- Reaction score
- 35
- Points
- 560
Forcasting the future is a very difficult art, and most people who try are usually wrong. I believe we may be equating armour=Armour in some of these arguments. A fast moving weapons system which can pack a punch is "Armour", so a CV-90120 is indeed an Armoured weapon, and so would a LAV III with a CV_CT turret.
A Leopard 2A6 is also an Armoured weapon, but its virtue of armour protection (along with any generation 3 or 3.5 tank) is actually best exploited in the current environment as an infantry assault gun, as was demonstrated in Iraq or Merkavas in the West Bank and Gaza strip.
This argument is also developing in the "Is the MGS/MMEV dead yet?" thread. I will say that the mobility and ability to shape the battle makes the "Armoured" part of the equation. General Patton was able to envelop large German formations, even when they were equipped with Tiger and Panther tanks, not because his troops had Sherman tanks and half tracks (all which were only equal to German Mk IV tanks and German half tracks, and far inferior to the Tigers and Panthers), but because he employed his troops effectively, avoided slug fests when he could, and employed operational manoeuvre to outflank the enemy, drive into the rear and collapse their morale.
The protection argument "may" go out the window as well. At a presentation I was at last year, an American general said the fundimental reason for the FCS program was extrapolation; a current 120mm cannon can deliver 12 megajoules of energy on target (which can "just" be stopped by the armour array of a 70 tonne M-1), but extrapolating future trends weapons systems in 2020 would be able to deliver 42 megajoules of energy on target. Hand held weapons were projected to have similar improvements, rendering passive protection somewhat moot.
While we don't have to believe this, we should certainly consider it in our thinking, before we are surprised by the introduction of hand held railguns or some equally exotic threat. This won't be the end of tanks or Armoured units, after all, Cavalry soldiers shed all their armour during the 1600's but remained Cavalrymen, with virtually the same roles and missions as before. An "Armoured Regiment" with CV-90120 tanks may not have the ability to go toe to toe with an "Armored Cavalry Regiment" packing M-1's, but they will organize and fight differently to exploit the mobility and firepower of their mounts.
A Leopard 2A6 is also an Armoured weapon, but its virtue of armour protection (along with any generation 3 or 3.5 tank) is actually best exploited in the current environment as an infantry assault gun, as was demonstrated in Iraq or Merkavas in the West Bank and Gaza strip.
This argument is also developing in the "Is the MGS/MMEV dead yet?" thread. I will say that the mobility and ability to shape the battle makes the "Armoured" part of the equation. General Patton was able to envelop large German formations, even when they were equipped with Tiger and Panther tanks, not because his troops had Sherman tanks and half tracks (all which were only equal to German Mk IV tanks and German half tracks, and far inferior to the Tigers and Panthers), but because he employed his troops effectively, avoided slug fests when he could, and employed operational manoeuvre to outflank the enemy, drive into the rear and collapse their morale.
The protection argument "may" go out the window as well. At a presentation I was at last year, an American general said the fundimental reason for the FCS program was extrapolation; a current 120mm cannon can deliver 12 megajoules of energy on target (which can "just" be stopped by the armour array of a 70 tonne M-1), but extrapolating future trends weapons systems in 2020 would be able to deliver 42 megajoules of energy on target. Hand held weapons were projected to have similar improvements, rendering passive protection somewhat moot.
While we don't have to believe this, we should certainly consider it in our thinking, before we are surprised by the introduction of hand held railguns or some equally exotic threat. This won't be the end of tanks or Armoured units, after all, Cavalry soldiers shed all their armour during the 1600's but remained Cavalrymen, with virtually the same roles and missions as before. An "Armoured Regiment" with CV-90120 tanks may not have the ability to go toe to toe with an "Armored Cavalry Regiment" packing M-1's, but they will organize and fight differently to exploit the mobility and firepower of their mounts.