- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 360
NavyShooter said:Wait....someone else is arming their infantry with MANPADS....? Who said that before?
As a short term solution. The article also doesn't cover their efforts to integrate the shooters into an IADS.
NavyShooter said:Wait....someone else is arming their infantry with MANPADS....? Who said that before?
NavyShooter said:So, the problem there is that C-RAM is very limited in range. (~2-3km at most I think) and very limited in magazine space (1583 rds) so while it might cover a small bubble of battlespace, it's also not a system that I thing belongs anywhere outside of a FOB or a larger base. It's not really designed as a field deployed system.
The *nice* thing about the C-RAM is that it's all one piece, a flat-bed with both a search and track RADAR integrated, and a built-in gun system.
-Stop-gap of Shoulder fired Stingers gets an initial capability at the tactical level. Issue one to every LAV.
-Follow up with a short-medium range AA missile on a vehicle mount with a better sighting system, think Avenger, or Chaparral, keep this with the Battalion CP
So far, we're not into anything integrated, just stand-alone equipment and vehicles that can be attached to give a local capability for AA.
Either of those would be a big step in the right direction, but to bring in an integrated AA suite would be the ideal....something that sockets into the 'system of systems' and gives a medium-long range capability.
NS
Fabius said:So if the US is doing this, again why is this not an interim option for Canadian manoeuvre battlegroups ?
I get that a layered IADS with capabilities against ballistic missiles, air, avn, munitions on terminal approach and UAS is the ideal solution. However that is likely unrealistic for Canadian GBAD given PY constraints, and money and even if we can square those items, it still won't be a rapid fielding of the capability.
How do we deal with the very real problem that exists now, given the resource realities we have?
Fabius said:So if the US is doing this, again why is this not an interim option for Canadian manoeuvre battlegroups ?
I get that a layered IADS with capabilities against ballistic missiles, air, avn, munitions on terminal approach and UAS is the ideal solution. However that is likely unrealistic for Canadian GBAD given PY constraints, and money and even if we can square those items, it still won't be a rapid fielding of the capability.
How do we deal with the very real problem that exists now, given the resource realities we have?
Bird_Gunner45 said:Also, I disagree with procuring an AD system for the infantry. They're not a secondary duty, so unless the Bn's have enough extra bodies in them to man up AD platoons than the capabilities are better centralized in 4 AD for a variety of reasons (force generation, currency training, Aircraft recognition, collective training, etc).
Loachman said:Guaranteed: They'll shoot first and identify later, then wonder why they're not getting any helicopter rides anymore.
And our Southern Cousins tend to pay less attention to AFV and aircraft recognition than we do.
Fabius said:Would not battlefield airspace control measures like Standard Army Aviation Flight routes (SAAFRs) and Low Level Transit Corridors (LLTC) paired with weapon control states also work to provide de-confliction?
Seems like a better approach than relying on 100% accurate aircraft recognition by troops of any MOC after days and weeks of combat under intense time pressure against fleeting things half seen in the airspace.
SeaKingTacco said:You have put your finger exactly on the problem. The troops holding the Stinger have to know that they are under or in a region where such things exist. They have to understand the shoot/no shoot implications. This implies that they be properly trained in such matters and that they exist in an IADS. Hence why, IMHO, issuing ifanteers Stingers on a "one per LAV" , just in case basis is probably a bad idea.
Colin P said:yes, but I suspect having a dedicated ADA Troop in the artillery is the better way to go with our small military, That troop can provide cover for units exercising and on real deployments. As mentioned in this thread, we seem to have the radar and networking assets, now we need some form of actual firepower. I still support a light gun and Manpad arrangement for now, then add larger assets later. Not to mention Simulators, including a traveling simulator that a small team of reg force guys could take across the country to teach a introduction course to Reserve units.
GnyHwy said:Just wondering, after the Infantry takes on all these roles, how many rifles will they have left? Serious question. Wasn't that part of the reason we are at where we are today?
I do agree that Inf should have AD, and I also agree they need AT, Pioneer and IDF, but none of these are secondary tasks all require extensive training.
If there is an Infanteer reading, please prioritize.
Colin P said:They did do all these tasks before, I am sure it was a struggle at times, I guess it is a case of prioritizing PY's to the Combat trades and those that directly support them.
Chris Pook said:Serious response: 20 platoons of rifles organized into 5 companies.