Very interesting in light of the RN's official trade protection requirement for the Blackburn Buccaneer carrier borne strike aircraft--one of it's roles was to counter large Soviet commerce raiding cruisers like the Sverdlovs.JWintjes wrote:Now that is a most interesting line of argument - and one I find (most shockingly!chuck wrote:
I would go further and add that, had the Soviet Union possessed better and more heavy cruisers in 1945, Alaska class could actually not have been seen as so useless. Instead it would have been seen as the economic solution to Soviet cruiser threat compared to the wild extravagance of using the Iowa class. It was only the fact that Soviet Navy had nothing that couldn't have been dealt with by a Baltimore class CA that put the Alaska class so swiftly out of favor. The designers of Alaska, of course, could not have been faulted for having failed to predict this exact chain of events back in 1940.) very convincing. I always thought that the Alaskas were all that the Baltimores were not - big cruisers able to take on every other cruiser and big enough to have lots of upgrade capability built into them.
Of course, the only really important thing is looks- and in that they are really hard to beat; normally I'm not a big fan of US warship architecture, but the Alaskas are beauties, plain and simple.
Jorit
Jack