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Large aircraft are the cheapest and most scalable way to deliver a ton of explosive on target. That's why aircraft carriers exist. Everything else either is too expensive per unit of destruction or sacrifices too much lethality.

The size of the ship has little bearing on the visibility of it to sensors. You should also consider that it is much more difficult to sink a large ship than a small ship.

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> Large aircraft are the cheapest and most scalable way to deliver a ton of explosive on target.

An important variable missing from your calculus is distance from munitions factory/supply depot. There are far cheaper and scalable ways to deliver tons of explosives if your supply lines are short, such as rail when you're defending your homeland. Carrier groups are both transport and FOBs

> You should also consider that it is much more difficult to sink a large ship than a small ship.

How did that turn out for the Russian Black Sea flagship, the Moskva?

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sure but if we're simply delivering drones then it might be better to have 1,000 small platforms than one big one. You can then still use the carrier in its classical role from further back.
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We can barely build FFGs, to say nothing of bigger drone carriers that would still be dwarfed by aircraft carriers.

So you'd say, OK, what drones can we launch from the tiny fiberglass-hulled small craft that we can build lots of, but the issue is that such drones will be very small and will necessarily have ineffectively small payloads to suit.

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sure but that's the purpose of most drones. If you want big ordinance then that's why you have the carriers and the planes and missiles.

I'm just saying that a carrier is probably the wrong footprint for something that serves up drones.

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I think this strategy is effective for Ukraine and Iran because they fight an enemy that is superior in terms of weapon capabilities.

If you are the big boy with the bigger gun you don't necessarily need that.

PS: I will take that back when someone manages to hit a carrier with a low cost drone boat.

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sure but America's ship building doesn't appear to be at the level of being able to cranking out carriers should they start losing them. Conversely I imagine it might have a better shot at cranking out a smaller blue print en-masse.
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That would change if there was any perception that a carrier could be lost. At the moment such things are theoretical
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