little jim said:
from an infantry perspective one of the initial trains of thought goes back to the arty command relationships. The Arty guys love to tell you they are a Div level asset (usually “We’re a higher level asset”), mortars didn’t get taken away from the Bn Comd – hence the old role of mortars to provide “guaranteed, intimate, indirect fire.”
No longer the case with the tubes with the gunners.
Historically (and I'm not a historian) I would be in full agreement - for an infantry battalion to operate and maneuver it did require evolving into its own task force complete with CSS, signals, recce, indirect fire, engineer, and armoured defence capabilities.
But a couple of things have changed:
1) The
guaranteed part has ended. The CF has long since passed the day when the Infantry battalion as a predefined minor task force is deployed in that configuration.
And diffusing other capabilities down to a predefined Task Force similar to:
Mountie said:
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My suggestion was for a combined arms battle group / task force permanently organized as such.
...
would just be perpetuating the
Infantry battalion as a predefined minor task force but a partial step higher, and, if embedded into the battalion, would also lead to problems such as:
horsegunner353 said:
...
The Americans tried permanently embedding things like FOO parties etc into the supported arm organization and found it didn't work. They became the Queen of RSM's detail and tended to do anything but their combat job. In addition, they were unable maintain skills associated with lower-level Battle Task Standards.
2) The actual capabilities of mortars (even the 81mm), combined with communication and tactical awareness capabilities, have increased to a point where mortars can be effectively used as supporting fire for other units (very much my opinion) - in which case the artillery view may not be too off-base.
Note: I also believe this applies to the TOW system, whereas I believe a mechanized battalion has outstretched the capabilities of the old Aslt Pnr platoon (again, very much my opinion) and requires the brigade's CER be expanded.
I'm not disagreeing with how well the infantry previously handled the mortar task, or how happy the CO was knowing that this was all completely theirs, but can't all this be mitigated by doctrine and training?
And, since there aren't separate PYs for the task anyways, how effective would it be to have a rifle company partially double-hatted as a mortar platoon?
One thing is for sure though - nobody from the infantry side of the house wants them left on a shelf.