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Halifax Rifles were brought back into the Res F, not the Reg F.
Halifax Rifles were brought back into the Res F, not the Reg F.
You are correct.Just a small add on to the above on the SoB. To the best of my knowledge, the Canadian Airborne Regiment was not placed on the SoB. It was disbanded.
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Of course they are. Damn typo. I need an independent proof-reader.Halifax Rifles were brought back into the Res F, not the Reg F.
Some interesting thoughts
The current paradigm of ground combat, made explicit by Ukraine’s 2023 counteroffensive, suggests seven variables that will inform the future construct of offensive operations:
1. Battlefield Transparency. UAS and precision fires enable all belligerents to see, sense, and deliver effects well beyond the FLET/FLOT (forward line of enemy troops and forward line of own troops). This new tactical revolution and changing characteristic of war imposes a grave threat to massed formations. If we cannot mass, how we will breach? And if we cannot breach, how will we seize terrain?
2. Mobility. Mines have resurfaced as a major obstacle to offensive maneuver. Our current inventory of plows, rollers, mobile bridges, mine-clearing line charges, and other mobility platforms are not sufficient to reduce the density of mines employed by Russian defensive positions.
3. Combat Power Preservation. Military forces require meaningful ways to generate mass without expending high volumes of mounted platforms and lives. This observation lends further credence to the need for small, plentiful, and distributed drones that could serve as a contact layer across the tactical FLET/FLOT. This could be a way to preserve combat power until conditions are met to seize terrain—but only if the United States invests in the required number of stockpiles required to make this a reality.
4. Changes to the Operations Process. Tactical formations need methods to distribute orders and execute the operations process in faster planning cycles and across dispersed locations. The operations process must keep pace with the modern battlefield. Our current training paradigm conditions us to execute deliberate planning and troop-leading procedures across multiple hours or even days. We then rehearse the plan on a static terrain model before disseminating updates to static command posts. The current operational environment requires formations to execute the operations process through distributed locations and under constant observation. We must not allow the operations process to prevent us from gaining and maintaining the initiative.
5. Battlefield Geometry. UAS, including one-way attack UAS, along with electronic warfare capabilities, a variety of sensors, and weapons standoff will change the scope and scale of division, brigade, battalion, and company responsibilities. Legacy planning considerations for unit frontages and depths must account for extended sensing and strike ranges.
6. Resourcing at the Decisive Echelon. The Army’s transformation in contact initiative seeks to improve the lethality of brigade combat teams; however, as a force, we have not defined which echelon will be the decisive command. US Army divisions and brigades of the future will still lack the appropriate mass, resources, logistics, and communications to act independently of their higher headquarters within the emergent operational environment.
7. Information Flow and Decision-Making. We have yet to understand the impact UAS will have on the relationship between information flow and decision-making. Our Army employs a quality noncommissioned officer corps and demands calculated risk taking and initiative; however, an empowered tactical formation assuming independent action may unknowingly maneuver toward its own demise. Future offensive frameworks should define conditions in which tactical formations exercise prudent risk and initiative under the umbrella of a deliberate offensive framework.
Based on observations of Ukraine’s 2023 counteroffensive, and informed by an understanding of these seven variables, we can establish a problem statement:
Given the high efficacy of enemy UAS, mines, and precision fires, how does the US Army manage high volumes of data across distributed locations, and then aggregate combat power in a method that enables operational endurance for follow-on operations while managing risk and preserving combat power?
Based on the variables and problem statement described above, we propose a framework, designed principally for armored brigade combat teams, that respects the defensive layers of the enemy, acknowledges the tactical revolution of UAS, and preserves our most valuable assets until conditions are set: Isolate, Suppress, Destroy.
Isolate
This phase requires the brigade to isolate battalion and company objectives. This phase does not attrit enemy formations, but degrades, dislocates, disintegrates, and disrupts key enemy systems (e.g., command-and-control nodes, electronic warfare platforms, fuel and ammunition stocks, and radar and other sensors). This phase requires the brigade to stabilize the FLET/FLOT and cover a frontage of over one hundred kilometers, compared to the legacy planning factors of three to eight kilometers. In this scenario, the brigade synchronizes and orchestrates a collection plan that leverages its organic assets as well as medium-range reconnaissance UAS and the family of UAS that reside at the squadron and battalion level. The brigade, concurrent with squadron security operations, will build the digital common operational picture of the isolated area. Simultaneously, the brigade dynamically retasks the squadron and battalions to deliver collection and fires tasks.
Mutually Suppress
This phase masses the effects of direct, indirect, UAS, and all forms of contact onto select enemy battle positions. The brigade and battalions continue isolation measures; however, this phase should see a commitment of brigade- and battalion-level assets against enemy objectives. The brigade will continue its effects against enemy command-and-control nodes, fire direction centers, and sensors while prioritizing enemy positions. This phase requires battalions to mutually mass on select objectives.
Selectively Destroy
This phase facilitates the point of penetration and offensive seizure. This phase also commits ground combat power—which incurs the greatest risk for the attacker. The brigade will continue to collect, disintegrate enemy counterattacks, destroy enemy command-and-control nodes and sensors, deny the enemy from reinforcing, and dynamically retask subordinate elements.
That is insane as enemy forces could drive a Division through that zone - and the entire theory is based on UAS and other remote sensors that are susceptible to EW or other methods of degradation.A 100 km Brigade vs an 8 km Brigade - Going to need more HIMARS at the Brigade level.
Yup....
The author in item 4 upthread called for changes to operation processes, suggesting op tempo was too slow and that there was too much deliberation.
His prescription seems to me to be awfully slow and deliberate.
I think you meant aith zero capability to mutually support or mass.1 Brigade covers 100 km to stabilize it. Presumably then a Division will be stabilizing 300 km. Both the Brigade and the Division are going to have widely dispersed Battalions and Companies with limited opportunities for mutual support and rapid massing for quick reactions.
I can see why he wants the Corps. But if a Brigade is covering 100 km wide, presumably those Brigade systems in the hands of the enemy are going to keep the next Brigade 100 km to the rear. A tactical bound has now become 100 km and not 10 km. How far to the rear does that put the Corps reserve?
That is insane as enemy forces could drive a Division through that zone - and the entire theory is based on UAS and other remote sensors that are susceptible to EW or other methods of degradation.
Yup.
I think you meant aith zero capability to mutually support or mass.
To me that article went to left field early and then just left the stadium.
FIFY.The problem with the author's model is that is accounts very little for reality.
That 100km AO is RTFO simply from Artillery support aspects.That 100km AO is a lot different if it's urban or rural, flat or mountainous, foiliage or grassland. Thinking from a CIS standpoint, range and signal path care not what your frontage and depth are; they have a limit range based on frequency and all are susceptible to EW and DF.
These factors, I assume, come front and centre as well to the logisticians, HSS, and maint folks who have to support these lone Battalions across a massive AO.
Teeth need tail, but the distance and speed factor much more into how far apart they can be.
OPFOR will use Low Yield Devices and the EMP from them to cause all sort of issues with the vaunted sensor net.