- Reaction score
- 36,475
- Points
- 1,090
But jobs in the right risings / districts...Lots of equipment exists in the marketplace without a thought to the need, or employment practicality.

But jobs in the right risings / districts...Lots of equipment exists in the marketplace without a thought to the need, or employment practicality.
Green/ Blue welfare and pork barreling drives me berserkBut jobs in the right risings / districts...
Ukrainian armored warfare specialist Mykola Salamakha says the current state of Ukraine’s and Russia’s tank forces is “roughly the same – grim,” with most frontline tank battalions operating at a fraction of their intended strength due to heavy attrition and drone threats.
In an interview with Radio Svoboda, Salamakha explained that operational battalions rarely field more than a handful of functioning tanks. “Instead of 30 or 40 tanks per battalion, at best five or six are combat-capable, sometimes only two or three,” he said.
Units that don’t understand the tank’s role often misuse them, resulting in unnecessary losses. “They send a tank forward just to show the infantry they have support — we lose them in such operations,” he said.
Salamakha said tank deployments are vulnerable from as far as 10 kilometers behind the front line. “The moment tanks are spotted, drone attacks follow quickly, using various tactical techniques and drone types,” he said.
Salamakha emphasized that drone saturation, persistent surveillance, and deep reconnaissance are now the primary challenges for tank crews. “Even rear columns are within reach,” he said, adding that armor alone no longer guarantees survivability in a battlespace constantly scanned from above.
110%Whatever tank we end up getting we're sure to need more than we currently have...
I fully agree with you.![]()
Ukrainian tank units face shortage of combat-ready vehicles
Ukrainian armored warfare specialist Mykola Salamakha says the current state of Ukraine’s and Russia’s tank forces is “roughly the same – grim,” with most frontline tank battalions operating at a fraction of their intended strength due to heavy attrition and drone threats. In an interview with...defence-blog.com
I'm hesitant to assume that a NATO-Russia conflict will look like the Russia-Ukraine war but I do think that serious thought needs to be given to the future role of tanks on the battlefield and what a tank and tank unit need to look like.
That is a pretty standard Divisional Artillery setup -- the issue is more what the Fire Bde consists of.One think that I'm confident of however is that we need to massively increase our indirect fire capabilities. One Reg Force Fires Brigade to three Maneuver Brigades I'm sure is a completely wrong ratio.
One think that I'm confident of however is that we need to massively increase our indirect fire capabilities. One Reg Force Fires Brigade to three Maneuver Brigades I'm sure is a completely wrong ratio.
Bingo.That is a pretty standard Divisional Artillery setup -- the issue is more what the Fire Bde consists of.
Fully agree110%
I fully agree with you.
I'm of the opinion (and I know many folks will disagree) that the Tank Platoon and Company need to have more than just Gun Tanks in their makeup. Which is another reason I like the CAB approach, and the ABCT composition as opposed to Infantry heavy Bde's.
But I think that in addition to main gun tanks, and APS systems for them, that a 35-40mm Air Defense turret (like the Geopard) and a DE C-UAS turret should be considered, in addition to VSHORAD and DE C-UAS turrets for a IFV (tracked) as part of a combined arms force.
That's fine for the direct support of the maneuver units but I think that Ukraine has shown that additional indirect fires capabilities - with a mix of guns, rockets, loitering munitions and UAVs - as well as significant EW and AD/C-UAS capabilities (both within the maneuver units and in dedicated units) are also required in order to isolate the enemy front at the point of attack.That is a pretty standard Divisional Artillery setup -- the issue is more what the Fire Bde consists of.
I am adamant that each Bde major maneuver unit (Armor, Inf, Cav) needs a minimum of a 6 gun 155mm BTY in close support (ideally 8 gun for 2x4 gun troops). So if you have 2 Infantry and 1 Armour in a CMBG, then it needs an 18 gun CS Reg't.
Assuming the 3 Maneuver units for a CMBG and 3 CMBG's then you need 3x 18 gun CS Reg'ts and a GS Regiment of HIMARS.
With the addition of the Light Infantry Regiment (or Light Infantry Brigade) to the Reg Force Div - you need a 4th 18 gun CS Reg't (and a role for the M777's once the SPA program gets moving).
I'm also a big fan of adding the M1287 AMPV Nemo Mortar carrier to the Mech Infantry BN's to give them a 120mm Mortar Platoon.
I'm finding this discussion fascinating, but I'm getting lost in the acronyms. You don't need to describe them (unless you want to), but could you spell out the following:Bingo.
Start by thinking of the arty brigade and even the regiment as merely a fires coordination element - i.e. the battalion, brigade and division FSCC. That's critical. Think of the close support regiment as providing the intimate advisor and effector of fires by way of the battery commanders and their FOOs.
Then add guns rockets, sensors etc as required.
@KevinB's rules of thumb are a good place to start with fires delivery systems. One CS battery with its FSCC, FOOs and guns per battalion builds the foundation. One CS regiment with its FSCC, sensors by way of an STA battery and STACC creates the flexibility to control fires to where it is needed the most. The thing builds at the divisional level even more.
I personally would reorganize a "FOO Battery/tactical group" to include some of the CS STA sensor resources (LCMR) and reallocate many of the PYs from the STA battery into a general support launcher battery for a variety of UAVs including loitering munitions useable at the brigade level.
Over and above the need for a general support regiment of rocket launchers at the division I would add an EW/MI/loitering munitions launcher regiment. In order to properly fight the divisional deep battle you need a coordination element for fires to the forward cavalry force. You then need to add a deep UAV recce element (essentially the cavalry's airborne FOOS) and more sensors, radar and acoustic. These need to be linked to a robust intelligence/analysis cell within its FSCC and rapid effector teams including EW, rockets and longer range loitering munitions.
I personally prefer a two brigade division (one or two tank and two or one mech infantry bns [three total] per bde) for the close battle and a very strong cavalry regiment for the deep. The cavalry doesn't need to be a full brigade, just enough resources to properly cover the div's front with sensors and effectors.
That brings me to two CS gun/loitering regiments; one per brigade but none for the cavalry. The cavalry, with an arty tactical group is primarily supported by the GS loitering munitions and rockets. They don't need guns per se. During the deep fight, the two manoeuvre brigades are generally unengaged in a close fight so their guns can be given at "priority call" to the cavalry. Range becomes an issue here.
Don't forget that in NATO theory there are also extra arty brigades with general support guns and rockets. These can and will reinforce the division during its fight.
Oh. Then there's air defence.
There are several shortfalls in our tactical thinking.
1) we've gotten better at the coordination game by having upped our battery tactical parties but it's still not good enough. Every manoeuvre tank squadron, rifle company, cavalry squadron needs a FOO and every manoeuvre regiment/battalion need a dedicated/organic a BCs FSCC. We don't have that yet;
2) we've only had a fledgling STA battery concept since the early part of this century. It's often an unattractive and undesirable posting. STA matters. It matters a lot. We need to strengthen it and better integrate it with intelligence analysis and EW. We also need to strengthen the STA's (and cavalry's) ability to strike deep. That means rockets and loitering or FPV. We need to put much more horsepower behind these concepts with both people and equipment and practical experimentation. We're way to slow doing this;
3) people. Artillery has been the poor man out for many decades (hell since the 1960s) It has barely enough people to man three very thin CS regiments and one equally thin GS regiment without any air defence arm for almost two decades. Assuming there is a wake-up call that seriously takes hold in our infantry-centric army and funds become available, then we need to bu y the equipment and create the people necessary to man it. There are two thousand or so reservists who could easily fill in on many of the base skills - running guns and launchers and ammo resupply - to allow the regs to more adequately man the harder skills - FSCCs, FOOs, JTACs, STACCs/EW/MI, leaders at all levels etc etc. But when I look at what little is coming out about army modernization, all that I see is same old same old.
4) air defence - need I say more?
![]()
CS = Close support - usually gun regiments with a full complement of the coordination resources - Fire Support Coordination Centre (FSCC) and forward observers etc - needed to support a brigade sized formation.I'm finding this discussion fascinating, but I'm getting lost in the acronyms. You don't need to describe them (unless you want to), but could you spell out the following:
CS
GS
BC
STA
STACC
FSCC
LCMR
PY
Thanks.
