markppcli
Army.ca Veteran
- Reaction score
- 6,492
- Points
- 1,260
I guess the more relevant part of the question would be “and would it be of much value”Lets use the data available. The factors most likely to contribute to success of an assault from the simulations were enemy morale and finding and suppressing the enemy (locating position and fire control). We can't really do much about the first one but we can measure the second one to some extent.
There was a good article posted here before on suppression in combat.
If you could utilize some sort of instrumentation to make a decent measure of "enemy is suppressed" you could create some metrics to objectively score an assault.
How long is the target up vice down (more time down is better)
How much ammo does the section/platoon have left after the assault (more is better)
A section or platoon completes an assault with the targets down most of the time, but with as much of its ammo preserved, to me it represents effective fire control and suppression, giving the assault element the best opportunity of getting on the objective. If the assault element lags, then ammo supplies will begin to go down.
Qualifying the assault is tougher. The other two factors on the higher side of successful assaults (covered positions and fire and movement) represent the movement of the assault element. This would be harder to measure - perhaps there is some sort of way a UAS could track the movement of the assault element and correlate its line of advance to intervisibility from the enemy position to give a readout on what amount of time it was vulnerable? When combined with the measurement of the firebase, you could have some objective metrics with which to assess the quality of the components of the attack.
During training would not reaching the objective with out any broken bones, enough ammo to defend the trench and cover your flanks, no one lost a magazine, weapons sight, pair of NVGs, mg barrel, or left their rifle behind be deemed successful?
I don’t be the eye roll emoji frankly; I think there’s a lot to be said for our AAR process but being able to really break down and see / assess how units are actually performing is always a good thing in my mind. Just showing up and going through the motions is never going to get anyone any better. Challenging training, with good assessments of performance to drive soldiers to do better is the job of the army in peace time.
To use your, let’s face it low, standard the section could have never suppressed the enemy, have ran through each others arcs, and made no use of cover. Great attack guys.
Ukrainian first person videos are snap shots with heavy editing. Often showing the assault and rarely the approach.From my perspective what the videos from Ukraine seem to be showing is a suppressing amount of fire to keep the enemy's head down so they don't toss a grenade at them. So the friendlies can toss their grenades in a safe manner. Seems like a win to me. Accurate fire is fire that keeps the enemy from shooting me.