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  1. TangoTwoBravo

    LAV 6.0

    This thread proves the First Immutable Law of Army.ca that all threads eventually decay to dress discussions (the shirt shown above), but also the Second Immutable Law that all threads decay to a discussion of the TAPV. The Third Immutable Law is that all threads decay to a Reserve Restructure...
  2. TangoTwoBravo

    Informing the Army’s Future Structure

    In fairness to the RCN, having a RAdm and a Cmdre on each coast is fine. The Cmdre has a Fleet and Fleet Staff and does embark as an operational commander of TGs. Those Fleet Staffs are quite lean since they do embark. So the Cmdre is "down and in" with the operational ships while the RAdm is...
  3. TangoTwoBravo

    Canada's tanks

    The Canadian Army can absolutely run exercises in Canada. The decision to conduct the Combat Team and Battle Group exercises for Build Year elements in Latvia was taken in the interests of efficiency, allowing us to square the circle of readiness and reconstitution. Light Battalion validation at...
  4. TangoTwoBravo

    Hamas invaded Israel 2023 Megathread

    The large number of rockets is one thing, but the ground incursions are very significant. Speaks to a long planning horizon and very good security. Footage is always questionable, but I’ve seen at least one clip of a Merkava on fire with a crowd around it.
  5. TangoTwoBravo

    Applying Ukrainian Lessons to US Army Training

    I am not sure that using school-yard experience as your frame for dealing with great-power relations with nuclear weapons is a good idea, nor is taking lightly the threat of open war between nuclear powers. Analogies can be useful, but they can also be a mental trap. A border fence can be...
  6. TangoTwoBravo

    Applying Ukrainian Lessons to US Army Training

    I am struggling to understand what you are saying. What is the "futility of trying to avoid a fight?" Counter-factual history can be fun, but I am not sure of the value. Do you think that the nuclear piece is an "occasional concern?" Are you saying that the eFP formations should be in...
  7. TangoTwoBravo

    Applying Ukrainian Lessons to US Army Training

    I don't think that you understand what NATO is and how it operates. A NATO country has not been attacked in this war (I am not counting stray ordinance), so there is no "refusal to defend." As to your comment about refusing to aggressively man listening posts and lines along its borders, what...
  8. TangoTwoBravo

    Canada vs Brits in Latvia

    My goodness this thread has diverted. "Attrition warfare" was a strawman created to support the existence of "manoeuvre warfare." This then gets even more confusing because we use the term manoeuvre for several things. The attrition warfare strawman uses WW1 battles where western front...
  9. TangoTwoBravo

    Canada vs Brits in Latvia

    The Cdn-led eFP BG is, actually, quite big. I imagine he was referring to the eFP BG writ-large. Having enemy-force exchanges like this is excellent. Good training for all involved.
  10. TangoTwoBravo

    Indirect Fires Modernization Project - C3/M777 Replacement

    Land Ops is a bit over-stuffed, but I am not sure what is confusing about this part? Land Ops describes the basic force elements: combat elements, combat support elements, combat service support element and command support elements. Its a useful breakdown. It adds combat arms as a colloquial...
  11. TangoTwoBravo

    Indirect Fires Modernization Project - C3/M777 Replacement

    Not sure what you are worrying about here for terminology? "Doctrine" wise we have the following from Land Operations: Combat Elements - those that engage the enemy directly (armour, infantry, direct fire units). Considered ground manoeuvre units. Combat Support Elements - fire support...
  12. TangoTwoBravo

    Informing the Army’s Future Structure

    An NCE does not have to be large, but I don't think it would make sense to roll it into the multi-national (or US) division to which a CMBG would be attached. That Div HQ would be focused on prosecuting the fight - they don't need NCEs attached to them. I would expect to find the NCE somewhere...
  13. TangoTwoBravo

    Informing the Army’s Future Structure

    If we have Canadian troops on an operation then we need some form of NCE. There are bone fide national command requirements that need to be met. An NCE relieves the Brigade HQ of that. We also need some form of NSE, apart from the CSS that is with the fighting formation and any allied CSS...
  14. TangoTwoBravo

    Informing the Army’s Future Structure

    Brigade Commanders have training and experience and are enabled by a staff and arms advisors. The load required for synchronization of combat power at that level is considerable, but they have staff to help. They have CO Guns, CO Engineers and CO Svc Svc Bn as advisors, each with their own...
  15. TangoTwoBravo

    Thinking about the Infantry Attack

    Good little video there - thanks for sharing! Watching guys mounting and dismounting from moving AFVs gave me a few starts. As a tanker I certainly practiced assaults during combat team attacks with infantry stacked up behind me and sometimes there was even somebody on the tank telephone. As...
  16. TangoTwoBravo

    Thinking about the Infantry Attack

    Infantry are generalists. Both the offence and defence have support plans, and those support plans are not concocted in isolation of the manoeuvre plan. The CO is responsible for the plan. The various support platoon commanders (when the Bns have them...) are indeed responsible for the details...
  17. TangoTwoBravo

    Allowances - Post Living Differential (PLD) [MERGED]

    In the army on courses a failed "trace" or leadership activity is sometimes referred to colloquially as a "Freddy." So if you fail a trace (a section attack for example) then you might say to your friends afterwards "I Freddied that one really bad." You get warnings for each failed activity...
  18. TangoTwoBravo

    Thinking about the Infantry Attack

    What is an "offensively-minded Major" as opposed to a "defensively-minded Major?" Is this something that would be found on their MPRR? I have found that some leaders may have a prediction towards deliberate planning/methodical conduct while others may prefer to improvise. Some may be comfortable...
  19. TangoTwoBravo

    Thinking about the Infantry Attack

    I am not an infantryman, but I see that much of the last two or three pages has been on Collective Training. I offer the following from our Training doctrine (BGL-300-008 Training Canada's Army) and relevant amplifying CAO 23-21 Foundation Training. These need to be used in conjunction with...
  20. TangoTwoBravo

    Informing the Army’s Future Structure

    "More deployable" is an interesting concept. How do you think our vehicles got to Afghanistan? The Leopard C2 actually had fantastic FCS including a very up to date thermal sight. Regarding your question, in the land of the blind the one eyed man is king. Anything with a gun capable of...
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