17 October 2024

American Politics Right Now Are A Horror Story

This morning I read a guest essay in the New York Times by Eric Hagen entitled "I Grew Up in Bucks County, Pa. I Went Back to Try to Make Sense of the Election.

It recounts what the author learned talking to sixty voters in an evenly split small town in rural Pennsylvania (in 2020, Trump got 276 votes and Biden 274), about 40 miles away from Philadelphia: precisely the sort of place where this year's Presidential election will be decided. The model at the FiveThirtyEight blog puts Pennsylvania's odds of being the marginal state that decides this year's Presidential election is 20.4% which is higher than any other state, with Harris's odds of winning currently at 53% as I write, nineteen days before the election.

Every single person he interviewed who backed Biden in 2020 backs Harris this year. Every single person he interviewed who backed Trump in 2024 backs Trump this year.

The justifications that Harris supporters have for backing their candidate are unexceptional, unsurprising, and mirror my own. A Harris supporter notes that: 
We were sitting at an outdoor table, overlooking the river. Riegelsville is in the far north of Bucks County, surrounded by corn and soybean fields, and only about 10 miles closer to Philadelphia than to New York City. “You see it’s so nice here,” he said. “It’s an amazing town. But politics has kept people a little separated. It has broken up some friendships.”
The horror comes from the Trump supporters, who make up about 47% of Americans, and about 49% of voters in the marginal swing states that are necessary for the winner to capture the electoral college in the latest polling averages. 

They utterly confound me and make me wonder how American politics became so broken, and how it can be fixed. In a better system, it would be the popular vote and not the electoral vote that would matter, but it would still be very close. I'll recount their side of the story in depth from this essay, in the hope of understanding it.
In Riegelsville, I was curious to know if the two-vote margin in 2020 was a signal that the town’s residents might be open-minded as they consider the candidates running this year — or if they are cleaved into two tribes like much of the rest of the nation. Would the fact that they live in proximity and actually mix with one another make any difference?

Over the course of five days, in two visits, I talked with 60 voters. All of them were white, reflecting the nearly all-white town. Riegelsville is, however, economically diverse: Among those I talked to were small-business owners, teachers, an architect, a retired stone mason and a couple of retirees from a now-shuttered Bethlehem Steel plant in nearby Easton, Pa. . . .

The more time I spent reporting, the more I realized I was not really writing about the numbers — or even the candidates. This election, more so than any I can remember, is about us, and how we think about our presidents. The people I talked to in this friendly little town expressed two starkly different visions of what a president should be — and what he or she represents in American society. . . .
Most of the Trump supporters were unconcerned with matters of character. If they ever had a hope that a U.S. president would be someone they admired, a person who might represent the best of us — a war hero, say, like Dwight Eisenhower; a straight arrow like Jimmy Carter; or a trailblazer like Barack Obama — they had abandoned it. Many said that was an outdated or even naïve notion. They know who Mr. Trump is and don’t care.

“He’s a shyster, but I’d take him over her,” Marvin Cegielski, 84, the retired stone mason, told me. “He’ll block off the border.”

“I detest him as a person,” said Natalie Wriker, 37, who works at the Lutheran church in town, “but he’s the lesser of two evils.” She said she believes that politicians are “easily bought” but that Mr. Trump has less motivation to do things for money because of his wealth.
The Trump supporters had a more complicated story to tell. They did not express fears that Ms. Harris would take away their guns — or, for that matter, even mention if they owned guns. None of them were QAnon-level conspiracy theorists who claimed that Democrats were pedophiles. In other words, they did not seem insane.

But in their defense of Mr. Trump — of his serial lying; his misogyny; his role in the Jan. 6 insurrection — they offered a range of explanations and rationalizations that did not align with any knowable reality.

“I think it was a crowd that just got out of hand,” Gary Chase, 72, said when I asked him about Jan. 6. “Some of it was set up. There were feds in the crowd who whipped it all into a frenzy.”

Mr. Chase is one of five members of the Borough Council in Riegelsville, an elected but unpaid position. He is a Republican, though the party affiliation is not, as he put it, “a nametag you wear here.” Like most of the Trump supporters I talked with, he gets his information from Fox News.

He viewed Jan. 6 not as a national tragedy but as a partisan event. “It was a political show, a distraction from the whole Hunter Biden scandal,” he said.

Those sentiments were echoed by others. Jon Libasci, 62, an architect, said, “How was it different from the police headquarters burned down during the B.L.M. protests?”

I first talked with Mr. Libasci and his wife, Yeyi, at the post office and then again one evening over drinks at their home. They had moved to Riegelsville several years ago from upstate New York, and live in the John L. Riegel House, built by a son of the town’s founder.

Mr. Libasci commutes by car to his office in Manhattan, a drive of about an hour and 15 minutes. “Gas was $2.25 a gallon when Trump left office,” he said. “I just paid $4 for mid-grade. You hear what Trump says: ‘Drill, baby, drill.’ I’m OK with that.”

Ms. Libasci, who emigrated to the United States from Panama as a teenager, is an interior decorator who has been spending her time painstakingly restoring their home. I asked her about Mr. Trump’s long history of using language that denigrates women. “I have no concerns about his rhetoric,” she said. “I’m a big believer in you get the treatment you allow people to give you. I won’t let you cross that line with me. But I’m not a fool. I know that when men get together, they speak like men.

I asked Trump supporters about his performance in the debate with Ms. Harris. None argued that the result for him had been anything other than a sound defeat. Several, though, observed that Ms. Harris had clearly spent more time rehearsing — as if preparing for an important event were not a quality you’d want in a president.

“I think she practiced very well,” John Shoemaker, 78, said. “Trump didn’t. And you could tell the moderators were out to get him.” 
. . .

I sat with this group two mornings. They reflected the town’s somewhat eccentric nature. Mr. Schaffer is a dressage trainer. Another man at the table had owned a tavern, which he referred to as a gin mill.

I asked them about Mr. Trump’s business history, which includes six bankruptcies, numerous instances of cheating his vendors and years of paying minimal or no federal taxes. Their responses were similar to what I heard from other Trump supporters: They accept that the rich play by different rules. Rather than resentment, they expressed admiration. “Every rich businessman goes bankrupt,” Mr. Shoemaker said.

A retired car dealer at the table, who asked that his name not be used, said he believed that Mr. Trump, as president, “took care of big business, and that’s smart because it’s good for all of us.”

On one issue — women’s reproductive rights — there was agreement at the table that Mr. Trump’s positions were hurting him and might cost him the election.

“It was a mistake,” the retired car dealer said of Mr. Trump’s role in the overturning of Roe v. Wade. He said his wife, daughters and granddaughters were all voting for Ms. Harris, and some had contributed to her campaign.

“Trump puts his foot in his mouth just about every time he speaks, but on abortion it’s the worst,” the man said and added that “the abortion thing is going to kill him.”
In Riegelsville, several Trump supporters brought up former President Bill Clinton’s sexual encounters with a 21-year-old intern in the Oval Office, which may have caused more damage to the institution of the presidency than many Democrats are willing to acknowledge.

I ended up talking to a pretty good chunk of the town’s voters. As I made my way around, what struck me was the difference in expectations. Ms. Harris’s supporters expressed a sense of hope that she might lead us into an era that feels sunnier. It wasn’t quite blind optimism, but they were willing to let her fill in the details.

Mr. Trump has activated darker impulses. His followers were unbothered by his constant denigration of women, of immigrants, of political opponents and even, if he loses, of Jews he says will be at fault for not having proper gratitude for how much he’s done for them.

A president is called on to lead, especially in times of crisis. But if Mr. Trump’s supporters remembered that his response to the Covid epidemic was an exercise in chaos, disinformation and divisiveness, that did not bother them, either. They were not looking to be led or inspired. They said they want him to lower gas and food prices and close the southern border.

The relationship seemed purely transactional — even if the specific things they expect him to deliver would be largely beyond Mr. Trump’s control. Presidents don’t set food and gas prices, and to truly solve the problems at the border would require an act from Congress — like the one Mr. Trump quashed in the spring for his own political benefit.

Character flaws in a national leader are not just about an individual — they speak to the character of a nation, its aspirations and ideals, and the type of government we want. Mr. Trump often isn’t campaigning on a recognizable version of recent Republican policies. He is not bound by any party-coalition give-and-take. He is the party, and whatever he says, those are its positions. His product, solely, is himself.

What if what his supporters really want, and do not express, is the Trump vibe? All the name-calling, coarseness and bullying? The hypermasculine, authoritarian rhetoric? Mr. Trump is peddling that poison like political crack, and half the nation is hooked, the other half repulsed. If it works and he is elected, it promises four more years of national political warfare. . . .

When I began to explore Riegelsville, I’m sure I had some of this in mind. As I walked its pleasant residential streets, Riegelsville really did, at times, feel like a Hallmark town. 
I figured that if there was a place that former Trump supporters might have grown sick of him — weary enough of all the ugliness and constant sense of grievance to cast him aside — this might be it. I was wrong. 
One of my last conversations was with a construction worker at the general store who asked that his name not be used. He brought up the assassination attempt on Mr. Trump in western Pennsylvania. “It was Biden’s fault,” the man said. How so? I asked. “Oh, c’mon,” he said. “The deep state tried to take him down. You have to be an idiot not to be able to see that.”

I also heard Riegelsville described as “quintessential Americana” — and in a slightly altered way, that also felt apt. It is America in 2024. It’s defenseless, like everywhere else, from the ever-rising tide of division and madness in the civic life of our nation.

15 October 2024

Active Defenses Are The Future Of Warfare

Offensive Weapons Can Overcome Any Passive Defense

There is no tank (or other armored vehicle or mobile ground based military system) on Earth that can't be destroyed with a hit from a single anti-tank missile launched from a device about the size of a golf club bag, that comes close to a one shot, one kill ratio, and has a range longer than the range of a tank's main gun. Often, it takes less to at least disable even a heavily armored tank, like a well placed tank round, an extended barrage of 25-40 mm canon rounds, some land mines, mortar and artillery rounds, IEDs, or even a well placed hit from a rocket propelled grenade or recoilless rifle, although heavy tank armor is pretty much impervious to small arms fire from assault rifles, machine guns, and the like.

There is no warship on Earth that can't be destroyed with a hit from a single, typical, anti-ship missile, which can have a range of 100 miles or more, and can be fired from land, from other surface ships, from submarines, from fighter aircraft, from bomber aircraft, from maritime patrol aircraft, and even from cargo aircraft like the C-17 and military helicopters. One or two torpedoes, or bombs are also up to this task. So are many anti-ship mines. 

A variety of torpedoes, sea mines, and anti-submarine missiles are capable of destroying or disabling any military submarine in the world with a single hit.

Most air to air combat involves the launch of a single guided air to air missile that the target aircraft is aware of for a few seconds before it hits, but too late in the vast majority of cases to evade. Jet aircraft sometimes evade air to air missiles or surface to air missiles fired within the range of the missile, with flares and extreme maneuvers, but this is the exception and not the rule to the point of being a minor miracle.

The largest conventional bomb in U.S. service at the moment, the MOAB has an explosive yield of 11 tons of TNT and a 0.6 mile blast radius (deployed via a C-130 intra-theater transport plane). This is about the same as the smallest nuclear weapons every built (which weighed about 60 pounds). While it may not literally be able to bust any bunker or fortification, it will destroy pretty much any building not buried deep within a mountain or deep underground.

The only modern aircraft to have any meaningful armor protection is the A-10 fighter, which while not really effective against modern anti-aircraft missiles provides meaningful protection against small arms fire from ground troops, shrapnel, and perhaps even somewhat against anti-aircraft guns firing grenade sized canon rounds. Other military aircraft rely entirely on active defenses (including staying out of range of enemy fire, and hiding and dodging).

Active Defenses

Because there are viable means of defeating any kind of passive armor that are available to pretty much any national military force worth its salt, and even select non-governmental insurgent forces (e.g. the Houthis right now, or the Afghan insurgents during the insurgency against Soviet rule there), war in the 21st century against any opponent of this caliber is all about not getting hit in the first place.

Hide and Dodge

One approach is to hide and dodge. 

For example, it is now standard for artillery forces to "shoot and scoot" before the volley of fire it launched is used to identify its location and fire back destroying it. 

A few U.S. aircraft currently in service (the F-22, the F-35, the B-2, and soon the B-21, as well as the out of service F-117), and possible a few very new Chinese and Russian planes, have radar stealth. But they can still be seen visually if one is close enough, they have significant heat signatures, make lots of noise, and have locations that can be tracked back from the bombs and missiles they drop. 

The SR-72 Blackbird spy plane can outrun and can stay about the maximum altitude of many war planes and even missiles, but it has no great offensive capabilities.

Submarines are good at hiding. Non-stealth aircraft, surface warships, and tanks, are not. Tracked vehicles and surface warships and submarines are all extremely slow. Wheeled vehicles are faster but don't rival missiles or aircraft. Helicopters, most smaller drones, and many transport aircraft are still much slower than a missile or a jet fighter.

Camouflage can help a little, but only on the margins in most cases for large military systems, as opposed to individual soldiers. 

Confuse

In the face of guided missiles and "smart bombs" and drones (and sometimes even manned aircraft), electronic jamming, dazzling visual sensors, sending out decoys and/or covering smoke, or even hacking the guidance system is sometimes possible. Indeed, these confusion oriented defenses are sometimes called "soft kill" active defenses.

U.S. Navy destroyers also have some soft kill type electronic warfare active defenses against income drones, smart bombs, and missiles, and torpedo defenses that use both soft kill electronic warfare type jammers, and decoys, all of which are active defenses designed to confuse incoming ordinance.

F-15 fighters sometimes carry ADM-160 MALD missiles which have electronic countermeasures and are used as decoys. Many aircraft have flare systems designed to be used as decoys against heat seeking anti-aircraft missiles.

Hard active defenses

Finally, there are "hard" active defenses, that destroy incoming ordinance before it gets too close.

Lasers

Laser weapons (and other directed energy weapons like microwave beams) are a class of "hard" active defenses that are just about ready for viable use on the battlefield. They prematurely ignite fuel or explosives, destroy guidance systems, or melt critical control surfaces. No practical laser weapons have the punch to pierce tank armor or sink a blue sea warship, but they can, in principle, prematurely ignite an incoming missile or artillery shell or naval gun shell or even a tank main gun shell, crash a drone, and can disable a speed boat or even a helicopter. It could even cause an externally carried bomb or missile on a fighter aircraft to explode and disable it. But the faster moving a target of a laser weapon is, the harder it is to get enough beam time on target to destroy it before it destroys you, during the possibly brief window when the target is in a line of sight.

Boeing's 5 kilowatt laser (shown above with the image from this link) intended for Army use against smaller drones, it typical of the state of the art, although these are still very novel and I'm not aware of any actually use of them in combat yet. There are some similar lasers that have been deployed on select U.S. Navy ships and experimentally in the Army up to 50 kilowatts.

Why military lasers are so low powered is a question I don't have an answer for. I have burners on my kitchen stove that use more than 5 kilowatts. There are ordinary civilian electric cars that use 350 kilowatts at full acceleration. There is no reason that I can see that a military laser defending a naval ship or forward operating base shouldn't have at least 1 megawatt of power, which would greatly reduce the amount of time that it would need to dispatch each target, making it more effective against swarms of targets and fast moving targets.

The pros of a laser weapon are that it is the cheapest per successful kill ($10 or so of electricity; it would still be cost competitive at 200 times that price), can be powered with batteries or super-capacitors charged with a military system's existing electrical power sources (so in the long run, its ammunition supply is basically unlimited), and the weapon itself isn't particularly large or expensive to build relative to conventional military guns. Improved battery technology may make it more viable going forward.

The cons are that the lower the wattage the more time the beam needs to be on target to destroy it (which makes it ineffective against targets that are approaching too fast like hypersonic missiles), it needs an energy source such as a battery or super-capacitor that is quite substantial (the exact demands depend on the wattage of the weapon), it can only hit targets in a line of sight (and struggles beyond about 2 miles in many cases), and it can be impaired by dust, smoke, rain, or mist.

Still, laser weapons could soon be a standard part of a layered active defense system. A powerful enough laser weapon could give an armored vehicle a fighting chance against an incoming anti-tank missile. It could be well suited to protecting a military base or artillery battery or naval ship against an incoming kamikaze drones or artillery shells or missiles. A fighter jet with an anti-air missile coming at it might be able to use a strong enough laser to shoot the income missile out of the sky before it hits, while it is trying to evade.

Guns

Another option is a "slug thrower" that fires "dumb" or minimally "smart" rounds (like grenades with timed fuses or proximity fuses). 

Historically, this was the idea behind cannon artillery style anti-aircraft guns, which are now mostly obsolete because of their limited range against high altitude fighter and bomber aircraft. 

The main example of this approach in the modern U.S. military is the Phalanx Close In Weapon System (CIWS) that shoots a rapid barrage of 20 mm (i.e. grenade sized) cannon rounds set to explode at a certain range if it doesn't make contact at incoming missiles and shells and drones. This was originally designed for the U.S. Navy where it is intended as a last line of defense against income missiles, and is in place on many U.S. warships, although a U.S. Army variant for point defense has also been developed on a limited basis.

The Phalanx CIWS (SEE-wiz) is an automated gun-based close-in weapon system to defend military watercraft automatically against incoming threats such as aircraft, missiles, and small boats. It was designed and manufactured by the General Dynamics Corporation, Pomona Division, later a part of Raytheon. Consisting of a radar-guided 20 mm (0.8 in) Vulcan cannon mounted on a swiveling base, the Phalanx has been used by the United States Navy and the naval forces of 15 other countries. The U.S. Navy deploys it on every class of surface combat ship, except the Zumwalt-class destroyer and San Antonio-class amphibious transport dock. Other users include the British Royal Navy, the Royal Australian Navy, the Royal New Zealand Navy, the Royal Canadian Navy, and the U.S. Coast Guard.

A land variant, the LPWS (Land Phalanx Weapon System), part of the Counter Rocket, Artillery, and Mortar (C-RAM) system, was developed. It was deployed to counter rocket, artillery and mortar attacks during the 2021 US withdrawal from Afghanistan. The U.S. Navy also fields the SeaRAM system, which pairs the RIM-116 Rolling Airframe Missile with sensors based on the Phalanx.

These rounds are a bit more expensive each than a laser shot, and a barrage of rounds from a CIWS fires lots of rounds at some expense. Rounds fired by the Phalanx cost around $30 each and the gun typically fires 100 or more when engaging a target. The ammunition has to be stored, loaded, and resupplied. The concept of any system like this it that most of the 75 rounds per second that it fires will never hit the target. The range is limited to less than one mile of effective range (although it has a maximum range that it can lob a round of up to about three miles) and has a radar to detect income targets with a range of about 4.5 miles. It weighs about 6 tons and draws 555 volts of electric power (apparently at about 250 amps which is 138.75 kilowatts) when fully operational. It isn't cheap either at about $12 million each for the system, before considering the ammunition (fully loaded it carries 1,550 rounds) or its power and transportation demands. It is also only effective against targets traveling at up to about Mach 2, so it can't defeat a hypersonic missile.

A much smaller and more precise version of the same concept is the Israeli Trophy system, an 1810 pound system used on armored vehicles like tanks (a lighter 1,080 pound version exists as well) that has a combination of "soft kill" electronic warfare defenses and "hard kill" explosively formed penetrators (basically anti-missile bullets) along with, like the CIWS, an automated targeting system. The system costs about 30% of the cost of a new Israel main battle tank (i.e., about $1.8 million domestically for Israel, and $3 million for foreign sales).

Trophy's radar and covered projectile launcher (via Wikipedia)

Trophy (Israel Defense Forces designation מעיל רוח, lit. "Windbreaker") is a protection system for military armored vehicles. It is termed an active protection system (APS) and is designed by Rafael Advanced Defense Systems.

It is designed to supplement the standard armor of light and heavy armored fighting vehicles. The system is in active use on Merkava Mark 3 & 4 tanks and the Namer armored personnel carrier (APC). It is also found on the Abrams M1A1/2 tanks, and has been tested on Stryker APCs and Bradley Fighting Vehicles.

The Trophy system protects against a wide variety of anti-tank threats, while also enhancing the vehicle's ability to identify enemy locations.

Trophy is quite effective against anti-tank missiles (although not perfect), and has been used with success against them since the year 2011, but not so effective against "kinetic energy anti-tank weapons" (basically fast moving tank rounds with no internal explosives  and railgun rounds). As explained at the kinetic energy link:

Critics have liked Trophy to “a shotgun blast. It’s not,” the Rafael official insisted. “It’s a sniper shot…. a small number of EFPs in a very small area, aimed at a specific point on the warhead itself.” Rather than just blow the threat out of the air, Trophy tries to disable the threat so it doesn’t detonate.

It also has other vulnerabilities:

The system utilizes small EFPs which are projected towards the incoming threat; energy, debris and explosive pressure waves disintegrate the incoming projectile. As such, the system has a risk to dismounted infantry, and this system impacts traditional infantry supported mechanized warfare tactics.

The Trophy system have a donut-hole like window of vulnerability to attacks from directly above, or the slow speed of the drone and the gravity-dropped grenade might have caused it to be filtered out by the Trophy’s sensors. In October 2023, Hamas used civilian DJI and Autel quadcopter drones, which dropped shaped-charge grenades to damage several tanks.

According to an informational 'flyer' distributed by Hamas, the system can be defeated by firing an RPG-7 from within 50m, or using a weapon with a projectile that exceeds the speed of sound, such as the SPG-9 recoilless gun. 
Firing multiple rounds in quick succession is also a tactic for overwhelming this system. In October 2023, Hezbollah used AT-14 Kornet missiles during engagements with Israeli forces after the onset of the 2023 Israel-Hamas War. The missiles were used from the Tharallah Twin ATGM system, which is a quadripod equipped with two Kornets fired in rapid succession. This arrangement is designed to overwhelm the Trophy APS of Merkava tanks by having a second missile available before the APS can react after the first intercept (reloading requires at least 1.5 seconds).

The Trophy system protects only a single vehicle sized target, that needs some armor to protect it from shrapnel from the intercepted incoming ordinance, and operates only at a quite short range against subsonic targets. The EPFs used by the Trophy system are presumably similar to or less expensive than tank shells. 

Whether heavy passive armor beyond what is necessary to stop small arms, shrapnel (including active defense system related shrapnel), and perhaps canon rounds up to about 40 mm really adds much value in questionable.

Interceptor Missiles

A third kind of "hard" active defense system is a guided interceptor missile. Most modern warships have something of this kind, which is basically an anti-aircraft missile optimized for incoming anti-ship missiles. The are potent, effective, have long ranges in many cases, and are very expensive. And, while some of the cost is basically amortization R&D and intellectual property costs, the price of the oldest interceptor missiles suggest that the prices will remain high long after all of their relevant patents expire.

The U.S. Patriot Missile system, the Israel Iron Dome system, and some Russian and Soviet-era anti-aircraft missiles are in this category.

The size and range of these missiles vary considerably, but they tend to be smaller than anti-ship missiles, surface to surface missiles, and air to ground missiles. They generally have longer range than lasers, directed energy weapons, or slug throwing guns, sometimes much longer. They can be fired from aircraft, ships, submarines, or ground launchers (often mobile ones). They are generally supersonic and have sophisticated guidance systems. At their best, as demonstrated in recent conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East, they can be close to 99% effective at stopping relatively large and slow moving incoming ballistic missiles and cruise missiles and kamikaze drones. But these missiles are very expensive ($100,000 to $1,000,000+ each), often the total radar and launch system is quite large.

For example, the U.S. Patriot Missile system cost the U.S. $1.09 billion each as of 2022 (foreign buyers pay up to $2.5 billion each), plus $4 million per missile (up to $10 million each for foreign buyers). It has a 99 mile range and its missiles are hypersonic (3,500-3,830 mph depending on the missile). It entered service in 1984 and has been used in ten different wars (all of which, except the Ukraine War, were in the Middle East). Each missile is up to 2,000 pounds and a C-17 can carry just one of them (which takes about an hour to set up once off-loaded). A full system with six launchers requires about 600 soldiers to support it, although each launcher can be operated by just 3 people once it is set up, loaded and ready to go.

U.S. Navy surface combatants such as Arleigh Burke-class destroyers use a variety of anti-air interceptor missiles such as the:

  •  RIM-66M surface-to-air missile (1558 pounds, 45-100 mile range, Mach 3.5, $238,000 each, entered service 1967)
  •  RIM-156 surface-to-air missile (2980 pounds, 70-150 mile range, Mach 3.5, $409,000 each, entered service 1999 with prior version entering service in 1981)
  •  RIM-174A standard ERAM (3330 pounds, 150 mile range against aircraft, 300 mile range against land targets, Mach 3.5, $319,000 each, entered service 2013).
  •  RIM-161 anti-ballistic missile (1.5 tons, up to 720 mile range, Mach 13.2, $12 million each, entered service 2014)
  •  SeaRAM (195 pounds with a six ton launcher which carries a 21 missile load, 5.6 mile range, greater than Mach 2, $905,000 each, relies on sensors for other weapons systems, entered service in 1992)
These are used in conjunction with the Phalanx CIWS sensors for the SeaRAM and the many other sophisticated sensors of the Aegis Combat system for its other missiles.

U.S. fighters like the F-22 (which cost about $360 million each including R&D cost and $191 million 2023 dollars as the marginal cost of each new plane) use air-to-air missiles including
  • AIM-120C/D or AIM-120A/B AMRAAM (356 pounds, 110 mile range, Mach 4, $1,090,000 each, entered service in 1991),
  • AIM-9M/X Sidewinder (188 pounds, 22 mile range, Mach 2.5+, $400,000 each, entered service in 1956).
The fighters have their own advanced avionic sensors in addition to those in the missiles themselves, but these missiles are primarily used against other manned aircraft or large, advanced drones. But fighter aircraft have been used as recently as this year to interdict the same kinds of threats that Patriot Missile batteries, the Iron Dome, and naval interceptor missiles are used against.

As far as I know, there is not an interceptor missile system for warplanes designed to intercept an air-to-air missile after it has been launched, as an active defense. These would presumably need only a small warhead allowing them to be fairly small, would need to be hypersonic, would have a relatively short range, would need advanced sensors and guidance systems, and would presumably be very expensive.

As far as I know, there is also not an interceptor torpedo designed to target and prematurely detonate or disable an incoming torpedo with a hard kill, as opposed to a decoy torpedo. One would imagine that a small, fast, super-cavitating interceptor torpedo would be technically feasible, however.

Implications

I'm weighing whether to expand this post, or to make a new one, working through some possible implications of the observations in this way in a narrative style context (i.e. brief near future fiction vignettes). I'm leaning towards a new post as this one is already long enough.