IMHO they belong to the Medium Force.
Which can be deployed with either Light Forces for additional firepower and protected mobility, or heavy forces for a great degree of road mobility and some protection.
They should not be integral to either Heavy or Light Forces, but are simply components that can be added as requirements dictate.
Let’s look at a NEO Forcible entry.
Drop a Bn (or more) of Para Light forces to secure an airport.
The light forces can quickly secure the air head site - but don’t have armor to do much in terms of escorting or moving the personnel being recovered.
- SOF can locate and secure the personnel, but again don’t have the ground mobility necessary to ensure the Non-combatants can move safely to the exfil area.
- the Medium Force however can do that in most situations.
The “tankettes’s” can somewhat function as a tank in some areas, but that is threat dependent, as Red Tanks or ATGM’s will ruin their day.
Without getting into a discussion on specific platforms, I think you are somewhat mis-characterizing some of the comments on here about light vehicles. I don't think many/any on here are saying that there is no role for the kind of light force that you are describing, but that light forces BY THEMSELVES are no panacea for an army. Light forces have their place but heavy forces have their own place. One cannot replace the other.
I believe (correct me if I am wrong) that you are leaning strongly into the idea that since Canada doesn't have the capability to deploy heavier forces rapidly enough to be an effective response to enemy actions then we should concentrate our efforts on light forces which are much easier to deploy quickly and where required.
I'll admit to seeing a certain logic in such a position. Heavy/Medium forces sitting in Canada that take months to deploy to a conflict zone don't do much for either deterrent effect or for rapidly needed combat power. Heavy/Medium forces realistically don't really do anything for the territorial defence of Canada itself.
There are other factors to consider however. We are part of the NATO alliance and we have a commitment to participate in the defence of Europe. And while today we may feel that Russia is in no real position to pose a direct conventional military threat to Europe, I don't doubt that once the Ukraine conflict is over (whatever the outcome) that the Russia that remains will continue to have its own defence objectives and will work hard to rebuild and restructure its forces in such a way as to avoid the mistakes that it made in this conflict. That will require a continued military deterrent by NATO against potential Russian aggression.
Light forces, while rapidly deployable I don't believe provide the same type of deterrent effect (or the same sense of shared commitment by our Allies) as heavy forces do. Deployed or pre-positioned heavy forces provide much greater deterrent effect and can be just as rapidly put into action as Light forces based in Canada.
You might argue that forward deploying our heavy forces in Europe against one specific military threat limits our flexibility to deploy against other various military threats. I'd suggest that Russia is really the only major military power that has (or will seek to gain) the ability to directly threaten the Western alliance "homelands" with heavy mechanized forces. China's threats to Taiwan, Japan, Australia, etc. are best responded to with strong Naval and Air forces. North Korea does pose a mechanized threat to South Korea, but I'd argue that the mountainous terrain of the Korean peninsula would be just as suitable for a Light force response as a Heavy force response from Canada if required. Iran is not close enough to directly threaten the major Western powers directly so if a conflict against them (or other regional powers) is required we would likely have time to deploy our forces like the West did with Desert Storm, etc.
I'd argue that politically and militarily Canada would be best served by a pre-deployed Heavy force element in Europe in support of NATO and a Light element in Canada. Medium forces, while possibly good for peacekeeping type operations seem to be sucking resources away from our war fighting capabilities on both ends of the spectrum. We could retain the LAVs so that our non-deployed Heavy and Light units have a Medium vehicle available for non-combat deployments/operations when they are the more suitable vehicle option, but for combat deployments we should be equipped with the appropriate Heavy and Light vehicles in my opinion.
I guess I'll try again.
My problem with the current Canadian structure is with the Medium Force. I like the Medium Force concept. But I believe it has lost its way in Canada. With the LAV 6.0 it is now based on a platform that is too light to be Heavy and too heavy to be Medium.
When the LAVs were plussed up for Afghanistan they lost their strategic and much of their tactical mobility. In particular they lost their amphibiousity.
The wrong decision was made on the CCV programme, and even on the TAPV programme.
The Leos should be escorted by CV-90s or a similar 30 to 40 tonne vehicle. A small, Heavy force, even a couple of Troops would add sufficient heft to a Medium, or even a Light Force, that it would be worth the commitment of our C17s for a focused delivery. 5 C17s. 1 Leo one aircraft or 2 CV90s at 35 tonnes. 5 aircraft could deliver 3 Leos and 4 CV90s in one lift. A definite "Nice to have" for any force.
My Light Force lift parameter is whatever can be lifted by the helicopters that Canada has, and in that I include the Navy's CH-148s and the Yellow Fleet's CH-149s. In fact I would make the upper limit of the light force vehicles 4 or 5 tonnes precisely because of that. What can you buy that fits in that bracket? VBLs, Ferrets, Dingos. Bv206s.
My Medium Force limit is the same as Shinsecki's. The C-130. But I would have load limited the vehicle to 75 or 80% of the carrying capacity of the C130 or about 15 tonnes. And that puts you squarely into the 15 tonne range. M113s. Grizzlies. Cougars. Bisons. Coyotes at a stretch.
C17s could lift four at a time, or a platoon/troop.
C130s could lift three or four of the Light Force's 4-5 tonners.
My argument is that we CAN supply a useful Force at the "light" end of the spectrum. We can't supply a useful Force at the "heavy" end of the spectrum.
We should properly equip our forces with equipment that, like matyushka dolls, nest within each other. Also, when dealing with light(er) forces we should adopt those principles which have kept light forces safe and effective on battlefields for centuries:
Speed -
Mobility -
Precision -
Range -
Fire and Retire quickly -
Move quickly on variety of terrain - "through the bushes and the briers where the rabbits couldn't go"
Picked shots
Stand off
We may end up like the French in Kuwait, "relegated" to the Flank Guard, but I don't recall us being in Kuwait at all. The French were there. With their AMX-10s and Panhard 90s and VBLs.
PS - I prize amphibiousity highly in a country filled with rivers, marshes and lakes and which floods regularly every year.