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Petard said:Hopefully some'll write a book about it some day!
cough Old Sweat cough ;D
Petard said:Hopefully some'll write a book about it some day!
Kirkhill said:Hey Clint,
It sounds as if:
A) you didn't need the mortars
B) that you probably could have found space somewhere in the back of each gun-det's 10 tonner for the C16
C) that your sense of when the 81s were "required" in support of coal face operations and the sense of a LAV Platoon Leader might be at variance.
But that business of prioritizing (item C) is why the Bns have always had their own integral fire support.
GnyHwy said:If a need was identified, and the numbers demanded of the Arty Regt had been bigger, a mortar platoon dedicated to the forward Cbt Tms could have been deployed as well.
Technoviking said:Without getting into OPSEC, I can raise a flag labelled "BS" on that last post.
I was the BG Plans Officer for a rotation. At one point, an operation was being planned that was outside the bubble of protection offered by the M777s. The need for indirect fire support was identified, and proposals were made to move the guns into range. "Can't do it" was the answer. "What about moving up with mortars?" Nope, we don't have the people. (Of course, it was made worse by the effects of HLTA).
The plan was allowed to go forward because the attached Brit unit brought along their mortars, which had enough fire support for the operation (in conjunction with other assets)
OK....carry on.
Technoviking said:Without getting into OPSEC, I can raise a flag labelled "BS" on that last post.
daftandbarmy said:And the scariest thing is that I get the impression the gunner in question carried on with no adverse career impact. Sigh...
Which brings us back to my earlier observation:GnyHwy said:If manning shortage was an issue, then changing the cap badge of 50 nonexistent soldiers doesn't change anything. As I stated, a few times now, if it was thought that the mortars were meant to be manned continuously in forward offensive positions, then more soldiers are required; the cap badge is irrelevant to me in this conversation.
Instead, we took those PYs out of the field force.MCG said:Had PYs moved to Arty & Engr along with the responsibilities of mortar & pioneer, then this discussion would not be happening today.
ArmyRick said:WTF??? Dude, please follow this thread.
1. 81mm Mortars were available on an operation in A-Stan and denied for manning reasons (note the technoviking words)
2. There is a shortage of personal, END STORY.
I have no idea how going on about seating arrangements and capacity in different armoured vehicles FITS into this conversation? Please break out the puppets and explain it to me, in squads, if there is a point to it?
We need 81mm manned and 155mm manned AND not by the same people. Either some one has to increase arty or infantry positions and we will be able to do so.
It would also probably mean creating mortar batteries or mortar platoons...depending on who would get them..
In this discussion, do not care about seating capacity of the LAVIII or any other vehicle....
KevinB said:....
Of course I'm also the guy that wants to create a seperate Calvary branch to run the LAV's and have all Light Infantry forces that can jimp in back of a LAV if needed.
KevinB said:Gny - Great points - but since every Roto is Roto0 the CF never evolves in that respect...
Kirkhill's point are actually 100% bang on. Its all about PY's and how the branch and then element chooses to employ them.
In the 80's we were told the 120mm was a Artillery mortar (I never understood that but I guess we had some staff paper that had 120's on it that where assigned to some fiction Artillery segment). I would suggest the 120 is lighter and easier deployed than a 105mm C1 howitzer - yes I know like the C16 v. 60mm the 120 cannot do everything a 105 can, but by my math one can deploy about 66% more 120's than 105's for the same gun line PY's - with about 500% more ordnance one the ground / person on the line (and yes a larger logistical burden to support the added weight of fire - but if combined with Precision munitions - the 120mm looks very very favorable).
In fact one could use a 120 mortar det with 4 pers using 1 Hummer type vehicles in the 'Light Role' or 1x V-150's for operations like Afghan/Somalia etc (light deployed with motorized light armor) and integral LAV Mortar vehicle for the LAV formations, with the 'excess' PY's used to get more tubes or flesh out the "A Ech".
Honestly I think rolling the reserve Arty units to LAV120's would actually make viable units out of most of them (who currently can man a 2 tube battery). Of course this would then require a deployable reserve structure.
Regardless of my drift in the above - Canada has some tough choices that need to be made before any of the Mortar options can be looked at with any success.