MMarsh just doesn't like navies in general...doesn't like carriers, doesn't like submarines...doesn't leave much. Surface Combatants are all well and good, but we can't do everything.
Your reasoning for #2 leaves out survivability. Everyone knows exactly where every missile silo is. Submarines...not so much.
Do I detect a slight bit of defensiveness? Attacking the poster instead of the post DOESN'T make your opinions anymore correct.
Wars are won by the side that thinks AHEAD not by the one that thinks BEHIND. I do question the NAVY'S vision for the future. It seems like the NAVY has evolved very little in 60 years and things that don't evolve die. The NAVY still plans for traditional naval engagement even though such engagements are getting increasingly rare. What can a ship do that a aircraft or cruise missile cannot? You tell me.
And no, I think surface ships are almost as vulnerable as carriers, but I do think they have a little more life in them because they are more modular than carriers or submarines are. They also don't cost as much.
Technology, no matter what it is will eventually become obsolete. My job in the civilian world is precisely this. To think what NEW technologies can benefit my company. When one works in Tech, you never cling to past ideas to move yourself forward.
Is the NAVY so different? I wouldn't know for sure as I never served but I highly doubt it. After all, how many sailing ships does the NAVY still have in commission?
The problem is that ships are slow missiles/aircraft are fast. Ships are easy to hit, aircraft much less so. Ships are very expensive and slow to build, aircraft and missiles are not.
The NAVY needs to find a new niche for itself, but building weapons for the expectation of the next Midway or even Jutland is a waste of time and resources.
As for Silos, the Russians have been using flatbed Missile launchers for decades and those are even harder to detect than a submarine is.
MMFNAUX
True, stealth is a part, but that's 70 year old cat and mouse game between the subs ability to stay quiet and the Hunter's ability to detect the sub. However, its the Hunter that wins the race as ASW technology usually catches up very quickly to the subs ability to stay undetected. We saw this in the Atlantic with the Allies against the Uboats and even in the Pacific where Japanese ASW technology got increasingly better the 4 years the war went on..