Tango2Bravo said:
I am not sure why Canada needs to buy the ships necessary to get tanks or LAVs to an operational theatre. We are not looking at an assault landing. We've been shipping our heavy stuff around for some time. You'll note that we got lots of heavy stuff to a very inaccessible theatre in recent history. What force are you suggesting is being established to look good on parade but not deploy?
Sending light infantry around the world can have a place, but I think that you are completely overestimating their capabilities.
We sent heavy forces by air, in dribs and drabs, over an extended period, into a secure airhead taken and secured by allied light forces. The came out from the same secure airhead over a similar extended period while allies held the perimeter.
With respect to overestimating light force capabilities you will not convince me or, so I believe, anybody else by depriving light troops of the full range of weaponry available to them and then sending them in to a fight they cannot win.
Crecy. Agincourt. Poitiers.
Light force wins over heavy cavalry.
Guarantee a reversal of outcome by denying the light forces rapid fire and anti-armour weapons and then force them to assault the French horse over open ground armed with their hammers and daggers.
194 troops carried by CC-150.
Armed with personal small arms as per a 140 man US Army Company (2x 60mm mor with 159 rounds + 6x 240B with T&E and 6000 rds 7.62 link + 72x Claymore + 9x CG-84 with 54 HEAT + 3x CLU with 9 Javelin) -
Reference http://thedonovan.com/archives/modernwarriorload/ModernWarriorsCombatLoadReport.pdf
Additional 54 troops available to man 81mm mors with PUMA PGMS, HMGs, C16s and Spike LR-ER-NLOS and PLGRs.
There is no reason for the infantry to assault the cavalry if the infantry is holding ground that the cavalry needs to cover.
Additional support for the light infantry could/should be CH-146 with 12.7/7.62 and possibly Spikes. Also CF-188s with SDBs and Brimstones.
Now tell me again about the ineffectiveness of the light infantry.