I often wonder if ASW blimps could still be used as a relatively cheap "net" in an area with many islands and miles and miles of coastline (see: my SMS nation North Point). I've often stated that North Point has a fleet of blimps used for ASW patrol, but have recently decided to scrap them. However, the above post raises some interesting points and makes me reconsider.
A fleet of blimps on constant rotating patrol, with MAD gear etc, could be a pretty easy way of keeping a large amount of sea territory under control. If a contact is sighted, the blimp can loiter while land based aircraft arrive.
Still, I'm not entirely sold on the utility of blimps given the fact that their main advantage was to force submarines to stay down and run out of air. Thoughts?
Keeping the submarines down was their function in the past, but airship technology has advanced. Or rather other air technology is being fitted to airships as interest returns to them.
In WWII and the post war period airships were slow and not at all maneuverable. Even if they saw a surfaced submarine there was no way they would be able to get to it, stabilize over it, and get a dumb bomb over it. Also they were many times detecting surfaced submarines which had hands on deck who would surely see the airship not only because eyes were better than any periscope at the time but because the airship itself had to be low enough to see submarines in a pitching sea with the same old mark 1 eyeball.
Today things are different:
1.) Submarines don't surface. While periscopes have advanced optics as far as I know they are still optimized for surface viewing. Yeah masts have sensors to detect search radar and what not but I think a blimp at 5-10K feet loitering on very low engine power relying on enhanced FLIR and other type devices that wouldn't give it away would be near impossible for a sub to detect. And the way surveillance technology is today the second a periscope or mast pops out there is a high chance the wake or periscope/mast itself will be detected. I think there is a good chance that not only will the submarine not know anyone is there looking, they won't know when they are seen either.
2.) Now add the above to current weapons technology. Yeah even today's airships are slow compared to aircraft and yeah an ASROC is not a workable idea, but you cold probably make a guided munitions kit for a torpedo to passively drop it on top of a submarine miles away from the actual location of the blimp. Many of our guided bombs work this way, its a kit attached to a dumb bomb instead of a purpose build guided munition. You would probably still need a parachute mechanism to slow for entry, but you get the idea.
3.) Again lets not restrict this to submarines. Put a few mavericks on there any there isn't a small patrol craft (or pirate skiff) out there that will probably avoid destruction as they generally don't carry an anti air weapon that can reach to an airship at a reasonable operating altitude.
Again I think this is more for asymmetric situations than state on state warfare, but we have a lot of those situations currently.