claybot said:Thanks Brygun
I see you are also into history in fact you are more up on than I am in some cases.
I have this discussed this topic with senior officers in the Infantry and in fact written it out just waiting to see if an editor will print it or not.
Your welcome. Perhaps you can get permission to post the reply... or a jist of the conversation.
claybot said:I view this mission a failure for the Light Infantry Concept as it proved that mech forces could do Light missions without a problem. If this mission were a true LIB mission then the extra company/manpower should have been drawn from one of the other two Light Infantry Battalions either RCR or VanDoo.
For OP ATHENA missions all the LIBs were using LAV and Iltis/G-Wagon. If LAV's were required then it is a Mech mission not a Light mission.
Two biggest differences between Light Infantry and Mechanized is first the presence of the vehicles and secondly the large differences in costs to operate and train in those vehicles.
It would be preferable if you could always have mechanized carriers for any mission for the infantry. I present to you instead that the OP ATHENA showed the adapability of LIB to become upvehicled. We had enough vehicles and funds for the vehicles to go so the vehicles should be there.
The question was more a matter of why the LIB infantry:
claybot said:Many believe that the mission should have gone to Mech Battalion such as 2 PPCLI as they were back from Bosnia and still had a lot of troops. Instead 3 PPCLI an understrength battalion was sent and had to be augmented by the entire C Company 2 PPCLI as well as pers from Sniper, Recce and other organizations.
While the reasons for the choices you mentioned I dont know for sure it may have to do with that "back from". Some times force leaders rotate who is going out whether training or operational. Was there another full strength Mech Battalion available? Are you sure its available and not tasked to some major training exercise or on a stay-home cycle? The US 82 airborne for instance uses a rotation schedule where one battalion is always on 2-hour standby to be on planes (you basically dont leave the base). To achieve that the battalions of the 3 brigades each spend two weeks is at that readiness. At that moment that other battalions are at other stages, 5 hour response time, training or at "rest status" so they have time to be fathers and mothers to their families.
It would useful to your topic to list what else was available.
The other implication perhaps is to the unpopular idea of keeping the transport vehicles in a seperate organization from the infantry. Namely you would shuttle into the situations the Mech Vehicles and attach the various LIB as needed. A true "battle taxi" service could in theory (not practice) pick up and move infantry force A then go get infantry force B. Nobody uses this approach as at least one infantry force should be intimately familiar with using the vehicles and the personnel operationg it. The only way to get the most out of the transports is to train regularily in using them. Temporary, such as what you describe, inserts of forces does happen when needed but not the whole infantry force swapping around.
For the other assets (sniper, recce) etc is it not the idea to assemble from our regular forces and reserves the right mission force.