as soon as i get excited - this aint my "grandfathers battleship" the way this thing gets deployed/defended has got to change. aint sure we can afford one, let alone 25 of them (at $20billion a piece) we need diffent, better submarines (
Columbia-class_submarine and put people on Mars.
When do we (the country) go over all that?
https://news.usni.org/2025/12/22/tr...l-be-largest-u-s-surface-combatant-since-wwii
Google AI Overview
Battleships became obsolete due to the rise of air power (aircraft carriers), guided missles, and submarines, which offered longer range, greater flexibility, and better cost-effectiveness, rendering massive, slow, gun-focused ships vulnerable and inefficient. While they remained symbols of power, technology proved smaller, faster vessels with missiles and aircraft could deliver more destructive force more cheaply and safely, making large armored battleships relics of a bygone era.
Key Reasons for Obsolescence:
- Rise of Air Power: Carrier-based aircraft could strike targets hundreds of miles away, far exceeding a battleship's gun range, and project power inland, making battleships less relevant for sea control.
- Guided Missiles: Missiles provided a way for smaller ships (destroyers, cruisers) to deliver devastating attacks from great distances, bypassing heavy armor and making battleships vulnerable targets.
- Submarine Threats: Advanced torpedoes and submarine technology made large surface ships highly susceptible to surprise attacks, as seen in WWII.
- Cost & Efficiency: Battleships required thousands of sailors and immense budgets, while smaller, modern ships with advanced electronics and missile systems could achieve more for less.
- Nuclear Age: The threat of nuclear weapons highlighted the danger of concentrating so much power in one large ship; it was better to disperse firepower across many smaller, more expendable platforms.
- Inaccurate Bombardment: Even in WWII, their large guns struggled to hit camouflaged, far-off targets effectively, a job better suited for precision-guided munitions from aircraft or missiles later on.
Relevance
** Sea Control:** Carriers need air superiority and struggle to control contested sea zones long-term; battleships can deny areas to enemies, acting as floating fortresses.
** Firepower:** Massive guns provide overwhelming firepower for coastal bombardment, a role difficult for air power to replicate with the same sustained force.
** Armor:** Thick armor makes them highly resistant to many modern threats, especially missiles designed for lighter ships, though vulnerability to specialized anti-ship missiles remains.
** Symbolism:** Battleships are potent symbols of national power, influencing morale and diplomacy.
The Final Era:
- Even though obsolete in concept, the US Navy kept powerful Iowa-class battleships active until 1992, using them for shore bombardment and as powerful symbolic deterrents in conflicts like the Gulf War.
- Ultimately, technology made the battleship's core function—delivering massive firepower—achievable by other means, ending its reign as the dominant naval weapon.
Why won't these things
still be sitting duck to the adversary?? i can't find a good answer or maybe I'm too stupid.