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Informing the Army’s Future Structure

an earth mover!! wow !! great tech, rather than the FN CShovel, or FN Cpick........


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PZM-2 vs HMEV

The difference - the attachments and the distribution of the equipment -
 
As opposed to, for example, having some viable numbers of suitable artillery...

Like guns, rockets and GBAD on wheels to keep up with the LAVs on the roads? Or Tank Transporters to bring the Tanks along at pace?
 
Unfortunately it came down to money. The LAV 6 purchase was an upgrade to the LAV 3 that we were able to get through because upgrades are easier than new procurement (the CCV project), and once that was approved the justification for CCV in an era of harsh budget cuts was made more difficult.

Mobility is an interesting topic; because it’s more of a series of trade offs that perhaps is being suggested. While on one hand tracks offer improved cross country mobility, that is offset by on road speed and some operational mobility. For what it’s worth I don’t find the LAV 6 to struggle that much in areas like Wainwright and suffield in comparison to say TLAVs. @KevinB is correct in the power to weight ratio, retuned engine gets a bit more go, but the felt effect is more profound in getting up hills than off road. For me anyways. What I actually miss about the LAV 3 is the barrel depression. I suppose one could argue that there’s serious benefits to road mobility if we have to ship LAVs to Europe in order to get them to the front.

There’s heavy criticism of it here, but that’s to be expected on a forum talking about change. Frankly were it me, and I was addressing the issues of the CAF replacing the LAV 6 fleet would be far far down my list.
I agree they are not going anywhere, but I still like to see a tracked fleet of APC/IFV to work with the tanks, with the intent of having a "Heavy Brigade" and "Light Brigade" built around the LAV chassis. We will always be an expeditionary force with no control of where we will be asked to go next.
 
I agree they are not going anywhere, but I still like to see a tracked fleet of APC/IFV to work with the tanks, with the intent of having a "Heavy Brigade" and "Light Brigade" built around the LAV chassis. We will always be an expeditionary force with no control of where we will be asked to go next.
I don’t think the juice to squeeze ratio there is worthwhile. The advantages in mobility from a tracked IFV, I think that’s a touch overplayed here, are off set by logistics and training complexities from mixed fleets.
 
Having had prepared positions done by Engineers, it’s night and day, and in frozen soil conditions, it’s the difference between life on earth and mars.

I do think the CA should look for at least 2 Bn worth of tracked IFV, to work with the tanks, simply from a practical standpoint, but it’s way down the list of items that the CA needs.
 
It’s easy to say “needs to be better protected” okay against what threat and what level of protection ?
I'm not deeply into armour standards. My general understanding is Stanag 4569 Level 4 is sufficient to defeat 14.5mm while Stanag Level 5 protects to 25mm and 6 to 30mm. Generally speaking there are quite a few APCs out there that operate with 25 and 30mm armament. It's them I think one should protect against.

Most APCs, including the LAV are rated at 4. Australia's IFV project is calling for 6 (I think that's for the frontal arc only). There are a few, like the Finnish Patria AMV which claims level 6 as does the Hanwah K21 and supposedly the Rheinmetall Lynx KF 41 and CV 90. I favour the K21 with its tracks and 9 dismounts. It does that at roughly the same weight with 2' less height than the LAV. I'll put the CV90 in second place because of its fewer dismounts.

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The Leo 1 Tank Trainer -

Which was actually deployed in numbers and overlapped both the Leo 1 and the Coyote.
It was an idea that was acceptable as at the time our brigades in Canada were supposed to be light and air portable for a variety of roles and we also had to train people for combined arms tactics because we were constantly rotating people through to 4 CMBG.

On the track v wheeled issue, I watched an entire square combat team of Grizzlies and Cougars mired to their hulls in Gagetown during RV 81. Our M109s and M113s and M548s never got bogged down.
We talk about the what ifs but we are staring "what if" in the face. We are closer to dealing with Rumsfeld's reality.
I'm one of those guys who feels that Rumsfeld's reality is simply: Reality
What can we do with what we have?

If everybody is satisfied that the LAV6.0 can operate as a Bradley/Warrior/Marder/CV90 substitute, much less a Narmer, then I will shut up. But, with very few exceptions I am not hearing that from the discussions on this board or in the CAF literature.
Not me. I think we need a real IFV. And we shouldn't be wishy washy and leave the SOR open for both wheeled and tracked like we did for the CCV - we need to say tracks are mandatory.
And before we start swapping old kit for new kit we need to be buying new kit to fill the gaps that the old kit doesn't cover.
That's my view as well.

IMHO the mixed fleet bug-bear is a red herring as long as we group our forces accordingly. For the cost of 100 IFVs (and 25 SPs) we could field one armoured brigade with the tanks we have (yup I know I'm mixing A6Ms and A4s - but it is what it is) and have enough left over for a training cadre. That equips two battalions of IFVs with all the heavy maintenance concentrated. That frees up 2 battalions worth of LAVs and one light battalion of people, which, if you play your cards right and make use of some reservists will give you two mech brigades with 3 bns of LAVs each and one light brigade with three light battalions. And incidentally (again with judicious use of reservists, gives each of the two remaining RCHA regiments three four-gun batteries of M777s. Bob's your uncle and you're on your way to a real army (and dare I ay it, maybe even a mechanized division with a light brigade to spare.

:giggle:
 
An argument for the wheeled Infantry Carrier Vehicle (Stryker) in the High Intensity Conflict



An interesting perspective from an American Stryker user.

HMMWV - MRAP - M113 - Stryker - Bradley spectrum with the Stryker being better than the HMMWVs, MRAPs and M113s already donated but not a Bradley.

So, from a Canadian perspective, if we saw the LAV 6.0 as a Stryker (Plus) rather than a Bradley (Minus), and we look at this Stryker-friendly view of what the vehicle can do, as opposed to what it can't do, can we describe an operational envelope that the LAV 6.0 can reasonably, and "safely" - in a military context - operate?

Getting Strykers would be a “win” for Ukraine, said Duplessis, who retired as a colonel in 2021 and oversaw live fire training for those vehicles at the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, California.

Straight opinion

“I would be hesitant to make a one-to-one comparison with Ukraine,” Duplessis told The War Zone on Wednesday, “But the Stryker was made to bridge the gap between light forces and really heavy ones in a high-intensity conflict like you see in Ukraine. The Stryker would provide mobility and protection from the kind of threats faced by Ukrainian forces just as it did for our formations in Iraq.”

The LAV 6.0 provides mobility and protection. Forces so equipped are more than light forces and less than heavy ones.

How Strykers Could Help Ukraine

While it is still unknown what variant or variants of Stryker the U.S. might provide Ukraine, any would represent a big upgrade for the country from the fleet of more than 1,300 High Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicles (HMMWVs) or Humvees, 300 M113 Armored Personnel Carriers and 527 Mine Resistant Ambush Protected Vehicles (MRAPs) the U.S. has already provided, said Duplessis, the retired Stryker officer.

Another opinion but a fairly uncontroversial one I think.

“It's quieter than a tank and you can get a Stryker in areas that you probably could not get a tank or a Bradley into, especially in urban areas,” he told The War Zone. Earlier this month, President Joe Biden authorized the transfer of 50 M2A2-ODS Bradley Fighting Vehicles to Ukraine.

I am going take @KevinB at his word and guess that Duplessis is referring to manoeuvering in a functional town - not one shot to pieces with the ground covered in rubble. That would be when the Bradley might seem to be a better choice.

Would the LAV 6.0 do any better than the Stryker in that environment?

The Stryker also provides safer mobility, with better communications and situational awareness systems, than either of those three previously U.S.-supplied vehicles, Duplessis said.

That would seem to be equally true of the LAV 6.0?

You can use all the digital systems. You can use your optics to fire the 50 cal or MK 19 from the protection of being inside the vehicle. You can't do that in the M113 or the MRAP or the HUMVEE. You can only match that with the Bradley Fighting Vehicle or the Abrams tank.”

Also equally true of the LAV 6.0 but better armed with the 25mm and the 7.62 coax. But are they sufficient to tackle armoured vehicles as a matter of course? Or should the just be used in that role in extremis? Are they more appropriate for shooting up infantry positions, structures and light vehicles from stand off distances?

Detractors, said Duplessis, point out Stryker’s limitations.

Others point out LAV 6.0 limitations.

“‘It can't fight a tank,’ they say. ‘It doesn't have the firepower of a tank. It doesn't have the protection of the Bradley.’ But you have to look at what role the Stryker plays.”

All equally true of the LAV 6.0





The Stryker, he said, “was produced and centered around the infantry squad. It is designed to deliver an infantry squad a kilometer or terrain feature away from an objective.”

And here, I think, is the most contentious statement in the article, especially as it applies to the LAV 6.0.

What is that distance?




It “allows mobility in ugly, restricted environments like a city. It allows for the protection of the infantry and at the end of the day, it allows you to put a squad of infantry in a vehicle or dismount with its leaders and organic equipment and weapons.”

Second contentious statement.

The Stryker delivers a Squad (a standard issue of 9 soldiers) in a bus driven by two others.
The LAV 6.0 delivers a Section (a standard issue of up to 10 soldiers) with 3 tied into the vehicle and the number of dismounts varying from 7 downwards.

Can both teams deliver the same effects?



The M1126 Infantry Carrier Vehicle (ICV), one of nearly two-dozen versions, is the “foundation of the Stryker formation,” said Duplessis.

The LAV 6.0 Infantry Section Carrier is the "foundation of the LAV 6.0 medium formation".

Other variants, such as the Commander’s Vehicle (CV), Mortar Carrier Vehicle (MCV), Engineer Squad Vehicle (ESV) and Medical Evacuation Vehicle (MEV) “enable the formation's infantry” in several way

Canada has all those enablers (LAV 6.0, Bison or ACSV) with the distinct exception of the Mortar Carrier Vehicle.

They provide command and control; organic fire support from the MCV's 120mm mortars - which can range nearly 4.5 miles; mobility support; and medical evacuation, he said.

“In this last role, the MEV provides a better protected medical evacuation vehicle than the U.S.-provided M113.” Such a role is critical in the fight Ukraine is facing against Russia, where artillery is arguably the biggest threat on the battlefield. The Stryker's speed, maneuverability, and protection from indirect fire could be a huge asset for Ukrainian troops.

LAV 6.0 would be equally capable of manoeuvering under artillery fire.

The Mobile Gun System (MGS) variant, with its 105mm cannon and the Anti-Tank Guided Missile (ATGM) variant, armed with Tube-launched, Optically-tracked, Wire-guided (TOW) missiles, “both have the capability to destroy Russian tanks,” said Duplessis.

As with the Mortar Carrier Vehicle Canada is deficient in these vehicles although some of the deficiency can be rectified by tanks, if they can keep up with the LAVs on the roads with their 80 km/h tank transporters.


But there are things that the Stryker can’t do, he said.

While it allows troops to maneuver in a rapid manner, it's best used as part of a larger effort.

“I probably would not recommend employing a Stryker Brigade alone in an urban environment, but as ... part of a combined arms effort with armor. With anti-armor systems like Javelins. With snipers. With mortars.”

The same holds true for the tank-killing variants.
“This is best done when employed as part of a combined arms formation as opposed to a stand-alone capability. Neither system matches the capability of the Abrams main battle tank.

In other words the Stryker (and the LAV 6.0?) are best employed in a Combined Arms setting

One of the biggest lessons Duplessis said he learned about the Stryker from his time at the National Training Center is the importance of knowing what it was designed for and tailoring missions around that.

What are the limitations of the LAV 6.0?

“I can't emphasize this enough,” he said. The Stryker “is designed to maneuver coherent infantry squads and provide protection, communications, situational awareness, and then a support-by-fire platform with a 50-caliber or Mk-19.”

The units that did “extremely well” at NTC were those that “recognized the limitations of it, and really used it to move forces to a position of advantage out of contact with the enemy,
and then make contact on their terms. It's not to get the Stryker in these decisive engagements ahead of the armor forces.”

And this is where I think all our discussions founder.....

Together with the lack of Javelins, mortars, TUA vehicles, DFS vehicles and artillery support. And not to mention the additional deficiencies identified by the Americans - GBAD, UAVs, EW and Loitering Munitions.


And finally, on the care and maintenance front - how can we Keep It Simple, Stupid?

The biggest challenge may not be maintaining the vehicle itself, but the digital systems on the vehicle said Duplessis. There are also parts of the weapons station that frequently broke.

“The digital components and the remote weapon station would be more of a challenge for somebody who's never operated the system,” he said.
 
Is this article unreliable/ based on a poor translation or could we be set for some pretty big announcements and actual movement this year?


He expected a contract award in 2023 but said the procurement could last seven years, compared with 10–15 years for the replacement of the LAV III with the LAV 6.0.

That 7 year timeline does conform to Force 2030 ... FWIW.
 
That 7 year timeline does conform to Force 2030 ... FWIW.
Still 5 years short of the 6.0 projected life though...
Do UOR's get listed announced before they're implemented? There's projects on the books for ATGM and GBAD (albeit with unsatisfactory timelines). Nothing for LAV other than the ongoing ACSV procurement. Surprise urgency on those two files plus some LAV variant gap filling?
 
Still 5 years short of the 6.0 projected life though...

Do UOR's get listed announced before they're implemented? There's projects on the books for ATGM and GBAD (albeit with unsatisfactory timelines). Nothing for LAV other than the ongoing ACSV procurement. Surprise urgency on those two files plus some LAV variant gap filling?
Maybe its been covered, but whats the plan with all these ACSV? Distrubted to who?
 
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