Seen
Assumptions
- Canadian 3-ship Flotilla off the Shetlands at extreme range of SU-35s. 96 ready to fire Tomahawks on board. 72 CAMM air defence missiles ready to fire. Supplemented with 127mm and 30 mm guns. Operating under the umbrella of the RAF
- Russia opposes with SU-35S - 112 built since 2007 (18 years of production - slow production rate - maintenance?)
Roll the dice, the Canadians get their missiles off, the Russians press home their attack and sink the three Canadian ships. What were their losses on the approach, the attack and the egress? What are the odds of replacing their aircraft?
Canada despatches another 3-Ship Flotilla from its 4 Flotilla reserve. We thank the RCN for its service. Did it really need 200 sailors on board each vessel?
As for operating as an inside force - it could be kind of neat to see what the effect of equipping 4GSR, or better yet all the regular Arty regiments with JLTV mounted NSMs would be and have the launchers scatter all over the Baltics, Poland or Romania.
What is the launcher to troop ratio expected by the USMC? How many bodies do they expect to put at risk to achieve the anticipated effect?
That picture changes again with dispersed HIMARs trucks, also potentially autonomous, launching GMRLS out to 150 km and PrSMs in the 500 to 1500 km band. We could talk about GLCMs, SM6s and HVMs but I think that they can be more effectively, and safely, delivered from the sea.
I have to believe that a few batteries (and ships) would be more welcome than a few hundred willing bodies with C7s. And be more useful, and be more easily expended by Canada.
Cheers
Edit - Marine Littoral Regiment
- 1800 to 2000 all ranks
1 Log Battalion
1 AD Battalion
1 NMESIS Battalion - NSM-JLTV Rogues - 84 JLTV Launchers to the Battalion (with 166 ready to launch missiles)