Posted on 12/11/2025 3:59:00 PM PST by SeekAndFind
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The terrorist DemonRAT Party running the joint with their drunken skank Judgettes will make sure “secret reports” get leaked.
Not much of a secret, now, is it?
Can a multi billion dollar aircraft carrier be taken out by bombs falling from drones?

Purely from a theoretical perspective, if the simulation showed that we WIN every time, that would mean less basis for more money for weapons, soldiers, R&D, etc.
This, hypothetically of course, would mean that the Pentagon has an incentive to create simulations where they LOSE.
Indeed, what benefit is it to them if they win in a sim? It’s not like the private sector where achievement is rewarded.
In govt, failure = $.
Again…this is purely hypothetical. No government agency would rig a test to get more money. That would be unprecedented.
Do I really need the /sarc?
RE: Can a multi billion dollar aircraft carrier be taken out by bombs falling from drones?
Yes, in principle a modern aircraft carrier can be badly damaged or even sunk by bombs or warheads delivered from drones, but doing so against a fully alert carrier strike group is extremely difficult and would normally require a large, coordinated, high‑end drone or loitering‑munition swarm rather than a few small quadcopters.
But consider — A U.S. carrier does not sail alone; it is surrounded by a strike group of cruisers, destroyers, submarines, and aircraft, plus layered defenses: long‑range fighters, ship‑based missiles, close‑in guns, electronic warfare, and increasingly dedicated anti‑drone interceptors like Coyote and Roadrunner‑M.
These systems are designed specifically to prevent small numbers of drones from getting close; analysis suggests a carrier group can probably handle a handful or even dozens of incoming UAVs, especially if detected early.
The main worry is large, coordinated swarms (air, surface, or even underwater drones) that might overwhelm sensors and magazines, or attack when the carrier is constrained, such as in port or at anchor, where maneuver and some defenses are limited.
Wargame and doctrinal discussions describe scenarios where massed drones could “mission‑kill” or even sink major surface combatants if defenses are saturated, particularly near a strong adversary’s coast where drones operate from many launch points.
So, yes, A multibillion‑dollar carrier is not immune; in the right conditions, bombs from drones or loitering munitions could catastrophically damage or sink it, especially as part of a large, sophisticated attack.
However, against a prepared carrier strike group at sea, a small number of commercial‑style drones with improvised bombs would almost certainly be shot down; it takes scale, coordination, and high‑end systems to have a serious chance of “taking out” the ship.
I’m sure China is already planning for this possibility and so is the USA.
“Can a multi billion dollar aircraft carrier be taken out by bombs falling from drones?”
No, that job will be done by China’s arsenal of 600 hypersonic missiles.
Secret?? Worst kept “secret” ever, this has been known for many years.
“bombs falling from drones?”
The bomb and drone are one entity.
Hasn't been a secret for years now.
We've been reading "China sinks U.S. carrier in secret war games" articles since at least 2013.
The secret report or the not secret report
The US couldn't have that result stand, as the Bush administration was trying to get support for the war, so the carrier was brought back to life.
Van Riper called BS and he resigned.
RE: The secret report or the not secret report
In the USA, almost nothing stays secret. Too many loose lips lying around…
It doesn’t take an expert strategist to know that the carriers will be the first thing to go, and the Chinese will quite simply overwhelm our limited defenses.
Aircraft carriers are obsolete. Really, that was the case when missiles became common even before we invented drones.
We got away with it because we've been fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Not when we have this weapon:

No. Presently the drones lack the range and payload to reach where the carriers will be — east of the Philippines where they hope to be out of range of the DF-21D ballistic missiles. The biggest threat to the carriers will be PLAN submarines.
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