What did Professor James FitzSimonds conclude about the era of long-range precision strike (LRPS) dominance in his presentation, "Contemporary Challenges to Sea Control"?
a. Sea control can be achieved in contested areas assuming a combatant is willing to employ fully autonomous detect-to-kill weapons such as the Low-Cost Autonomous Attack System (LOCAAS).
b. Passive defense such as hiding in areas of "clutter" is key to survival and an area where advantage can be gained.
c. Missile defenses that can achieve intercept rates of 90% or higher can prevent offensive missiles from penetrating in operationally relevant numbers.
d. Forward deployed stand-in forces are unlikely to gain advantage in the hider/finder competition due to their lack of mobility and long-range fires capabilities.