Dear Editor:
Is the MGS Really the Answer?
There has been much ongoing discussions involving the acquisition of the MGS. However, Major Atkins published letter seems to skirt around many of the issues that concern me. I would like to address a few of these issues regarding the MGS.
Maj Atkins stresses the fact that the MGS and the Leopard C2 have virtually the same gun. This is true, and give both vehicles the same capabilities. These capabilities include the defeat of any second-generation tank. However, even if the threat is increased, we know that the C2 can be upgraded to a 120 mm cannon. The Germans have developed the Leopard 1A6, complete with Turret Electric Drive, 120mm cannon, and hunter killer capability with a new PERI sight for the commander. The Leopard C2, with these upgrades, would be quite capable of taking on, and defeating, any perceived future threat. The MGS cannot be upgraded to anything beyond the 105, indeed, the argument can be made for mounting a smaller calibre cannon! This, in itself, defeats all of his arguments about the Leopard not being capable of being a tank killer. Such an upgrade would also be significantly cheaper than the MGS would be!
Maj. Atkins is correct in his assertion that tanks have superior tactical mobility, and the MGS has superior operational mobility. While operational mobility is good to get the equipment to the threat, it is not very useful once it arrives in the threatened area. The Leo C2 is far more agile cross-country than the MGS. This would be especially true in extreme climatic conditions, such as deep snow in the winter. The cross-country mobility of the Leopard C2 gives the commander a huge edge, primarily because it gives him more options. The MGS will not allow the commander the same options, for it does not have the tactical mobility, agility and flexibility of the C2. By flexibility, I mean the capability of firing accurately on the move, in both offensive and defensive operations. When we look back at history, we would find that battles where the commander lacked the options of mobility, battles of attrition were the result. I would argue that mobility, combined with firepower, allows one to defeat a less mobile enemy without the same personnel losses that can be expected in a static battlefield. We could also address strategic mobility, we simply cannot transport the MGS by air. Therefore, it would be shipped the same as the Leopard would be, by sea and rail.
Maj. Atkins also appears to be giving the impression that the Leopard is going to be replaced by the MGS, when in fact it is going to be replaced by three vehicles, the MGS, the MMEV and the LAV TUA. While LCol Petit in a separate article derides the 120mm turret mounted breech loaded mortar as â Å“unproven technologyâ ?, despite the fact that it is being fielded in several armies, the same organization is pushing ahead with the MGS and MMEV, which is most definitely unproven technology. So, one vehicle is being replaced by three, with a much greater manpower, support and logistical burden. This would obviously affect immediate battlefield resupply! The Support echelon would therefore have to be much busier and larger. So, despite the MGS having one less crew member, the direct fire squadron would have to be several times larger than the present tank squadron, in terms of fighting vehicles, manpower, logistical vehicles, supply and maintainers.
There is a further issue that bothers me the most. The crew of the MGS will not have the same tactical awareness as a crew of the C2. The MGS has the commander and gunner hatches on each side of the gun, and the gun obscures the view to the opposite side. So the commander can see from 12 to 6 o'clock on his side, the gunner the same on his side, but neither can see beyond 12 o'clock on the opposite side of the gun. This hardly enhances survivability!
Maj. Atkins also confuses survivability with armour protection. Certainly, armour protection is one aspect of survivability, but by no means the only one. The Fire Control system, amount of ammunition, mobility and crew awareness all play a part in survivability. Not only that, the MGS will require additional, as yet to be manufactured, protection against RPG style weapons, where we have already bought additional armour packages for the C2 that provides more than ample protection against these types of weapons.
I am also confused by Maj. Atkins statement about the Leopard C2 â Å“The Canadian Forces cannot continue to invest in an outdated piece of kit unsuitable for the role it was originally designed for. The MGS is being brought into service and will be used in an appropriate role: that of a direct fire weapons platform.â ? Cannot equipment be used in roles it was not originally designed for? Can the Leopard C2 not do the task? Of course it can.
I suppose I am also wondering why a few short years ago, over one hundred million dollars was spent on upgrading the Leopard to its present C2 standard. In Dec 2004, the Minister is apparently ordering an initial buy of 16 vehicles â Å“off the shelfâ ? for a purchase price of some 30 million dollars. These vehicles will not be â Å“Canadianisedâ ? in that they will not have the MBGD, C6 mounts, TCCCS radios and so on. No, these are going to simply be test beds to determine how to make these vehicles compatible with the rest of the Canadian fleet. Is this value for our dollar? One would think that if a manufacturer is wanting to sell vehicles to us, then they would make them to our standard.
I suppose that there is one irony in all of this. A successful argument could be made for the MGS to augment the Leopard. It can certainly take over some of the traditional roles of a tank, and would be a welcome augmentation to convoy escort, flank and rear area security, and other uses its wheeled mobility would be useful. But replace the tank, the MGS cannot do. Not even an obsolescent tank.
My final question would be; what, exactly, has changed in our defense policy within the last few years? Just how does the expenditure of so much of our limited budget on an unproven vehicle make sense? This vehicle has failed many US Army trials, and may yet prove to be another example of other US weapons, such as the infamous Sgt York or Bomarc Missile! Yet we seem bound and determined to buy this unproven, and in many ways, inferior vehicle.
Our army, it seems to me, lacks direction and focus. Someone has decided that we require a direct fire vehicle for peacekeeping missions, and that we would no longer equip to operate in anything higher than a low intensity conflict. This despite what it says the military is to be capable of in the latest White Paper! The White paper, we all can agree, is outdated, but it has yet to be superseded by anything else. Should we not be fighting to retain combat capabilities, instead of voluntarily giving up capabilities without government direction? Should we not be arguing for equipment that would allow us to meet our written mandate? Is it not the responsibility of the military senior leadership to allocate the dollars given them in order to best meet the mandate of the military as stated in the Defense Policy? An expensive vehicle can do the job of a less complex vehicle, but the opposite is certainly not true! I would think that the military hierarchy should be fighting for the best equipment for its military personnel, and settling for what the government gives them. Not arguing for an unproven vehicle that reduces our already limited capabilities, is not to be built in Canada, and has limited commonality of parts with the present wheeled fleet.
WO Lance Wiebe (Ret'd)
Lincoln NB