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@ryelor12311 ай бұрын
The government needs to bring back the Peacekeeper. The CEP was so much better than anything else.
@MausMasher5411 ай бұрын
Reminds me of UltraCorps brought into the 21st Century(yes, it's still online & free to play, it's a RISK in Space)....
@Kevin_Patrick00111 ай бұрын
The Peacekeeper was phased out because the contractor that built the guidance system used non approved components in order to meet deadlines. As a result, up to 80-90% of the missiles were failed for launch in their tubes. This was a major scandal and they were traded away under the arms limitations treaty because the missile was a failure and the fix was very expensive for new guidance systems. So why not trade away a broken system?
@CarlosGonga-g6t8 ай бұрын
What happened to the 57 Kawasaki satélites usa pure in the spare ?.
@lsdzheeusi11 ай бұрын
You mentioned hot launch vs. cold launch, but did't explain to viewers why this matters. A hot launch destroys or damages much of the missile silo, requiring major and timely repairs to use it for another launch. A cold launch system allows for the possibility of a fast reload and reuse of the silo, adding another dimension to deterrence. In an exchange, an opponent could safely ignore any silo that had launched a missile with a hot launch. With cold launch capability, even previously used silos would need to be targeted, making a first strike even more risky.
@ashleygoggs567911 ай бұрын
problem with reloading these things though is if they are known by the enemy, after launch there probably isnt a chance of a reload.
@lsdzheeusi11 ай бұрын
The US looked at moving the missiles among various shelters as a deterrent. The Soviet Strategic Rocket Forces took the same basic idea and instead looked at using mobile missile carriers that could hide and then reload and be ready for launch in under 24 hours. In a way it's even scarier than the US system which was predicated upon fixed storage locations. The Soviet doctrine would have seen missiles scurrying on their carrier vehicles in all directions and hiding basically anywhere. Cold launch and reload was a big focus for them, and cheaper than building new silos. Not only were reloads probable, they were difficult if not nearly impossible to stop. Reference the SS-18 (R-35) and the negotiations of the SALT/START treaties. The cold launch capability was indeed a huge concern for western countries and therefore a key goal was to limit Soviet deployment of systems with that capability. @@ashleygoggs5679
@HnvyCat11 ай бұрын
@@ashleygoggs5679 That's also the point though.
@jonryan888811 ай бұрын
He’s explained that in like 8 other videos homie
@Knight_Kin11 ай бұрын
Hot Launch: That's what she said she wanted.
@jairo874611 ай бұрын
It is amazing the amount of effort placed on getting so much original footage. Excellent work.
@aaronschaefer416711 ай бұрын
👍That MERV test was about as cool as anything I've seen in a while on KZbin 🎉
@vickomen33311 ай бұрын
Amazing for sure
@1funnygame11 ай бұрын
Significant improvement to some of the stuff he's posted in the past
@bronson457411 ай бұрын
2:05 James May: I seems to be damp
@NordRheinWestfale11 ай бұрын
2:07 Someone tried to ignite it once, but it was a little damp.
@NiteAtTheFort11 ай бұрын
James May
@orderlyhippo156911 ай бұрын
@@NiteAtTheFortYES that scene was hilarious!
@HailSantaa11 ай бұрын
Target: Chipsky Norton
@ibnorml550611 ай бұрын
Bombers may be slow and more vulnerable than ICBMs, but they have one major advantage. They are recallable. Once you fire your ICBM, you are committed. During the cold war, the bombers were used as a strategic measure, always ready at a moments notice to advance on the Soviet Union, but then also easy to recall. Strategic bombers allow the US to escalate and to deescalate. An ICBM does not have that option.
@1funnygame11 ай бұрын
I thought you could open the silo doors to escalate? Signaling the immanent ability to launch
@seaker920611 ай бұрын
@@1funnygamenope, opening silos doors straight up means ww3 due to security protocols.
@dustinbrueggemann187511 ай бұрын
@@1funnygame The doors are only opened moments before launch. Doing that would be like randomly laying a card face up in the middle of a poker match. It can only hurt you.
@1funnygame11 ай бұрын
@@dustinbrueggemann1875 Good to know. Must be a false recollection on my part.
@DarkNightDreamer11 ай бұрын
The doors only open seconds before launch. Its crazy how fast they slide open for how big and heavy they are.@@1funnygame
@Predator42ID11 ай бұрын
You failed to mention the fact the Minuteman III missiles are now going to be replaced by the newest ICBM designated Sentinal along with brand new nuclear warheads.
@johndor779311 ай бұрын
whats special about the new warheads?
@battleoid241111 ай бұрын
@@johndor7793they're new
@christopherleubner663311 ай бұрын
@johndor7793 they use an optical firing set, and are independently dial a yeild. One size fits most modular,
@christopherleubner663311 ай бұрын
@johndor7793 they use an optical firing set, and are independently dial a yeild. One size fits most modular,
@Sffker11 ай бұрын
@@christopherleubner6633 nobody even knows about "new" nuclear warheads. don't kid yourself. anything "new" in the nuclear military will be classified for the next 10 yrs minimum before it is leaked. you watch a video on "new" nukes? Please. Otherwise, I urge you to claim sources for "new," military source verified nuclear warheads, with specs included. oh wait... those don't exist. and to anybody that they do exist to, you already know the NSA is watching everything you type, and if you type the wrong thing...... good luck to you. point being, you have no idea what is new or not 🤣🤣
@frimodig11 ай бұрын
It will be intresting to see if the upcoming Sentinel missile will have any similarities with the Peacekeeper, like the cold launch and in terms of size with ten warheads.
@1paris194211 ай бұрын
The warhead limit per missile is still in effect from previous treaties.
@howlingwolven11 ай бұрын
The Sentinel is designed to be stuffed down Minuteman tubes, I believe. I don’t expect them to carry a different loading than the Minutemen.
@Evan_Bell11 ай бұрын
@@howlingwolvenThey'll use the W87-1, a higher yield modification of the W87-0 currently carried by Minuteman.
@raymcdermott920111 ай бұрын
Learned about the peacekeeper missile just last week in class, awesome to see a video about it so recently!
@blakefrenick20311 ай бұрын
What class are you taking that talks about ICBMs? Sounds cool
@stoneprevious429411 ай бұрын
I'm really glad you have a sponsor, gotta pay the bills, but "War Planet". lol
@dylhas111 ай бұрын
That last sentence made me smile. Thanks for that
@Tomyironmane11 ай бұрын
The plow truck and the rail car of the apocalypse are both on display in Dayton, along with a Peacekeeper.
@HarryWHill-GA11 ай бұрын
We have six Ohio-class SSBN and 2 SSGN submarines home ported locally at NSB Kings Bay, GA. They are beautiful to watch entering and leaving port.
@hanspeter2411 ай бұрын
back in school it was the loudest shouting guy that always won. same with us in the word: they just scream the loudest (example you lol)
@HarryWHill-GA11 ай бұрын
@@hanspeter24 That makes no sense. Who is screaming at whom?
@killerbern66611 ай бұрын
thats 120 icbm in one place haha
@HarryWHill-GA11 ай бұрын
@@killerbern666 Well, it would if they were ever all in port at once. They aren't. Our local boats represent about 1/4 of our nation's nuclear deterrence force. I don't recommend F'ing around with them. The Finding Out could get ugly fast. We also have two SSGNs that can bring their own unique pain to the finding out.
@brunol-p_g880011 ай бұрын
@@killerbern666 that’s 120 silos in one place, not 120 missiles. There’s a reason the upcoming Columbia class number of missiles carried are scaled down to 16, we haven’t enough to load 20 on each submarine, following the treaties and scaling down of the nuclear force.
@piotrd.485011 ай бұрын
80% of MX programme was insane basing scheme - not the missile.
@danmaster556511 ай бұрын
p.s. you can't ignite a SS-18 with a lighter
@johanmetreus126811 ай бұрын
Smoking Ivan: "Hold my vodka bottle!"
@paalbrudevoll633011 ай бұрын
Great project ! Greetings from Norway
@Gundumb_guy11 ай бұрын
Ah yes, Friday means a long video!
@whatismynameohwhatismyname11 ай бұрын
Right on time with Perun on the whole nuke content, nice.
@greyprice599111 ай бұрын
The missile knows where it is at all times
@eriklunden521811 ай бұрын
because it knows where it isn't. Classic.
@Leo13715611 ай бұрын
Excellent video and summary, thanks.
@gustvanrenterghem155611 ай бұрын
Idk why but i love that they named it the midget man missle lol
@K33GRT7N11 ай бұрын
You mean the “Minute Man Intercontinental Ballistic Missile” capable of reaching speed of 17,045.231 Miles per Hour and hitting it’s target with the at most accuracy with ensuring that the enemy would think twice about why they went to war with the Grand U.S. Of A?
@tw537811 ай бұрын
@sniperspk1237 did u watch the doc? it sound like the midget man is totally different than the minute man. it was mobile.
@battleoid241111 ай бұрын
@@K33GRT7NNo, he means the midget man trailer launched missiles that was shorter ranged and only carried one warhead you clown
@flyingfloorboard409711 ай бұрын
Huge missed opportunity to call it the secondman
@Evan_Bell11 ай бұрын
@@K33GRT7NNo, he means the MGM-134 Midgetman. A very small solid fueled road mobile ICBM that was in development but cancelled at the end of the cold war.
@CarlosGonga-g6t8 ай бұрын
My friend what happened to the 57 Satélites Kawasaki USA pure in the space 🚀 ?.
@thebrownieboy240211 ай бұрын
I’m a huge fan
@johnshite465611 ай бұрын
This channel has such a click-baity name, but it's really good. Glad I subbed!
@carlsoll11 ай бұрын
6:59 😱 Oh my Gosh! I never knew that was a Soviet ICBM Launched from a Train 🚂
@SirGalahad-br8zu11 ай бұрын
HANDJOB High Altitude Nuclear Deterrence Joint Ordnance Blast
@bobertmcboberty13854 ай бұрын
“what did you while serving grandpa?” “well i can’t go into detail because of security but long story short i performed Handjobs”
@Graatand11 ай бұрын
Nuclear strategy my beloved 🥰
@hankjones352711 ай бұрын
Are you familiar with Perun? His latest video is on nukes.
Didn't Sandboxx make almost this exact video about a week ago?
@John.Greyman11 ай бұрын
I'm almost sure that many silos have some new unknown icbms.
@johno154411 ай бұрын
Yamantau mountain complex
@Evan_Bell11 ай бұрын
Why?
@John.Greyman11 ай бұрын
@@Evan_Bell why not... Why to tell everyone the truth about your best weapons?
@Evan_Bell11 ай бұрын
@@John.Greyman Because their function is deterrence. You can't deter someone with something they don't know exists. It's also pretty difficult to test an ICBM without anyone noticing.
@John.Greyman11 ай бұрын
@@Evan_Bell so one should send a full inventory list? Their main function is deterrance, but there's the MAD factor. And also the issue of not incentivating other players to develop better icbms. Do you really think US' best weapons are 70-80's projects? Weapons designed 40-50 years back? And then they went watching Netflix this whole time? So skunk works & alikes did nothing in the last 3 decades besides an export fighter? 🤔
@Arshiyaomera8811 ай бұрын
Old title: American 200 billion Missile that never launched
@briangriffith398511 ай бұрын
best thing America's governments do... waste taxpayer's money
@jurajsintaj664411 ай бұрын
@@briangriffith3985 To be frank, the alternative might have straight up been nuclear annihilation. The USSR would have probably attacked the US in a first strike if the US couldn't strike back.
@hankjones352711 ай бұрын
@@briangriffith3985 So cancel your nukes and military. See how much that ends up costing.
@briangriffith398511 ай бұрын
@@hankjones3527 nothing to do with cancelling. they make some piss poor choices, and dont mean nuke programs. look at those modern navy ships that are retired because of buckled super structures. they havent seen any heavy use yet. why? cause of piss poor choice of materials. thats only 1 example. another is sending all that money to Israel every year to prop up their own military.
@hankjones352711 ай бұрын
@briangriffith3985 The original comment was about spending money on missiles that were never launched. I pointed out it's best to spend on a military and never need to use it than not have it at all. Yes some programs fail but that doesn't mean all expenditure, like the one in the original post, was a waste as you suggested it was.
@notdrake500111 ай бұрын
*What if I want it to fail*
@SB-qm5wg11 ай бұрын
The peacekeepers went live 1986. Soviet Union collapses in 1991. So all that for...4.5 years.
@josephtaylor385711 ай бұрын
"Greetings Professor Falken. Would you like to play a game of chess?"
@twixxtro11 ай бұрын
so much peacekeeper but no peace
@johnbecker521310 ай бұрын
minuteman , the only one that you know of
@a_bar857911 ай бұрын
Wonder that violence and war make all this genius!
@artemkotelevych252311 ай бұрын
There is no such thing as "too offensive" when dealing with russia, force is the only treaty they can follow.
@NotWhatYouThink11 ай бұрын
I think you missed the joke on that one.
@artemkotelevych252311 ай бұрын
@@NotWhatYouThink 😫
@weirdsciencetv499911 ай бұрын
Its called a nash equilibrium and it explains a lot of horrifyingly bad systems that are stably in place.
@Hobbes4ever11 ай бұрын
wonder why they decided to make a brand new Sentinel missile instead of an improved Peacekeeper to replace the Minuteman 3
@americafirst373811 ай бұрын
It is called kickbacks
@Evan_Bell11 ай бұрын
Because Peacekeeper had a payload capacity deemed excessive of requirements, and was extremely costly.
@73caddydaddy9311 ай бұрын
Treaties limited warhead counts. Sentinel is mainly a service life extension for the minuteman III as the solid rocket boosters are getting pretty old and they're staying ahead of the eventual breakdown of the thiokol propellant
@Hobbes4ever11 ай бұрын
@@Evan_Bell well Putin is making the RS-28 which is as heavy as the SS-18/R-36. @73caddydaddy93 if the Russians are making a replacement for ss-18 then surely that treaty is as dead as the INF
@Evan_Bell11 ай бұрын
@@Hobbes4ever The treaty was never ratified. And the US and Russia have different doctrines when it comes to nuclear weapon delivery systems and use strategies. Russia uses has many more tactical weapons, but fewer SSBNs, for example. Just because one country chooses the path of superheavy ICBMs, doesn't mean it's the objectively best solution. The RS-28 is far more costly and less survivable than the LGM-30 (or it would be if both were produced in the same country), even if it does have a far greater payload capacity. The Minuteman fleet was built precisely because it was low cost. There were debates in the US military leadership about the virtues of liquid vs solid fueled ICBMs. Liquid fueled rockets can be more precise, more efficient (for example as measured in terms of throw weight vs overall missile weight), but are far more costly, harder to maintain, physically larger, thus requiring larger more expensive silos... The US opted for solid fuels starting with MM1 because they knew they could out-produce the USSR with low cost solid rockets, which at the time the USSR had not perfected. It was felt that numerical superiority had a greater deterrent effect than greater accuracy, or other advantages of liquid fueled rockets.
@John-rl9ue11 ай бұрын
Lol the title sounds like a Real Engineering thumbnail
@erbenton0711 ай бұрын
You should address how an icbm launched from Russia could destroy land based missiles. Since the flight time is about 28 minutes, then there is time for us to launch before the Russian icbm's arrive, meaning they would hit a lot of empty silos, but yeh, some loaded silos too because we would not launch our entire arsenal.
@Evan_Bell11 ай бұрын
Why do you think the entire land based arsenal would not be fired? If any were to be held in reserve, it'd be the SLBMs. Silo launched missiles suffer from a use them or use them limitation.
@babushka392011 ай бұрын
2:05 *I think it must be damp*
@frutzu729511 ай бұрын
Zero mathematics were discussed in this video
@kevincooper372710 ай бұрын
If missiles were launched against the US the retaliatory strike would be in the air before impact. So the silos would already be empty.
@MustangsCanTurnToo11 ай бұрын
I appreciate the Westinghouse logo on the missile. It’s like they knew their product would be in propaganda videos which helped them sell television sets…which allowed people to watch propaganda videos.
@Night-21111 ай бұрын
Cool
@thespalek111 ай бұрын
... the very last sentence😂😂😂
@Ed_Stuckey11 ай бұрын
_MidgetMan missile too offensive_ In name only...
@bobertmcboberty13854 ай бұрын
so dwarf man is still a go?
@MarcusEasterbrook-i2lКүн бұрын
The world should of been figgering out how to get rid of nukes not make them better
@mariacheebandidos718311 ай бұрын
looking at: - what became of the soviet union - what the US was / is - what russia is today - how the same or similar people overhype, exaggerate china's abilities and capabilities (especially vis-a-vis the US) - behaviors and tendencies of reporters, journalists, ... some folks
@benyb36910 ай бұрын
2 RIBU BiLLiON
@heikos426411 ай бұрын
It's a Grader. A plow would do the exact opposite to the ground 😉
@kurtnelle11 ай бұрын
Wasn't the space shuttle also supposed to be a method of carrying Warheads into space should the US decide to launch a covert first strike?
@fn0rd-f5o11 ай бұрын
NASA was created as a Civilian arm of a Military program. The military has their own launch vehicles.
@thesmartgoose209911 ай бұрын
The soviet space shuttle was originally designed as a platform to strike the US, in response to the American space shuttle as soviet leadership thought the space shuttle was designed to launch nuclear strikes but as we know it wasn't. The Buran (soviet space shuttle) ended up only launching once in the late 80s before the collapse of the soviet union, after the USSR collapsed Buran was placed into storage until 2002 when it was destroyed
@andrewthomson11 ай бұрын
@@thesmartgoose2099it wasn't destroyed. It's in storage at its launch site in Kazakhstan. There are even youtube videos documenting this.
@kurtnelle11 ай бұрын
@@fn0rd-f5o The military has their own space shuttle? (serious question)
@ronjon794211 ай бұрын
@@kurtnelleExpendable rockets. Back in the day, the USAF ran the launches that the ULA, SpaceX, Orbital, and others, are now contracted to launch. No vehicles like the Space Shuttle…although I guess the USAF-managed X-37 would count - but no one knows what it carries.
@Mymn_011 ай бұрын
where do you get these pictures on the video thumbnails bro pls I NEED ITTTT
@Theggman8311 ай бұрын
Ummm, wait, didnt the title says "Russia"? I could have sworn it did when i put it in my watch folder...
@jr290411 ай бұрын
Nope, "American 200 Billion dollar missile it never used" or something like that
@Theggman8311 ай бұрын
@@jr2904 meanwhile the title has changed again.
@omegaz339311 ай бұрын
Russian ICBM's actually had a CEP of 600 meters. Not feet. That's why the went with multiple reentry vehicles. The U.S. CEP was 200 meters. But let's keep in mind. The Total number of nukes was enough to destroy nearly all life on earth 10× over. There would be no winners.
@Max_Jacoby11 ай бұрын
Hello, cold war, again...
@jerrylim672211 ай бұрын
first strikes with shit like ICBMs, are just global sized mega battleships game with guessing what's a silo and what's a weird ass farm.
@gotanon965911 ай бұрын
NGL thinking a platform that could be knocked out by conventional means(torpedoes) is more survivable than one than NEEDS another nuke to KO is not very smart.
@mahadehasankhan853610 ай бұрын
Hi. Every one.😊.
@DutchWhite-c9e10 ай бұрын
Thanks for not launching ladies and gentlemen.
@DomyTheMad42011 ай бұрын
NGL, i'm already thinking of ways to Mod the HMV & MidgetMan into my Civilization game.
@ronjon794211 ай бұрын
1:25. Weren’t the Peacekeepers ‘phased out’ due to SALT or START treaties w, the USSR? I always understood them to be technically superior to the Minuteman, and were more destructive with 10 MIRVs vs 3. Edit - 4:28 Our author claims 12 MIRVs for the AGM-118.
@metalogic158011 ай бұрын
Yeah, that's literally what he said later on in the video. Just keep watching it instead of asking questions lol
@piconano11 ай бұрын
This is why we can't have nice things. Either I'm insane or this world is. Only one can be true.
@sarahkatherine845811 ай бұрын
Isn't that most of nice things we are using come from war's needs? Like radio, GPS, IRS..
@wolfplayr213711 ай бұрын
@@sarahkatherine8458Jet engines, etc.
@gimmethegepgun11 ай бұрын
@@sarahkatherine8458 Radios were invented long before the wars that extensively used them. The wars accelerated their development by throwing more resources at them out of necessity, but they were very much extant before that.
@sarahkatherine845811 ай бұрын
@@gimmethegepgun Sorry for the misunderstanding, I didn't meant to say that "they were invented for war" (and I also didn't say that), despite some of them were. What I meant was exactly what you said: the tech may exist long before, but wars and similar conflicts reveal the needs for them, and such accelerate the developement/refinement. On a small note, why picked radio over the other two? Should I throw in the Internet?
@gimmethegepgun11 ай бұрын
@@sarahkatherine8458 Receiver-only radios had plenty of consumer presence, and two-way radio communication was being developed, because ships at sea and airliners in flight greatly benefit from it. The war probably accelerated advances in miniaturization of transmitters but I don't really see a whole lot of credit there. I picked radio over the others because I don't know what you're referring to with IRS, and GPS was obviously a military program. However, though both GPS and the internet were developed by the military, they both could've instead been non-military programs made for public use. The internet in particular shares a lot of similarities with the telephone network and could've followed a similar path of development.
@coenicorn11 ай бұрын
Imagine how screwed we'd have been if it did launch :/
@smoshfan43911 ай бұрын
I wouldn’t have been born so that’s a plus
@ljmorris649611 ай бұрын
"missile that never launched", trust me. I don't wanna see the US get to a point where that is launched....
@cowsagainstcapitalism34711 ай бұрын
nuclear arms are by far the most wasteful thing humanity has ever done.
@companymen4211 ай бұрын
Not like the missiles in Putin’s arsenal could even get off the ground in the first place 😂
@Evan_Bell11 ай бұрын
I mean we have plenty of video evidence showing them to get off the ground just fine. The reliability of Russia's ICBM are comparable to that of the US.
@jimonthecoast323411 ай бұрын
Us started using MIRVs in 1970. We've always been ahead.
@JudielFua11 ай бұрын
Use it or lose it😂😂😂
@melchristian887611 ай бұрын
👍👍🌟🌟
@justinworkman998011 ай бұрын
Let's spend 200 billion on this shit then we will change our minds when complete 😂
@alexciocca445111 ай бұрын
Wasting $$$that is not theirs but utilizing humans greatest talent WAR they need it to survive
@tankndg2611 ай бұрын
Once the Soviet regime fell it was discovered that only 1 to 3 ICBM were in working condition…
@ABESAALE11 ай бұрын
😮
@piotrd.485011 ай бұрын
And ...? You do realize, that for last generation of Soviet ICBMs - containerized ones - that was about as designed? One in production to replace legacy, one on duty and one on factory level maintenance?
@jonvro402211 ай бұрын
Where’d you even hear that from lol
@billyponsonby11 ай бұрын
Where to you see that gem of nonsense?
@scottpohl406911 ай бұрын
Show your references. This would have to been documented.
@nestbergfamily138011 ай бұрын
M yes first 2,000 views in 11 MINUTES. HOW
@johno154411 ай бұрын
2.76 million subs
@michaelhband6 ай бұрын
👍👍👍❤❤❤🚀🚀🚀
@khchannel211 ай бұрын
Not soviet now it is RUSSIA ...king of nuclear technology
@piotrd.485011 ай бұрын
Unpopular opinion: shame that both MX and Midgetman have not entered production and stayed in service.
@Evan_Bell11 ай бұрын
Midgetman maybe. But MX was extremely expensive and had a payload capacity deemed unnecessarily excessive.
@gotanon965911 ай бұрын
@@Evan_Bell No its the drop in budget. Remember the treaty only counts DEPLOYED warheads not payload loadout they could easily put 1 or 2 warheads each and a ton of decoys and countermeasures
@Evan_Bell11 ай бұрын
@@gotanon9659 Yeah, they could do that, but it'd be far more expensive than the current fleet of MM3s
@Blutankalpha11 ай бұрын
first like, view and comment not that anyone cares
@SpaceBlockRR11 ай бұрын
Your not first
@ronjon794211 ай бұрын
I care. I was first once, it’s worth announcing.
@PrathameshPonkshe11 ай бұрын
The entire world is in peril because a certain country felt insecure....gulp that -_-
@killerbern66611 ай бұрын
how to waste taxpayer's money 101 america really is the best at it even to this day!
@GammaFields10 ай бұрын
Yknow its kind of condescending when people try to white night and speak for someone born differently, it would be much less offensive to treat someone like regularly and not assume you know what's offensive for others. Especially when it comes to something cool like missile names.
@fn0rd-f5o11 ай бұрын
This is why we made sure that Ruzzian missiles would never make it out of the Atmosphere
@johno154411 ай бұрын
Fantasy land M.A.D was and still is in effect. Nobody is knocking out hundreds let alone thousands of ICBMs in boost stage
@fn0rd-f5o11 ай бұрын
@@johno1544 nobody has thousands of icbms ready to launch either.
@fn0rd-f5o11 ай бұрын
@@johno1544 yes we do have classified satellite constellations.
@johno154411 ай бұрын
@@fn0rd-f5o Your dreaming if you think there is some SDI network up there. Neither side would have limited warheads if there was such a defense and both sides would back to tens of thousand of warheads. There is also going to be a insane amount of decoys to deal with
@fn0rd-f5o11 ай бұрын
@@johno1544 it has been PRIORITY NUMBER ONE to defend against this very threat for the past 60 years. You are kidding yourself if you think they planned to defend the homeland soley on deterrence. They had plans for this since the 1960s. A way to keep a project secret is obviously to tell you that they didn't do it.
@Limozo11 ай бұрын
Didn't hear anything about mathematics.. why use that title? weird
@gustvanrenterghem155611 ай бұрын
What do you mean, once it fell? Then russia was made and they would definitely nit go out to the us and say, yh btw we actually only have 1/3 of our strike capabilities,
@setituptoblowitup11 ай бұрын
🇺🇲🗽⚖️
@howthats977410 ай бұрын
❤😂🎉🎉😢😢😮😅
@billyponsonby11 ай бұрын
Another reason Americans do a GoFundMe when momma gets sick.
@ivanphilip711211 ай бұрын
10th
@janggaban476610 ай бұрын
Malaysia with palastine.... Usa, isreal nato terrorist... Bidan natanyahuuuhaaaa...
@molybdaen1111 ай бұрын
If we had put all this money into science we could heal Aids and cancer by now.
@iyaashshareef739711 ай бұрын
4th
@Rotorhead165111 ай бұрын
The premise that missile silos are vulnerable due to being immobile has been misleading since the beginning. The vulnerability premise assumes that once the enemy's missiles were launched we would just sit here.....waiting....like a bunch of sitting ducks. Does that sound the least bit logical to ANYONE?!? The moment an enemy missile launch was detected, the U.S. Missile Command (and the U.S. military in general) would be placed at Defense Condition (DefCon) 1, and our missiles would be launched, with OVERWHELMINGLY superior response.
@piotrd.485011 ай бұрын
Whole idea was driven by concept of first incapacitating strike / failure to respond on time and suffering crippling loses as result.
@antoniohagopian21311 ай бұрын
You ain't superior in any way
@juliustheillustrious772711 ай бұрын
@@antoniohagopian213 >He still believes in "le roosia stronk epic maymay"...
@cascadianrangers72811 ай бұрын
Not if they get subs off the coast, 5-10 min warning tops, less for some. Possibly no warning at all, our first notice may be the detonation of dozens possibly hundreds of sub launched hydrogen bombs.
@johno154411 ай бұрын
The worry was always one side pulling off a suprise first strike. Green light teams for example
@g0lomp_11 ай бұрын
1st
@Rotorhead165111 ай бұрын
Nobody cares
@ronjon794211 ай бұрын
Hey, I care. Thumbs up 👍
@g0lomp_11 ай бұрын
@@ronjon7942 thx bro
@RuelDomalaon-fy3hf10 ай бұрын
My way of missile is not like that , a missile that have no weight in flying. No noise no batteries and fuel . No weight can float in the air and dive if the control to blast. The floating missile is like a Ball or saucer , and can wait for the target . And can blast if the control to blast . A perpetual flying missile, with own power , 110v ac x2 small , big 10000v ac x2 , very very big 100000v ac x2 , The purpose of this missile is to wait the target in the air . You want this ? My flash driving invention running in light speed way first why ? It's the power of my missile. A perpetual power.