carebear
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There's nothing new or exciting about the Sunburn or its technology, all the major powers experimented with ramjet powered missles at one time or another. It was originally designed back in the '80s, the things been known to the Navy, including all its strengths and weaknesses, for years. In addition to not actually being "unstoppable" it has a short range. In the Gulf that's more of a problem but rest assured the Navy is on top of it.
Pretty much the mass media is waaaaay behind the times on modern military tech. Everyone who actually matters has known the info by the time the alarmist press gets wind of it.
Standard "sky is falling" defeatist tripe.
Oops, had to update the post.
Apparently the Sizzler SS-N-27 is a Sunburn that doesn't go supersonic the whole way in, only at the last, conserving fuel and increasing the range.
Still the threat is that there is less time for Aegis to engage at close range, not that it absolutely can't, especially several hundred kilometers out, pre-separation, with Standards and Sparrows. US Navy doctrine remains to intercept the missiles far off from the fleet if launched and kill the delivery system to prevent (further) launches. Given the range restrictions on the missile, once the sky over Iran (for example) has been cleared of enemy aircraft (an actual inevitability) the key will be defeating the small mobile launchers (torpedo boats? trucks?) as the fixed sites will be identified and won't survive the first salvo.
Consider the only threat zones noted are in areas where the fleet is required to go near shore, like a defense of Taiwan or ops in the Gulf.
The AEGIS-killer myth
The SS-N-22 has a semi-deserved reputation as being an uninterceptible superweapon. This is because it is a sea-skimming missile, which makes it hard to detect until rather close range, and it is supersonic, which shortens an adversary's reaction time. It was, in fact, designed to counter the USA's AEGIS combat system and other systems like it - but in practice, it's only slightly harder to intercept. First, it flies at a much higher altitude than most other sea-skimming missiles, about 60 meters rather than the 5-10 meters that missiles like Harpoon, Tomahawk, Exocet, Penguin and Kormoran fly at. Second, although it pulls random evasive maneuvers during its final attack stage, it is still a large target with a huge RF and infrared signature. In tests, numerous air defense weapons including the AMRAAM, Standard, Evolved Sea Sparrow, Aster 30, SA-N-6 Grumble, SA-N-9 Gauntlet and Rolling Airframe Missile have intercepted either live SS-N-22 missiles, or drones replicating their performance. Its high speed does make gun-based CIWS like Phalanx and AK-630 decidedly less useful, however. In short, while dangerous, the Sunburn is not quite the AEGIS-killer that popular myth makes it out to be.
It is carried aboard Sovremenny class destroyers and Tarantul III missile boats as well as the single Udaloy II class destroyer, and can be launched by Su-27 Flanker fighter/attack planes. Russia and China have the surface and air-launched versions of this missile, while the land-launched variants have been exported to India and Iran as well. Iraq was rumored to have purchased some of these, but no evidence of that has come to light.
Pretty much the mass media is waaaaay behind the times on modern military tech. Everyone who actually matters has known the info by the time the alarmist press gets wind of it.
Standard "sky is falling" defeatist tripe.
Oops, had to update the post.
Apparently the Sizzler SS-N-27 is a Sunburn that doesn't go supersonic the whole way in, only at the last, conserving fuel and increasing the range.
Still the threat is that there is less time for Aegis to engage at close range, not that it absolutely can't, especially several hundred kilometers out, pre-separation, with Standards and Sparrows. US Navy doctrine remains to intercept the missiles far off from the fleet if launched and kill the delivery system to prevent (further) launches. Given the range restrictions on the missile, once the sky over Iran (for example) has been cleared of enemy aircraft (an actual inevitability) the key will be defeating the small mobile launchers (torpedo boats? trucks?) as the fixed sites will be identified and won't survive the first salvo.
Consider the only threat zones noted are in areas where the fleet is required to go near shore, like a defense of Taiwan or ops in the Gulf.