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by Arrath
1827 days ago
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There are never enough bombs to go around, especially smarter versions. Classic every problem is a nail and I have a hammer situation for commanders and strike planners once they have access to such munitions. This bit NATO forces in Libya[1], for example. Building drones may well be more scalable and economically viable than smart bombs. Consider a multiuse drone that could be utilized for battlefield recon with its camera, or the user snaps something akin to a BLU-108[2] smart munition onto the bottom of the chassis and now they have a remote controlled smart anti-tank weapon. The drone being multi use could increase the use cases, increasing the order size, decreasing the unit cost. [1]https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/nato-runs-short-on-some... [2]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BLU-108 |
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> Building drones may well be more scalable and economically viable than smart bombs
That's the heart of the matter. Is it, or isn't it? And for what? The commentary usually glosses over this.
E.g. what's the difference between a JSOW-ER deploying CBU-103s / BLU-108s or a "drone"?
I think the more important future distinctions are going to be between attritable/simple vs expensive/capable platforms, temporary vs persistent platforms, and organic autonomy vs network-reliant. Where some combination of the qualities is optimal for any particular mission.
As an example: Is a mid-air refuelable X-61 without organic sensors but carrying smart munitions a cruise missile or a drone?
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dynetics_X-61_Gremlins