So last night we had a visitor from one of those private security companies in Iraq - ex Windsor who took a career path slightly off the beaten track.
He is doing convoy escorts. The AFV he is using is an armoured F350 crew cab pickup truck (armour consists of bulletproof glass, and I guess some sort of armour in the doors, etc) protected to level "B6" (I guess the uparmoured GWagon is "B7") In the bed, they have a welded steel box with two MG pintles mounted on it (called it the "gun bucket") with a pair of gunners in the bucket - saw no gunshields, but gunners looked covered about chest high by the walls of the bucket. Commander sits in the front passenger seat, and carries an LMG as well.
Tactics seem similar to Canadian tactics - vehicles work in 2-truck patrols, with between 2-4 patrols per convoy, depending on size. Being a British company, they used British/Canadian style callsigns - this was effectively a privately owned Recce troop.
They got hit quite a lot. Usual tactic was to detonate a bomb of some sort, then hit convoy with small arms/LMG fire from alternate directions, sometimes with LMG gunners mounted on vehicles. He had a low opinion of the marksmanship of most AK gunners, but a healthy respect for the marksmanship of the LMG gunners. From his pictures, I could see why - burst spashes centered on driver's door/window and engine compartment giving testimony to gunners attempting to kill drivers and disable motors and hitting their targets.
Armoured glass works well, but becomes opaque at point of impact.
Another nifty innovation - a "panic button" connected to a transponder that broadcasts a distress code and a grid location to higher HQ.
Quite a lot of mobility kills on gun trucks. Tires shot out, "magic bullets" into engine compartments, servered steering/braking hydraulics, penetration of transmission casing causing catastrophic fluid loss, etc. Also a few firepower kills when guns and ammo boxes hit. Few KIA or WIA, due to vehicle/body armour and presence of nearby medical facilities. Occasionally gun truck taken out by initial bomb, but survivability good (even if truck utterly wrecked)
Common theme of engagements seemed to be initial ambush disables (M kills) leading gun trucks, disabled gun trucks and follow-on gun trucks immediately engage and suppress enemy fire, convoy bashes on through and follow-on trucks push or tow disabled trucks clear of ambush. He repeatedly stressed the need for IMMEDIATE and ACCURATE return supressing fire as being the key to surviving the ambush.
That struck me as a key point to practice with our GWagons - practicing gunnery off the top of the vehicle with the pintle mount MG.
I was struck by the resemblance between these gun trucks and the Vietnam-era ACAV M113, and that, plus the good Capt. Rosencrantz's recent rant, got me thinking.....
Take a Bison. Cover the commander's hatch with a gun mount similar to the M1 commander's hatch, plus maybe a gun shield - so now you have optics, power traverse, power elevation (ok, not on M1, but we could do it) maybe a simple laser rangefinder, ballistic computer, and gun stabilization (the constantly shrinking cost and size of electronics makes this feasible) - but the idea is a gun mount that can be fired either hatches up or hatches down, and can mount 50 cal, Mk19, or C6.
Now put two more of the same mount on the rear of the vehicle, forward of the "air sentry" hatches on the Bison, inside the wheelbase. (My experience with the air sentry hatches on Bison was that they were so far aft of the pitch centre that the vehicle kept trying to flip the air sentry out his hatch - but if you opened the central cargo hatch and worked out of that, the vehicle felt much more stable.)
Give it a 4-man crew - driver, crew commander, and 2 observer/gunners. Leave the internal configuration more or less standard Bison. Simplify the external hull to be just the three weapons stations and nothing else - no cargo hatch, no air sentry hatches, no big storage boxes.
What does this accomplish?
- provides a cheap (compared to a full-bore Coyote) recce vehicle that provides a useful convoy escort configuration and is perfectly workable for all other recce tasks (I've done recce in Bisons, and I thought they were GREAT) Bison was considered cheap enough at one time to provide to Reserve units en masse; this should be too. So we equip all the Reserve Recce Regiments with them.
- has a lot of internal volume, making rescue/evac of injured/immobile pers fromother vehicles in the convoy (or even cargo) much easier - plus it's just nicer to live out of than something really cramped (Lynx, Ferret, etc)
- provides a vehicle that is highly parts-compatible with the existing LAV fleet
- provides (assuming all three weapons stations are the same) a vehicle that is highly parts-compatible with ITSELF, further simplifying maintenance and logistics
- provides a vehicle made in Canada (always a nice selling point)
- provides a vehicle that has enough systems overlap with Coyote to greatly ease the transition from this thing (can I call it a "Puma"?) to a full on Coyote, meaning that a Reservist trained on Puma has most of what he needs to transition to Coyote, making augmentation much easier (Capt. Rosencrantz's complaint)
- provides enough integral capability that deploying them as actual Reserve formations in theatre is not unthinkable
So where do I put in my order?
DG