- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 210
George Wallace said:We can talk about the role that the MGS may have found in the WoT and in Afghanistan, but we also have other options to the MGS and who should employ/crew it. I don't believe it is an Armour role to crew and deploy the MGS if its' main role in life will be to support the Infantry in mostly a Defensive role.
...
I can't see the MGS or any other DFS vehicle having, as its main role, supporting Infantry in the Defensive. The DFS vehicle will be used like the LAV-III would be used once the infantry dismounted - but with a more powerful weapon and with more versatility. And in all aspects of operations, after all, the LAV-III isn't restricted to a static defensive role. The DFS vehicle would also provide the same weapon support to any Armoured recce mission that required it.
George Wallace said:...
I can not see it being used by Armour in the Advance as an option in Tank on Tank scenarios.
...
No, but who does? However, as the DFS vehicle for the Infantry in the Advance (a much more likely scenario as we currently have no Tanks overseas), or as the DFS vehicle for Armoured recce on the flanks or out front during the Advance
George Wallace said:...
I look at it as being an Infantry Wpn, much the same as the TOW, Assault Gun, and Anti-Tank Gun were in the past. The use of it in Convoy Escort, does not automatically make it an Armour role, just as a Section or Platoon of Infantry in the Escort does not make them Armour. The MGS is more in line of what the TOW was to the Infantry Bn than what a Tank was to an Armd Regt.
...
Sure, both the Infantry and Artillery have, in the past, crewed AT guns, but the Armoured hasn't always crewed only MBTs. Even now the Armoured crew the Armoured recce (hardly the Iron Fist role of the MBT), and previously the Armoured crewed the Infantry/Close Support Tanks. I don't think Infantry should be fighting vehicle specialists; an infantryman will need to know whatever vehicle their battalion uses, but it doesn't change their core competency.
George Wallace said:...
Currently there is a Turreted 120mm Mortar version of the LAV III. It has a very high profile, and perhaps serious 'roll-over' concerns. What is to say we can't have a 120mm Mortar version, without turret, along the same lines as our former 81mm Mortar Bisons? With the improved munitions for the 120 mm Mortar, it has become a very versatile tool. It could offer more to an Infantry Bn, and in fact an Armour Regt, than the MGS ever could. They would be just as deadly, if not more so, than the MGS in a Convoy Escort in Afghanistan. They would be able to drop rounds in behind the enemy in the hills. They would be able to provide "Guided" Munitions to troops equipped with Laser Designators. They offer good Range. They could provide illumination, both White Light and IR, at night. All things that the MGS is incapable of doing effectively.
...
A 120mm has a couple of other drawbacks in this role, the first being that it has an extremely limited DF AT ability when turreted (and none when not turreted), the second being that the exotic rounds are not exactly main stream at the moment. I like the idea of a mobile 120mm mortar to complement the DFS vehicle (or any mobile force).
George Wallace said:...
In Suffield during RV 85, all the Canadian Armour Regiments passed their Cougar Trained people through our C Sqn Tanks for a Live Fire Ex. They had done Leo Dvr and Gnry Courses and now had the opportunity to put those skills to work. They had all of Suffield to spread out and do the Trace, but most insisted on parking bumper to bumper to each othe in the advance, keeping a frontage of about 250 m max instead of 2.5 km as they could easily have done. They also had problems with judging distances in their shoots and taking very short bounds, closing the Ranges to Tgts to much less than they required. They picked up a lot of bad habits on the Cougars. They also did not have the feel for where a Track could go and where Wheels shouldn't go.
Perhaps that is part of the problem - as I understand it, the Cougar was a trainer that evolved into DFS - but the MGS is not a training vehicle, it is meant for DFS. A crewman would have no more bad habits than they would crewing a Coyote.
George Wallace said:...
In the end, are we creating a role for a piece of kit that could easily be replaced by better kit, and crewed by more appropriate troops?
The role was always there but, like the Grenade Launcher, it was on vacation from the CF (or at least wrapped up in the almost never deployed MBT). To have a 90/105/120 mounted on a LAV-III type chassis is not a bad idea (whether the MGS or not). And crewed by more appropriate troops? - even though the Infantry has shown its versatility in the past - so has the Armoured. Would it really be that difficult to see Armoured DFS troops deployed to support Infantry Tasks given that Armoured recce squadrons already do?
Alternatives? Anything wheeled and carrying a 105 gun.