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carlosjobimyesterday at 8:46 AM1 replyview on HN

Offshore wind farms have been stopped by the Finnish and Swedish military in many parts of the Baltic sea which aren't the gulf of Finland.

If wind farms are a problem for radars in the US, then it's quite a small price to pay to block them offshore. Especially since the country is gigantic and has plenty of room inland.

Any attack on the US will be through sea or space. Both are voids and very difficult or impossible to surveil. There's a historical example in Pearl Harbor.

So why you are bringing up nearest land I have no clue? The point is that the US is exposed to the oceans.


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digitalPhonixyesterday at 3:16 PM

> Baltic sea

Still don’t see a problem making this comparing?

Atlantic ocean: thousands of miles to the nearest land from the NE coast; unrestricted commercial activity

Baltic sea: Belligerent nation on the coast (Kaliningrad Oblast) ~100 miles away; heavily patrolled and monitored commercial activity

> If wind farms are a problem for radars in the US

I’m asserting they are not because they magically weren’t 2 years ago and the airspace on the NE coast of the US has some of the largest and most aggressive ADIZ in the world since 2001. If wind farms were a problem for RADAR/early warning systems we would have heard about it in the last 25 years.

> So why you are bringing up nearest land I have no clue? The point is that the US is exposed to the oceans.

Er yes... I’m sure the military groups responsible for early warning didn’t just realise that in 2025. 10 years after offshore wind farms in the area were fully operational.

Edit: I want to say that learnings from recent conflicts (especially around drones) would be a compelling argument for why we only just realised these issues, but no one has articulated that or why it’s an issue on the Atlantic coast.

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