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nostrademonstoday at 5:36 PM0 repliesview on HN

The staccato style is often effective for emphasis, but the paragraphing is wrong on this article. It should've been:

> The headlines say yes.

> Patriot crews shot down a Kinzhal over Kyiv on the night of May 4, 2023. Arrow-3 batteries killed Iranian ballistic missiles over Tel Aviv in April and October 2024. A pair of THAAD batteries in Israel emptied something close to a quarter of the US national inventory across twelve days of war in June 2025. The headline word in every one of those engagements was hypersonic.

> The headline is wrong.

> No maneuvering boost-glide hypersonic vehicle has ever been fired in combat against a defended target. Every “hypersonic intercept” the press has reported in the last three years was a different class of weapon: an air-launched aeroballistic missile, a quasi-ballistic short-range ballistic missile with a maneuvering reentry vehicle, or in one case a MIRV bus on an intermediate-range ballistic missile that the press could not stop calling hypersonic. The Avangard, the only Russian vehicle that meets the strict definition, has sat in silos in Orenburg since 2019 without being touched. The Chinese DF-17 has never been used. The American Dark Eagle has not yet been ordered to fire.

> So when we ask “can you stop a hypersonic,” we are partly asking “what would happen if anyone fired one.”

There are assorted other issues with the article as well, like excessive use of passive voice, lack of parallelism, and too much meta-talk.