95% TB casualties, because AAA is murder on low-level straight-line fliers.
Midway Torpedo bomber casualties were the result of unescorted torpedo bombers being attacked by Japanese fighters. Not AAA.
A major point for glide bombs is that they allow for suprise attacks. Low-level bombing, not so much.
Enemy has radar on all major ships. No suprise attack is going to happen.
Is that in any way worse than sitting still and flying in a relatively straight line we have to do to bomb/torpedo enemy ships?
Divebombing is a thing. More importantly, our torpedo bombers are not fragile, unlike the Icegiants and to a lesser extent, HAFB's.
Also, the fact that you're deploying a glide bomb rather than a normal bomb means you need to continue flying in the same direction for a lot longer.
Wire guided then.
That's going to be one hell of a long wire.
Jamming is hard when they have to be LONG RANGED, work on a set of frequencies you've NEVER TRIED, and in a game where having no experience causes higher difficulties.
If they invent jamming, well, guess what? That's a wasted design for them. We up our radio power/change how they operate to get around the jamming, problem solved.
It's a fundamental fact that it's easier to jam than to send transmissions through jamming. After all, the jammer only needs to make radio noise, the transmitters need to get through useful information.
The other reasons why jamming is easier are :
1) Jamming needs only to be successful for a short time to make the bomb's trajectory irrecoverable.
2) The missile is coming to them, giving them the range advantage. Not just the last 1000 feet, but long before that.
3) They're on a boat, we're on a plane, giving them mass advantage. They can afford a much bigger radio.
Glide bombs are HIGHLY effective, and in fact can be deployed in great numbers after a single revision, IF EVEN. We revise our preexisting MTA to drop them 4 at a time. And the Ice Giant could drop them 12 at a time. Then we have all the radio operators you could ever wish for.
Except they won't be able to.
The Fritz-X, as an example, could make a maximum correction of 500 metres (1,600 ft) in range and 350 metres (1,150 ft) in bearing. The Ice Giant is not at all agile. It will struggle to make the initial window.
In addition, these were often deployed alone, not together. This is because the bombardier has to keep track of the individual bomb, and he can't accidentally pick the wrong one. So you can't dump 12 out at once. Maybe 1 or 2, but no more.
The last issue is that the bomber has to fly steady. The Ice giant is way too big a target for that. I'd get shot down easily.
The HAFB is not a feasible alternative. It's noted as being short ranged, which will prevent it from being effective.
I was a bit angry
Still are.
calling something that was deployed by many nations in WWII a "wunderwaffe" is not a good start to your arguments.
I'm calling it a wunderwaffe, because it is, and was IRL.
(
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wunderwaffe#Bombs_and_explosives)
The Fritz-X was long in development(since 1938), used by just 1 unit after being introduced Summer 1943, and rendered useless early 1944.
It was used succesfully less than 20 times.