of 7.3 million km. And actually the SLN's old Javalin SDM could (thanks to its superior acceleration) reach 7.9 million. (And if they used the drive off the latest Cataphract's 1st stage I believe it'd be 13.6 million.
So the SLN has the missile range to snipe at LACs from beyond their own missile range.
However there's still a few problems with that.
1) RMN/GSN LACs are very difficult missile targets - thanks to their stealth, ECM, decoys, and point defense. So you'd need a
lot of missiles to kill them.
2) The LACs don't have to sit there and take it - they'll have higher acceleration; maybe around twice as much acceleration, and so they could close to their own missile range fairly quickly if necessary.
3) The RMN/GSN LACs are screening a wall. Which between it's modern close escorts and the wallers themselves carry missiles with powered ranges of 16.4 (ERM/LERM), 29.2 (Mk16), and 65.7 (Mk23) million km -- so while the attacking SLN ships/LACs outrange the screening LACs they're in turn sufficiently outranged by the GA wall that they'll be coming under fire before they enter their own missile range of the LACs.
(Well, unless you use BCs carrying Cataphracts - which if they use a ballistic segment can theoretically be fired from as far out as a Mk23; just with a
lot long time of flight)
Now if the RMN/GSN LACs are on an attack mission then of course they'll leave the wall far behind, as they need to close to at least their own missile range (if not energy range) of their target to be effective.
If the SLN was foolish enough to detach LACs or escorts for an attack mission of their own I tend to strongly favor the RMN/GSN LACs in a deep space engagement (too far for either wall's long range missiles to be very effective against targets that small -- though if the RMN/GSN was willing to "waste" Apollo smiting LACs or escorts that'd be a very bad day for the SLN). The RMN/GSN LACs' missile might be somewhat shorter ranged; but their ECM, decoy, and strong point defenses will stand them in good stead. We saw during Buttercup, and even during the BoM, what RMN/GSN LACs could do against anything less survivable than a battleship or waller.
But if the SLN held its LAC or escorts closer, around the edge of CM range of its wall, then the advantages shift somewhat against the RMN/GSN LACs. Now the SLN heavies can (unless distracted by their GA counterparts) expend heavy missiles against the LACs (once detected). The LACs are still hard targets, but at less then 15 million km their ECM and decoys are going to struggle to fool all of the waller's sensors and tac departments all of the time -- and they will take heavier losses. I doubt they'd take heavy
enough losses to keep them from gutting a forward anti-missile screen but it could well be very painful to do so. (Possible painful enough that they wouldn't be ordered to / allowed to try)
And finally if the SLN kept the LACs and escorts tucked right close in to the wall then going after them with LACs, even RMN/GSN LACs is untenable. OTOH that sacrifices much of the advantage of anti-missile escorts because while they can still thicken your terminal point defense they fail to buy you any additional defensive depth so you get less time to adjust to each salvo's ECM / decoys and fewer chances to attack each inbound missile.
That said, even though SLN anti-missile forward escorts are at risk of getting punched out I still feel that even with their current hardware the SLN is better off building lots of them (whether LACs or based around somewhat larger ships)
Yes they might get swept away by a LAC strike -- but that won't be without losses to the LACs. And the LACs that are doing that won't be in position to provide an anti-missile screen to their own wall.
So best case the SLN gets greatly increased missile defenses for much of the engagement - and worst case it forces the GA wall to weaken its missile defenses in turn or.
(Of if one side went after the other's screen with their long range missiles -- well dying to keep missiles off your heavy hitters
is one of the jobs of the screen. So again worst case the existence of the forward anti-missile screen means taking much of the heat off the wall until long range fire is able to suppress (or exhaust the CMs of) said screen.
And frankly - odd are the SLN isn't going to fight a rematch against the GA anytime soon. But they still need to evolve their anti-missile doctrine and have units they can use to test it out in [hopefully realistic] exercises. Because if they wait for the perfect technology to come first they'll never make any progress.