Oleksandr Syrskyi, Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, has reported that Ukrainian troops shot down a Russian Tu-22M3 bomber with a drone a few days ago.
It’s apparently a little more controversial than that. There’s a whole community of “truthers” that are committed to debunking the idea that Van Riper’s tactics would have worked in the real world and accuse him of gaming the simulation and ruining the productiveness of this massive exercise by, more or less, using exploits. On the other hand, there are some other military people who say more or less that his job wasn’t to make an objectively productive exercise, it was to win, and at that he excelled and fair’s fair. The truth is probably a mixture of both, innovative tactics alongside semi-exploits that aren’t applicable to the real world.
Such defeat can be attributed to various shortfall in simulation capabilities and design that significantly hindered Blue Force fighting and command capabilities. Examples include: a time lag in intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance information being forwarded to the Blueforce by the simulation master, various glitches that limited Blue ships point-defense capabilities and error in the simulation which placed ships unrealistically close to Red assets.
His real job was to find exploits so that we could learn and mitigate them. If we learned and take steps to prevent what he did from working in the real world he did his job. If we didn’t take steps (at least gain confidence that this isn’t real world possible) then he failed.
It’s apparently a little more controversial than that. There’s a whole community of “truthers” that are committed to debunking the idea that Van Riper’s tactics would have worked in the real world and accuse him of gaming the simulation and ruining the productiveness of this massive exercise by, more or less, using exploits. On the other hand, there are some other military people who say more or less that his job wasn’t to make an objectively productive exercise, it was to win, and at that he excelled and fair’s fair. The truth is probably a mixture of both, innovative tactics alongside semi-exploits that aren’t applicable to the real world.
Curious to know how the exploits would not be applicable in real world.
Some of them would, some would not.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millennium_Challenge_2002
His real job was to find exploits so that we could learn and mitigate them. If we learned and take steps to prevent what he did from working in the real world he did his job. If we didn’t take steps (at least gain confidence that this isn’t real world possible) then he failed.
Sounds like Enders Game.