Don't get me wrong. I'm not defending the TAPV as a cavalry vehicle or minimizing its problems.
My point was that the TAPV has for a long time been a known quantity. The army knows what it can and can't do. There should be adequate safeguards and training in place to minimize the problems with its characteristics. It strikes me that the army continues to misuse it because it has to use it for the purpose for which it was originally built. We continue to have issues because the training and supervision of the drivers is weak.
It's long past time to hand them over to purposes that do not need aggressive driving on difficult terrain. (I'm a fan of using what you have because anything is better than nothing at all - give them to an MP battalion or theatre level rear area security battalion for rear area patrols for example) That means, however, there needs to be a clear plan and strategy for what is needed by the "armoured cavalry" (I still divide them into distinct "tank" and "cavalry" components - the former organized and equipped for the close fight and the latter primarily for the divisional deep fight). The surveillance LAV, is one item but I see the need for smaller, lower, lighter, but heavily armed and networked vehicles as the core of the latter augmented by a variety of SEV "enablers." - I don't see a TAPV anywhere on the front lines.