Going to throw this out there as a possible 2025 first step towards a re-designed Army.
Highlights:
- Concentrates the LAV battalions together within Reg Force Brigades (with rotating readiness each Brigade can force generate a medium-weight Infantry Battle Group (which remains our most likely type of foreign deployment requirement).
- Adds an additional Artillery Battery to the Reg Force Brigade Artillery Regiments.
- Frees up some Reg Force PYs from the Light Infantry companies for some of the key enablers that need to be added to the Army (SHORAD, additional indirect fires, Anti-tank, etc.).
- Creates a hybrid 25/75 Brigade that maintains the core of Reg Force enablers/supporting elements which are harder for the Reserves to generate and focusing the Reserve elements on the core combat trades. Centralizes this hybrid Brigade in one Province to minimize the spread of additional support infrastructure required.
- Consolidates the Reserve units into fewer Brigades which more realistically represents the size of the units. This consolidation at least provides a structure which has the potential for possible deployment as a unit as Reserve restructuring evolves.
- Matches each Reg Force/Hybrid Brigade with a Reserve Brigade which gives opportunities for a direct augmentation relationship to be created between affiliated Reg/Reserve units.
This structure could develop in a number of different ways as we move toward Force 2030, 2035 and beyond. In its initial form it has created essentially a "Heavy" Brigade with all the tanks concentrated in 1 Brigade, 5 Brigade as a "Medium" Brigade and the hybrid 2nd Brigade as a "Light" Brigade. You could keep this structure, or with the reduction in Reg Force PYs you could adjust the existing budget more towards equipment and upgrade/purchase enough tanks to equip both Reg Force Armoured Regiments. Over time the hybrid Brigade could also be equipped with the same equipment as the Reg Force Brigades giving it a deployment capability similar to the US National Guard Brigades.
View attachment 65959
If you are going to buy steel for deployments why are you spending muscle?
If you are going with a LAV based / Wheels based force why not take full advantage of that and use it to reduce the number of PYs relative to every tube in the system?
Instead of packing as many bodies as possible into each vehicle why not reduce the number of bodies in each vehicle and optimize the tubes per vehicle? 45 LAVs per Battalion? More if you add in the Recce Platoon? Strap a couple of ATGM launchers on each turret. Add a Trophy system. Add an AD radar to half a dozen or so and supply them with AA missiles along with their Bushmasters. Convert some to AMOS or Mjolnir 120mm mortar turrets. Maybe even add a few 105mm RWS turrets to the mix. And reduce the number of GIBs to 4 PYs per LAV.
A lot more capability. Many of the gaps filled. Far fewer bodies. And residual PYs for other capabilities. Including CH-146 transportable Light Companies.
And all of the capabilities are "upgrades" to existing platforms. Conversions of LAVs, ACSVs and the occasional TAPV.
If you're going with LAVs you have converted the infantry to dragoons in any event. And the dragoons are cavalry. Not infantry.
Meanwhile I will still argue for the benefit of well armed light infantry that can be rapidly deployed to inhospitable firing positions by means of our available helicopter force. That means a dozen CH-146s and 4x CH-147s attached to each Brigade on ops. It does not need road warrior light vehicles.
It does argue for small vehicles that can be transported by CH-146, along with the troops, that can carry 750 kg of platoon and/or company supplies, and that will spend most of their life quietly crawling along in the rear of the foot-borne troops with an occasional sprint to the CQ.
Call it 8x ATV per Coy, all held at the CQ. One for each platoon driver, one for the Coy HQ driver and 4 for the CQSM and his 3 drivers.
They are not there to transport the troops. They are there to take a load of their backs and carry lots of water, bullets and bombs.
On long term deployments you don't want casualties. Casualties turn long term deployments into short term deployments once the headlines hit. The best solution to casualties is not more steel on wheels. It is not to deploy the bodies in the first place. Deploy vehicles not bodies unless you have to, or unless the ground prevents the deployment of the vehicles.
If you really need more bayonets in the assault then heli-lift them up to the line of departure to marry up with the vehicles where they can supply mutual intimate support.
I see nothing wrong with a 3 Brigade structure with a LAV based ISR regiment, a pair of LAV dragoon battalions (equipped with a full suite of suitable tubes), and a well equipped light battalion trained and equipped to operate with CH-146s and 147s on both the armoured and the remote battlefields. That would mean that each brigade would be equipped to go Medium AND Light and that follow on rotations would have the time to adapt and reorg to meet the needs of the operation.
And the Tanks? I would concentrate them in the Combat Support Brigade Group. Along with the Armoured Engineers, the Div Recce/ISR Regiment and the Div Arty Group.