- Reaction score
- 3,633
- Points
- 1,160
Unlike Canada, which seems to excel at not having a standing army until 6 months after it was needed.
Cloud Cover said:Unlike Canada, which seems to excel at not having a standing army until 6 months after it was needed.
Cloud Cover said:Unlike Canada, which seems to excel at not having a standing army until 6 months after it was needed.
PPCLI Guy said:Really? Please provide a specific example NOT related to WW1 (which was an entire century ago) to bolster this claim of yours.
Infanteer said:Spring 1940 (which turned out to be a good thing - would have got trashed on the continent)
Korea 1950 (Pretty much missed the war of movement)
Kuwait 1991 (if I understand the history right, Operation BROADSWORD was a no go partly because of the inability to scrape together a force out of 4 CMBG to be able to actually fight the Iraqis (see pg.41-43 here)
Old Sweat said:I attended some of the planning sessions for Operation Broadsword, but was not a real player. A number of the planners were opposed to it, and did their best to make it too difficult. For example, the casualty assessment for the bridge group for thirty days in operations was more than 1.5 times the formation's strength. I noted on a file copy that this was ridiculous, as the predicted casualties for one brigade group and its tail exceeded the casualties suffered by the Canadian Army at Passchendale in 1917 and in the 1944 Normandy campaign.
Frankly, Broadsword was a make work project as, I was told, the government did not want to face the political fallout of suffering casualties. When the thing first blew up, the CDS had mused about sending the airborne regiment, but that soon was put to bed. The army also was heavily involved with OKA et all, and none of us knew where that was going.
Add: Someone came up with the theory that 4 CMBG was not operationally ready as the rotation was underway. From my perspective, this was an excuse for inaction. A certain staff officer from the army floor actually stated that he was against sending troops to the theatre, as "someone might get killed".
PPCLI Guy said:I too was very much on the periphery, but this is much as I remember it - that the casualty estimate is what killed it. That's what happens when you do not update Staff Planning Data that was based off of decades old spurious reasoning
PPCLI Guy said:I too was very much on the periphery, but this is much as I remember it - that the casualty estimate is what killed it. That's what happens when you do not update Staff Planning Data that was based off of decades old spurious reasoning
d. The data that appear in the tables of this section are based on both experience (World War II and Korean War) and on projections (see paragraph 4-11h for appropriate projection parameters). The tables should not be viewed as directly applicable to any future conflict, but as a basis from which planning can begin. Each conflict will have its unique characteristics and, as such, will require that each echelon of command compile loss statistics. The longer the conflict progresses, the more comprehensive the statistical base will become. Accurate estimates of losses should, therefore, improve over time as the unique aspects of the conflict become readily apparent. Since administrative losses are based on policies which are subject to change over time, they are not readily adaptable to presentation in tabular form. Therefore, tables on administrative losses, other than confinement, are not included in this manual.
3.4-10. NUCLEAR, BIOLOGICAL, AND CHEMICAL LOSS ESTIMATES.
. . .
b. No valid experience data exist from which loss experience tables can be compiled. The problem of estimating the number of replacements (both unit and individual) required to replace losses to NBC weapons involves many variable factors. . . .
Red 6 said:I was interested to read the posts about possible casualties in Desert Storm. My unit in Desert Storm (1st Infantry Division) had the G-Day mission of forcing the breach in the Iraqi main defensive belt in the Neutral Zone. We rehearsed and drilled our G-Day mission for a month, and had it completely memorized. When we went to rock walks and so forth, we'd always ask what our follow-on mission was going to be. The answer was always the same, "It's an 'on order' mission." Well, the rumors flew that casualties would be so heavy, there wouldn't be enough of us for any follow-on missions.
Needless to say, the reality was completely the opposite. The Iraqi front-line division in our sector (the 25th Iraqi ID) had been heavily attritted from he aerial campaign and the pre-assault arty prep. Once we cleared the forward defense, the whole desert was covered with little groups of Iraqis with surrender chits. The little chits, pieces of paper with a cartoon of an Iraqi surrendering to the coalition with some Arabic writing on it, were blowing around the desert everywhere. We collected them and found out they made way better butt-wiping material than the TP in MRE's. Every time I see one on E-Bay, I always wonder how it could be real, since 99% of the surrender chits ended up buried in a cat hole.
Good idea - stand by …tomahawk6 said:This conversation while interesting needs a thread of its own.
MarkOttawa said:...managed to get out with most of their equipment"