- Reaction score
- 1
- Points
- 410
As I wrote in Post #1 on this topic, you are not talking to someone who hates the mortar. I have long been a huge fan of it and what it can bring to the table.
However, when I hear people saying that the CASW is worthless and "Long Live the 60", I think it's ludicrous.
As for rounds on target being its "only advantage"...giving you the benefit of the doubt here, perhaps you've heard of Shock Action, Surprise, and Offensive Action? Kind of hard to achieve Shock Action or Surprise when you see an enemy of opportunity and yell to him "You just stay right there while I get this thing ready and fire bombs that will take a minute to get where you are when I fire them, but whatever you do, don't move in the meantime!".
What you call its only advantage I would be willing to call that a game changer. Getting rounds on target in 5-10 seconds vs 60 seconds is almost insurmountable. To make up for that much of a disadvantage, the mortar and ammunition should have to weigh nothing, drop 1000 pound bombs, and shine my boots.
The next CASW advantage is the ability to do precision strikes, which isn't even an option on the 60mm. You can still use the CASW for area suppression, but you can also use it to hit one guy standing in the open. So not only do you have a weapon system that is far faster, but it can do more things.
As for my "relative inexperience", the counter to that is that the guys with too much experience are the ones who end up getting everyone killed because they fight the last war.
In WW1 they didn't take machine guns into account. In WW2 France was overran for relying on area defence. And now, we are losing in a COIN environment because of people who were trained to fight the Russian hordes.
They can't adapt. Guys like Rommel can. The Comd just finishing up in TFK can, and has drastically changed things for the better, specifically because he's not fighting the last war.
However, when I hear people saying that the CASW is worthless and "Long Live the 60", I think it's ludicrous.
As for rounds on target being its "only advantage"...giving you the benefit of the doubt here, perhaps you've heard of Shock Action, Surprise, and Offensive Action? Kind of hard to achieve Shock Action or Surprise when you see an enemy of opportunity and yell to him "You just stay right there while I get this thing ready and fire bombs that will take a minute to get where you are when I fire them, but whatever you do, don't move in the meantime!".
What you call its only advantage I would be willing to call that a game changer. Getting rounds on target in 5-10 seconds vs 60 seconds is almost insurmountable. To make up for that much of a disadvantage, the mortar and ammunition should have to weigh nothing, drop 1000 pound bombs, and shine my boots.
The next CASW advantage is the ability to do precision strikes, which isn't even an option on the 60mm. You can still use the CASW for area suppression, but you can also use it to hit one guy standing in the open. So not only do you have a weapon system that is far faster, but it can do more things.
As for my "relative inexperience", the counter to that is that the guys with too much experience are the ones who end up getting everyone killed because they fight the last war.
In WW1 they didn't take machine guns into account. In WW2 France was overran for relying on area defence. And now, we are losing in a COIN environment because of people who were trained to fight the Russian hordes.
They can't adapt. Guys like Rommel can. The Comd just finishing up in TFK can, and has drastically changed things for the better, specifically because he's not fighting the last war.