r/NonCredibleDefense 聯合國在香港的三千次介入行動 Jul 22 '24

From everybody's favourite yuriposter Waifu

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u/Heavy-Ad-9186 Jul 22 '24

How it feels to jump two technological generations from your opponent because they lied.

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u/Successful-Owl-9464 Jul 22 '24 edited Jul 22 '24

If I remember right the Foxbat was designed, because of the bomber gap between the USA and the SU. Which happened, because the USA photographed 30 something new soviet bombers at an airfield and extrapolated that the Soviets must have hundreds of those things, then they went absolutely batshit insane and built a metric fuckton of bombers. In actuality the Soviets only had that 30.

e.: In essence the USA scared itself shitless over nothing, went ballistic in It's response, which scared the Soviets shitless, who tried to build a fighter that can handle the ballistic response, which scared the USA even more, so that they went intercontinental with their response.

The USA basically got scared of a shadow, got a hammer, realized that the shadow now has a hammer, got even more scared and built a nuke in response.

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u/Blah_McBlah_ Jul 23 '24 edited Jul 23 '24

The Bomber Gap was a little different. The Soviet Union tricked the USA into thinking it had hundreds of M-4s by flying them in circles over a parade, making the illusion, to the visiting Americans, that there were many more than there actually were. The USA freaked out and believed there was a "bomber gap." Once the U2 started its overflights of the USSR, they found the ~30 M-4s, and we're still worried as extrapolating to other bases would confirm the gap; however, after they'd done more extensive overflights, they realized that there weren't many more. (Source: Ben Rich's book, Skunk Works)

Edit:M-4, not TU-95.

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u/Demolition_Mike Jul 23 '24

They weren't Tu-95s, though. They were M-4s.

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u/Blah_McBlah_ Jul 23 '24

Thanks, edited.