I agree with the use of LAV as convoy escorts; there's a lot of firepower in a 25mm cannon and a coax MMG.
But I agree double on the need to treat and train CSS pers with more emphasis on the "combat" - my squadron went through this at Stalwart Guardian this past summer, when a sqaudron-sized convoy escort task turned into a giant Chinese fire drill when the truckers... made some unusual decisions when confronted with enemy presence, and command and control went to hell in a handbasket in very short order. Once C&C is lost, it is very difficult to re-establish.
( I also learned that, as LO, the job entails more than just running traces and frag o's back and forth between the convoy commander and the escort commander during the planning stages. If I had taken the time to do my own map recce and combat estimate of the proposed convoy route when the trace was handed to me by the convoy commander, I would have noticed the great big defile littered with ambush sites and could have suggested an alternate route on the spot, BEFORE it was graven in stone. *sigh*)
If your escort force for a CSS convoy (enough to resupply a battalion sized Task Force of M1s etc) consisted of roughly six vehicles, would you rather all LAV/Coyote or perhaps four LAV/Coyote and two MGS?
Hm. For sake of discussion, let's call it 8 vehicles and make it a Recce Troop convoy escort task. So I send a patrol up ahead as an advance guard, and then I have a patrol at the head of the convoy, a patrol at the tail of the convoy, and my HQ patrol in the centre of the convoy. And because we're on Hwy 8, a straight, multi-lane, limited-access, Interstate sort of route, with little to no elevation changes to use as cover as we move along, we're not moving tactically by bounds, but rather screaming along at the best speed of the convoy.
*thinks*
I think the primary threat I'm facing are medium machine guns in roadside or standoff emplacements, RPGs in roadside emplacements, and the occasional suicide truck running onto the road in an attempt to ram. I don't need the anti-tank capability of the 105 (unless a tank shows up) and the 25mm can handle anything lighter than a full-on MBT.
What I DO need is supression. Ideally, the advance guard is going to locate the ambush sites and fire positions by setting them off prematurely. They'll radio back the contacts, and the patrol at the head of the convoy will pick them up and suppress as they go by, hand the contact back to the centre patrol (who suppresses in turn) and ditto back to the rear patrol - and if any weapons mounted on the CSS trucks can join in, so much the merrier.
While 105 HE makes for a good supression round, I don't think MGS (as I understand the layout) has sufficient ROF or ammo capacity on the main gun to last the entire way, and I don't think it has a coax MG either. I won't complain if you give me a couple of them in addition to the normal Coyotes, but I don't think I would trade a 25mm Coyote for an MGS on this mission.
Where it might be handy is smoke - if it has a smoke round, maybe I can smoke off nests as we approach them...
But you know what I *would* like?
If I can have a couple of M1 or Leo2, I'll send them along with the advance guard. Then if the advance guard finds a really big nest, I can leave a tank or two there to act as a static supression post. Unlike the MGS, the tank can afford to stay put and hand out punishment because it has enough protection to not need to rely on speed to keep it alive.
Please? Can I have a couple of Leopards?
DG