Red_Five said:
the Ops, as our leadership has chosen to conduct them ...require LAVs, Leo2, etc.
The enemy has a say as well, and perhaps they didn't get the memo. Infantry lacking armoured fighting vehicles have been penned up inside their bases by a determined enemy who can sense a vulnerabilty and exploit it. Sometimes it comes to a fight whether you want to or not. When the enemy is dug-in across that river, it can suddenly get very 1944 and some 1944 tactical solutions come to the fore.
Terrain and the size of the operating area also have a say.
Quite correct. The leadership does an appreciation, which includes the enemy and the environment (yes, both terrain AND the size of the AO), from which they determine how they wish to prosecute the campaign. Your sarcasm and the utility of your insight are equally valid.
Infantry lacking armoured fighting vehicles have been penned up inside their bases...
Thank you for providing a wonderful example to illustrate the difference between how we are currently engaging the enemy versus what I stated several pages ago.
Does your hypothetical COIN situation represent:
A) the primary emphasis being on increased protection and technology, relying on increasingly heavier weights of fire (think Dien Bien Phu), or
B) a Light Infantry force, living out amongst the population to assist them in
their struggle, while interdicting insurgents in their supposed safe-havens (think Selous Scouts).
If your priority is force protection, then by all means, "A" is fine. Just be aware that over the past 3000 years, "A" only defeats an insurgency when you are capable of going in with
overwhelming force (for chuckles, Google "3rd Punic War" and see what the Romans did to Carthage). Canada is incapable of adopting such a strategy, even if we wanted to. Therefore the tactics our military leadership
has chosen to employ, whether conducted from a LAV or a Nyala, WILL NOT support our strategic objective of defeating the Taliban insurgency.
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If you can snag a copy, have a read of Col. JH Vance's "Tactics Without Strategy, or Why the Canadian Forces Do Not Campaign" - - he does a much better job of explaining the
required linkage between tactics and strategy, which is absent in our current operations.