Somtaaw wrote:Your assumption is flawed that a stealthed ship somewhere between the two ships is only using CMs for anti-missile. During the ballistic phase, attack missiles (if you can localize them) are HIGHLY vulnerable to beam weapons. Mk23s are only crowding the 0.3-0.6 range, but beams are twice as fast and there's no missile wedges to block the laser/graser.
If you had a ship that was entirely, or mostly beam-based, they'd be able to put a pretty large hurting on a ballistic Apollo salvo. And being at the mid-point, it would have much better eyes on where Apollo's stage 2 drive burnt out and the salvo went ballistic; than the ultimate target would.
That's an interesting concept: using anti-shipping beam weapons (which have a range of 2 to 3 light-seconds) instead of PDLCs. That gives you much better ranging against the missiles and allows the ship that is doing the attacking to be further out. If I were that ship, however good my stealth was, I wouldn't want to be within 100,000 km of the missile salvo -- there's a non-negligible chance that the networked sensors would see me!
However, anti-shipping beams don't have a high cycle rate. At 0.54c, the missiles would be out of range within 4 seconds, so it seems like the ship would be able to fire each emitter once only. Plus, anti-shipping isn't designed to hit such small targets, even though they aren't evading.
This attack is also geometrically difficult: the interception platform must have been placed directly on the flight path of the missiles before they were themselves launched. So it can't be done if the source of the missiles isn't known well in advance (e.g., they've transitioned from hyper in the last 10 minutes). What's more, this means this technique can only be used once: after the interception has happened, the next salvo(s) will curve away and add an orthogonal separation of a few million km. That decreases the powered range and increases the ballistic one, but it makes interception negligible again.
If this was an alpha salvo, the stealth ship can't take out enough ACMs (there'll be hundreds, even a thousands of them). If this was medium-sized salvo, then it'll be followed by another.
The ultimate target also would get pretty good interceptions against Apollo if it were far enough back to easily tell them apart from attack missiles. But by that point in time, Apollo has already done 99% of its job, and could self-destruct on it's own, the only last reason for Apollo to follow the Mk23's into laserhead range is on the off-chance of an 'abort attack' command being issued.
And as I mentioned before, attacking the ACMs at this point would be counter-productive. Every ACM or ECW bird you've taken out is a warhead you haven't.