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![]() "Kevin Brooks" wrote in message om... "Paul Austin" wrote in message . .. "Kevin Brooks" wrote in message om... "Paul Austin" wrote in message . .. "Tony Williams" wrote I understand that basic Stryker is right on the size/weight carrying limits of the C-130. Any info on how the Herc will cope with the bigger versions, like the one carrying a 105mm gun? By buying A400Ms? Seriously, the Stryker (idiot spelling) Maybe because it was named for a fellow (MoH winner IIRC) named Stryker? sacrifices too much for C-130 compatibility, particularly in the area of protection. How can you support that? The amount of protection required is dependent upon a number of factors, including specific threat, operational terrain, etc. And applique/bolt-on armor is an option if required. Not to mention that *some* deployable protection is a bit better than what we have now, which is pretty much limited to the kevlar vest and helmet mounted on the crunchies. The MagicTech remote sensing/remote fires stuff isn't ready yet, never mind "electric armor" that's needed to make what amounts to a LAV mounted army viable. Huh? Why is this required to make it "viable"? The USMC has found their LAV's to be very much "viable" in places like Panama, Afghanistan, and Iraq--ISTR that the Army folks were quite jealous of the LAV in Panama. And the Marines augmented their LAVs with what? As an adjunct to a heavy armor core, LAVs have great mobility and reliability (a lot more than the LVTP7s which had serious electronics reliability problems for lack of water cooling on the hull). Calling the LVTP 7 "heavy armor" is quite a stretch if you are considering the survivability/protection issue. Fact is that the LAV affords Army early entry forces with a level of protection and ground mobility, not to mention firepower, that they do not now enjoy; therefore its use on an interim basis is of benefit to those forces. Read a little closer. The Marine combat teams had M1A1s to provide the heavy armor I was refereing to. With that backup (which will be missing with the Stryker units), the Marines could manuever aggressively when faced with enemy armor. Without that backup, doing so would be suicide. I mentioned the LVTP 7 only as a comparison to the Marines' LAVs. The LAVs showed much higher reliability than the LVTPs especially in reliability areas. LVTPs have much of their electronics in the bilge, in direct contact with the belly, assuming (most of the time) water cooling of the skin. Because of the prolonged operation away from water, the LVTPs suffered a lot of reliability failures in their mission electronics. The GDLS factory in Tallahassee is full of boxen back in the shop for repair. Your enthusiasm for Strykers is misplaced. While usually, I'll take good enough and now over better in the indefinite future, I can't in this case. Stryker Brigade Combat Teams are too heavy to deploy and too light to fight. According to a RAND study, the limiting factor in deploying a SBCT is ramp space at the entry airport. Assuming the ability to process, unload and turn around 4 C-17s an hour (which RAND considered heroically optimistic), the 96 hour deployment range for a SBCT using a fleet of 60 C-17s is 1325 miles. That puts a SBCT in place with 3 count them 3 days of beans and bullets but no POL. Time to Kandahar with 3 days of beans and bullets is 21 days, by which time the lead elements have long ago shot out their basic loads and have run out of gas. What do you get with your rapid deployment force? You get very little organic anti-armor, good mobility and vehicles proof against 14.5mm fire. I'm as in favor of improved strategic mobility as anyone but Stryker brigades sacrifice too much to that end. You get a force that isn't tolerant of the misfortunes of war and which is unable to sustain a momentary reverse. If the Army is to be both rapidly deployable and as effective on the ground as it currently is, then much more capable airlift is required. In fact, A300M is too small (only marginally larger box or payload than a C-130). What's needed is Pelican or LTA kind of solutions. That would presumably be "A400" which you are referring to. I believe you are ignoring the fact that we currently have *no* airborne armor deployment capability to speak of, and the Stryker will provide additional versatility to an Army that is currently capable of either light or heavy operations, but lacks the ability to deploy *more* survivable, and lethal, assets into an AO by air to fill that large void that exists between "light" and "heavy". Not to mention that the ever improved ISR and attendant targeting capabilities make the LAV-based force more lethal than you give them credit for. Take a simple scenario where an early entry ground force is tasked to provide an urban cordon/containment/evac element to support a SOF raid (sounds a bit like Mogadishu, huh?). What method would you prefer--travel by HMMWV or foot, or travel and support from Strykers? Kind of a no-brainer. The Army and the Marines have gamed light and medium forces augmented by sophisticated communications and fire support significantly in advance of the Stryker brigades fought conventional mech opponents. What got found was that if _everything_went right, the US forces did OK. If_anything_went wrong, the US forces lacked the resilience to recover and prevail. In particular, the Marine games found that if the opponents targeted communications and fire support nodes that defeating the US forces was pretty easy. Kind of hard to target mobile fire support assets. How easy would it be for an enemy lacking even air parity to target HIMARS? But the real question is, how would those same games have played out if it was our *current* early entry force (i.e, light infantry only) that had to deal with that same threat? Much worse, that's how. Light infantry is just about useless today and Stryker units not a lot better. How many rounds are available for the HIMARS? As far as targeting those assets, the Red force managed as the real enemy will, given the incentives. How would I do it today? With a MEU or if necessary, a MEB. What's needed if the ability to move_much_greater tonnage by air to give the equivalent capability for land locked locations. And you never answered the question--do you want those air deployable LAV's in this scenario, or do you want depend upon bootleather and a few HMMWV's? How about during the urban fight in general--do you want to be solely dependent upon helos and unarmored vehicles, or do you want that added capability that the moderate protection afforded by the LAV gives your assaulting infantry force? These appear to be no-brainers to me. As far as deployability is concerned, as usual people forget logistics. The Stryker brigades have a smaller logistics footprint than a heavy mech brigade because of reduced POL requirements but the remaining beans and bullets have to come by boat. If that's the case, then send the heavy mech units the same way No, they don't *have* to come by boat, especially in the early stages, which is after all when the SBCT's are going to be most valuable. The Marines deployed LAV's into Afghanistan--how many boat docks in Afghan land? Just how would you have sent those heavy mech units into that country? Roll through Pakistan first? I don't think so... And even when port facilities can be seized, there is no assurance that they will be usable in the short term--witness the time required to open that Iraqi port to friendly shipping? The SBCT fills a niche; no, it can't do everything, but by golly it is better than having to depend upon the poor bloody light infantry for *everything* during the early entry phase, too. The Stryker is an interim vehicle, to be fielded to no more than what, three to five brigades in the total force? Sounds like it has a lot to offer to the current mix of available forces, which are either too heavy for rapid deployment, or too light to survive in higher intensity scenarios. Take a look at the logistical requirements for a single SBCT, just to get it in place. The lift doesn't exist to get the consumables there for intense combat. You should be unwilling to insert troops that we can't support unless we end up being limited to constabulary operations. |
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