Ukraine War has Shown the Ineffectiveness of Some US Weapon Systems

Why?
Jamming by the Russians.

Many U.S.-made satellite-guided munitions in Ukraine have failed to withstand Russian jamming technology, prompting Kyiv to stop using certain types of Western-provided armaments after effectiveness rates plummeted, according to senior Ukrainian military officials and confidential internal Ukrainian assessments obtained by The Washington Post.

Russia’s jamming of the guidance systems of modern Western weapons, including Excalibur GPS-guided artillery shells and the High Mobility Artillery Rocket System, or HIMARS, which can fire some U.S.-made rockets with a range of up to 50 miles, has eroded Ukraine’s ability to defend its territory and has left officials in Kyiv urgently seeking help from the Pentagon to obtain upgrades from arms manufacturers.

U.S.-made guided munitions provided to Ukraine typically were successful when introduced, but often became less so as Russian forces adapted. Now, some arms once considered potent tools no longer provide an edge.

“Dumb” weapon system reign supreme in the war. And Russia who cranks out a million artillery shells a year has an advantage. Thus this war winner will be the nation with the best industrial base producing the most “dumb” artillery shells & attrition of the smaller opposing army.

The US has and is spending a lot of money on stealth aircraft. But while those aircraft are less detectable than no stealth aircraft. They are detectable. Even the Serbs shot down a F117 with a missile. So why is our nation going to spend $20 billion on the new B21 bomber? Besides the huge profits to the defense industry that is. I posted yesterday that the US now has the capability for robot controlled aircraft. Why not construct cheap robot controlled bombers to flood an enemy’s airspace?

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Depends on where the F117 was.

The F35 can fire at targets from a greater distance. Meaning, the plane is not in harm’s way.

The F-35 can barely stay airworthy and they are a nightmare to maintain.

But they cost a lot…

Report: F-35 Struggled With Reliability, Maintainability, Availability in 2023 (airandspaceforces.com)

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Ukraine proves US high tech, high cost defense industry approach is NOT an effective strategy.

Critics have long maintained that our obsession with technologically complex weapons inevitably yields unreliable systems produced in limited numbers because of their predictably high cost. They are furthermore likely to fail in combat because of the military’s lack of interest in adequate testing (lest realistic tests reveal serious shortcomings and thereby threaten the budget.) The unforgiving operational test provided by the Ukraine war has shown that the critics were absolutely right. Successive “game changing” systems - such as the Switchblade drone, the M-1 Abrams tank, Patriot air defense missiles, the M777 howitzer, the Excalibur guided 155 mm artillery round, the HIMARS precision missile, GPS-guided bombs, and Skydio drones endowed with artificial intelligence, were all dispatched to “the fight,” as the military like to call it, with fanfare and high expectations. All were destined to fail for reasons rooted in the fundamental problems cited above. The $60,000 Switchblade drone, produced in limited numbers due to cost, proved useless against armored targets and was quickly discarded by Ukrainian troops in favor of $700 Chinese commercial models ordered online. The $10 million Abrams tank not only proved distressingly vulnerable to Russian attack drones but in any case broke down repeatedly and was soon withdrawn from combat, though not before the Russians put several out of action and captured at least one, which they took to Moscow and added to a display of Nato weaponry in a Moscow park that included an M777 howitzer and other items of NATO hardware, . The M777 cannon, though touted for its accuracy, has proved too delicate for the rough conditions of sustained combat, with barrels regularly wearing out and requiring replacement in Poland far from the front lines . Notoriously, its 155 mm ammunition has been in short supply. Thanks to the consolidation of the U.S. defense industry into a small number of monopolies, a ill-judged policy eagerly promoted since the Clinton Administration, U.S. domestic production of 155 mm shells is reliant on a single aging General Dynamics plant in Scranton, Pennsylvania, which is struggling to meet its targets. President Zelensky has been loudly demanding more Patriot launchers and missiles to defend Kharkiv, which is curious, given the apparent ease with which the Russians have targeted Patriots defending Kyiv, and the system’s declining effectiveness against Russian ballistic missiles. HIMARS long range missiles indeed had a deadly effect on high value Russian targets, such as ammunition dumps, but the Russians adapted by dispersing and camouflaging such dumps and other likely targets.

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They are hard to shoot down because they are more distant from enemies.

The rest of the aircraft fleet will be shot down. It does not matter how many of them get closer to the target when the target is shooting back successfully.

Besides with today’s disinformation campaigns honest information on preparedness will be hard to find.

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