I will answer my own question. I'd say 5%. Play it out 20 times it happens. once.
agsalaska said:
I will answer my own question. I'd say 5%. Play it out 20 times it happens. once.
I don't know about that. But i do believe in the gradually than suddenly theory. My guess is that most people will not suspect it to happen until a few weeks before it does.Sid Farkas said:agsalaska said:
I will answer my own question. I'd say 5%. Play it out 20 times it happens. once.
Odds jump to 80% in the next four years if Biden wins in November.
0% you live through it and if it strikes close enough, you may not witness it.agsalaska said:
So I am 47. Lets say I live to 87.
In the next 40 years what are the odds I either live through or witness a nuclear war?
Your best guess.
Livetosmoke said:
Turns out ships can go where they want in international waters. They've sailed to Cuba and/or Venezuela many many times.
Slicer97 said:The polygamy might cause some issues with the visa status though.akm91 said:
Don't forget RV's
agsalaska said:
I will answer my own question. I'd say 5%. Play it out 20 times it happens. once.
Quote:
Russian Naval Group Arrives in Cuba, U.S. Increasing Atlantic Naval Presence
SAM LAGRONE US Naval Institute NewsJUNE 12, 2024 6:30 PM
The four-ship Russian Navy action group arrived in Havana on Wednesday for a five-day port visit, local media reported.
Guided-missile submarine Kazan, guided-missile frigate Admiral Gorshkov, salvage tug Nikolai Chiker and fleet oiler kademik Pashin pulled in on Wednesday as part of the Russian Ministry of Defense's planned series of exercises in the western Atlantic and the Caribbean.
Gorshkov and Kazan are among the most advanced ships in the Russian Navy and can be armed with a variety of anti-ship and land attack missiles, USNI News reported earlier this week.
Following the port visit, the ships plan to hold joint air and naval drills in the region, Russian military officials have said.
"During the exercise, the crews of the frigate and the nuclear-powered submarine have been practicing the use of high-precision missile weapons by means of computer modelling against sea targets, which indicate ship groups of the conditional enemy and are located at a distance of more than 600 kilometers," said head of the Russian Navy, Adm. Alexander Moiseyev, according to Euro News....
....
Livetosmoke said:
Turns out ships can go where they want in international waters. They've sailed to Cuba and/or Venezuela many many times.
peacedude said:
Why is it that Russia's almost always ahead of us militarily?
They have hypersonics, and we don't. They made thrust vectoring in jet fighters a thing long before we did. They exploded a device almost 4X what our biggest bomb ever yielded, so we quit testing.
And we keep kicking them in the shins begging them to obliterate us?
Oh, and they have Poseidon nuclear torpedos ready to destroy the east coast, west coast, Gulf coast, and Britain/France/etc. tomorrow?
If you didn't think libs and RINOs were suicidal freaks, you need to rethink your stance.
And the Russians came up with stealth and didn't do anything with it, even allowed the information to be made public.Quote:
1) They put thrust vectoring into action long before we did. It was our idea in the 50's, but we waited 50 years to adopt the technology: https://jalopnik.com/the-a-6-intruder-was-originally-designed-with-thrust-ve-1560922846
The negotiations for the Limited Test Ban Treaty were already underway well before the Tsar Bomba. It had little to do with the ending of atmospheric nuclear testing by the US and Soviets, except perhaps to convince both sides it was a good idea.Quote:
2) Above ground tests were curtailed after Tsar Bomba, but we (and they) obviously continued under ground. No above ground tests in well over 50 years.
Hice Hunt for Red October reference.Slicer97 said:
I wonder if their XO has a fondness for plump females, bunnies, and underpopulated mountainous states.
Quote:
US submarine arrives in Cuba a day after Russian navy docked in Havana
By Mike Brest June 14, 2024 3:58 pm
A U.S. Navy submarine arrived in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, on Thursday, a day after Russian naval vessels arrived in the area for drills with the island nation.
"The fast-attack submarine USS Helena is in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, as part of a routine port visit as it transits the U.S. Southern Command geographic area of responsibility while conducting its global maritime security and national defense mission," U.S. Southern Command said.
The Navy rarely announces specific movements of its submarines, indicating U.S. defense officials wanted the world to know the location of the USS Helena.
The Department of Defense said it doesn't view the Russian naval fleet arrival as a threat to the United States.