Derfel Cadarn
ACCESS: Restricted
- Joined
- 5 April 2020
- Messages
- 7
- Reaction score
- 15
The comparison with Tornado in the Gulf doesn’t hold water.What does “work” mean?
“Work” for who?
I’m absolutely sure TSR2 development would have eventually yielded a system that would have skimmed across the Russian country side at supersonic speed, any weather, while navigating precisely with a few tactical nukes.
However we’ve now given up on tactical nukes as informed understanding is that they’re unnecessary, indeed maybe unworkable. Furthermore the first Gulf war showed low level was not a good place to be, so due to high losses, was rejected after only a few days. So is this a concept that worked?
The low level supersonic tactical penetration was rejected by the RAF shortly after they got the capability in the Tornado;- they disabled the capability by inhibiting (latter removing) the inner workings intake ramp control actuators. So why didn’t they even try to make that aspect work?
Such a niche, small numbers inservice, would have required disproportionate funding. What capability would have been lost to pay for it? There would have been no Vulcan, black bucking the runway at Port Stanley…. Would this have worked for the RAF and the U.K. actual national defence needs ?
A production run of 50 aircraft, maybe 3-4 years wouldn’t have worked for BAC, indeed it may have been a disaster, starving other projects of resources. Additionally probably it’s existence would mean, no 365/1000 aircraft production run Tornado. Damaging your ability to produce a weapon system, is that worth making TSR2 work?
Big difference between the dangers of overflying a well defended airfield to deliver JP233, or lobbed iron bombs - where the enemy can simply hose down the sky with AAA and short range SAM - and delivering a tactical nuke from outside the chaos.
Close is as good as on with nuclear weapons.
The problem with low level AD is its lack of range and reaction time. To cover every avenue of approach to every possible target in East Germany with spray and pray defences would be far far too much.
In 1962 the Tac Nuke was far better placed in the nose of ballistic or cruise missile. From 1971 conventional bombs were best delivered from a medium altitude strike package of ECM and SEAD.
TSR.2 and its descendants simply ran out of time.