- Reaction score
- 8,305
- Points
- 1,160
Equip is more expensive mainly because the radios they use are much much better, any other weapons/gear they use is almost a rounding error after comms are considered. Training is much more expensive. Not only the selection, but even something as simple as the amount of ammunition they use is orders of magnitude more than infantry uses.
In the grand scheme of things, however, it's chump change. (looks a 60+billion dollar warship procurement and 30+ billion dollar aircraft procurement)
Are we all agreeing that the primary difference between a Special Forces Operator and the rest of the Army is the training budget? To me that speaks more to the shoddy attention to training in the rest of the Army, in particular the Reserves, than about the quality of the Special Operators.
We almost seem to be saying "if you jump through enough hoops long enough and prove yourself committed to us we will eventually train you". (Come to that, based on the tales from recruiting, we seem to be saying exactly that).
Why wouldn't we be training the Light Infantry (or General Duties Infantry as I prefer) with the same intensity as the SF Operators? As Underway notes, in the grand scheme it would be chump change - especially given how few of the creatures there are. And local range time and thousands of bullets has to be cheaper than the grand theatre pieces of Wainwright.
For that matter, with respect to the Reserves, which would attract and retain most civilians? A bit more beer money or an annual allocation of 5000 rds of 5.56 or 9mm, a rifle with an annual refurbishment and a new barrel, and free access on their own time to a local range?
Add in some useful multipurpose vehicles from MILCOTS market and decent comms and you have the basis for a solid volunteer force.
And, with a few thousand more rounds annually, and access to some of the more exotic disposable weapons available, you can train effective infantry.
Final thought:
With respect to the number and size of infantry battalions. Frankly I have no time for tying the PYs, or the structure of the non-LAV infantry to the LAV infantry. If anything I would be looking to the CSOR end of the spectrum for ideas.
The number of infanteers, even the number of companies, is not as important as the existence of the Light Battalions and the range of weaponry and skills they can bring to the field. I would recommend keeping 3 Battalions, if for no other reasons than mutual political support and permitting three discrete but mutually communicative local experiments to develop and adapt lessons learned.
I would be fine with three Light Battalions of 270 each if that is all the manpower that is available.
On the other hand, if we are going to tie ourselves to the LAVs then, 45 LAVs with 6 GIBs each = 270. If the Light Battalions were organized on that principle, and the reserves, then they would supply a ready drop in to the LAVs when the LAVs ran out of GIBs...assuming the LAVs survive.
4 LAVs = 4x 6 Infanteers (1x 6 Command and Support + 3x 6 with 1x 4-man fire team and 1x2 crew served system) modelled on the Scandinavian pattern. = 24
15 LAVs = 3x 4x 6 Infanteers = 72 + 3x 1x 6 Command and Support =18 for a total of 90
45 LAVs = 2x 3x 4x 6 Infanteers with 2x 3x 1x 6 Command and Support = 180 + 15x 6 Command and Support specialists = 90 for a total of 270.
270 that can be dumped in the back of the LAVs or operate independently as battalions or companies or support of CANSOFCOM, or be brigaded into what would be, effectively, a 20th century battalion of 810 with an additional 270 HQ and Atts.
It could also be a model for the Reserves.
I know it means 6 man sections and 24 man platoons. That just means you need to task more sections and more platoons and more companies to achieve your objectives if the situation requires.