Thomas C. Theiner Profile picture
Jan 28 25 tweets 12 min read
Earlier I posted a thread about how Abrams, Leopard & Challenger, and Bradley, Marder & CV90 combine with infantry and armored support vehicles during an combined arms attack.
As people asked about the supporting & sustainment elements of a combined arms attack I will do now
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a thread about these.

Please read my earlier thread before continuing with this one. Here I will give you a very rough overview of the elements an armored brigade or division staff has to plan, prepare and execute for a successful armored attack.

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Reconnaissance: commanders need to know where the enemy is, where he has concentrated his forces, where he moves to or retreats.

Ground & air assets of a brigade's recon battalion reconnoiter ahead of the armored spearhead. Nowadays drones are the most used recon asset, but
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before the ubiquitousness of drones helicopter recon and reconnaissance planes like the RF-4E Phantom were a key aerial recon elements.

Ground recon comes in many forms: from long-range reconnaissance patrols to armored reconnaissance with tanks. What kind of recon is chosen
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depends on terrain and enemy, and if you scout or probe: the former observes the enemy, but doesn't engage him, while the latter engages him and gains intelligence from his reaction.

To scout you use easy to disguise, small armored cars like the Dutch/German Fennek,
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to probe you attack with something with more firepower: i.e. Italian Army Centauro Tank Destroyers, French Army AMX-10 RC, or US Army M3A3 Bradley Cavalry Fighting Vehicles, or British Army Ajax Scout Vehicles.

But there are also vehicles that combine scouting and probing,
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like the French EBRC Jaguar, which is an armored car with a 40mm autocannon and Akeron MMPs, or the Norwegian CV90 Mk IIIb Recce, which is an IFV with added reconnaissance capabilities.
In the coverless Steppe of Southern Ukraine armored reconnaissance & drones will be used;
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in wooded northern Luhansk scouting & drones will be used.

Once the enemy's location and composition is clear you want to hit him with artillery, for which you have Forward Artillery Observation Vehicles, like the Swedish Epbv 90 or the M7 Bradley Fire Support Vehicle.
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These vehicles will direct artillery and mortar fire onto the enemy positions; and you have to have self-propelled artillery, because your howitzers must be able to keep up with your attack formations and they must be able to start firing quickly once the enemy is discovered.
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You will also need mobile artillery radars to discover from where enemy artillery fires at your armored spearhead; and M270 MLRS with GMLRS rockets to hit enemy positions, that were newly discovered or were already known and only now came into range.
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If there is a river to cross, you have to ready a water crossing engineer unit with i.e. the Improved Ribbon Bridge, which can be used as a pontoon bridge or as ferries.
If Ukraine wants to cross the Dnipro river in Kherson Oblast, it will need a lot of such bridge elements.
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An armored spearhead also needs armored command and control vehicles, and signal units to ensure communication between all parts of the spearhead function properly.
Also you better bring Military Police along to secure the rear, command posts, supply points and POWs.
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Electronic Warfare vehicles, mortar carriers, artillery ammo carriers, air defense, engineer units to repair your lines of communication, all this is needed - and needs to be readied before an attack can begin.

(photo: a US M992A2 Field Artillery Ammunition Supply Vehicle)
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Also: a combat support hospital is key if you care about your troops. And enough armored ambulances to bring your wounded troops out of the combat zone.

If you can use medical evacuation helicopters - even better, but then your logistics become much more complicated.
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Logistics - the biggest and most complicated of all the elements, and the most important. You have to bring fuel, ammo, food, & water to your frontline troops - they must never run out of anything!

You need huge logistic depots behind the front and a vast fleet of trucks to
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continuously ferry supplies forward. Trucks have to run 24/7 and the maintenance crews have to fix every broken truck no matter how little sleep they had.
You must be able to refuel an entire Bradley company in minutes and bring enough ammo for the entire battalion.
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If your logistics can't keep up with the speed of your advance - well if you're the US Army - then you fly fuel & ammo in, because you never want to lose momentum. Once the enemy is one the run you gotta keep him running. So plan your logistics accordingly - & remember:
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too many supply trucks is always still too few supply trucks.

Ukraine doesn't have air supremacy yet, but once you achieve that, you want a lot of air assets in the air to cover your spearhead from enemy air attacks and to smite enemy units before they come even close to
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your troops. This requires a lot of coordination between air assets and ground forces - that is why you have Joint Terminal Attack Controllers, who direct close air support (CAS) from a forward position.

But once you get close air support, you need also fighter jets, which
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will protect your CAS aircraft from enemy fighters. And you need fighters that suppress enemy air defenses (SEAD).

Like this Eurofighter with an air-to-air load of Meteor, AIM-120, and IRIS-T missiles; and these two F-16CM Block 50 with a SEAD load of AGM-88 HARM missiles.
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Naturally if you have fighter cover you can use your attack helicopters, which are crudely said flying infantry fighting vehicles with an autocannon to annihilate infantry and light armored vehicles, Anti-Tank Guided Missiles to destroy tanks, and unguided rockets to destroy
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everything else. If your Apaches, Vipers, Mangusta, Tiger can fly - so can your Predators, Reapers, Bayraktars, etc.

The advantage of combat drones is naturally that they can immediately destroy an enemy position they just have discovered.
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Combined arms is a complex art and NATO armies continuously train every aspect and element again and again and again. Well planned and executed combined arms attacks can crush the Iraqi Army in four days.

Ukraine will receive a full armored brigade set of tanks, IFVs, and
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support vehicles from the US. Training how to seamlessly use these will take some time. But they learn from the best (UK, US, etc.)

Last but not least: the tank is an integral part of combined arms, without it you will not succeed. Only people, who know nothing about
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combined arms say nonsense like "tanks are a deathtrap now."

Tanks are the tip of the spear, with which Ukraine will slice through the russian front and liberate the South and East, and Crimea.

Just learn and master combined arms before you attack.
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More from @noclador

Jan 30
Very true and everyone knows this.

British Army soldiers are some of the best in the world... but 90% of their equipment sucks!
I.e. the Warrior IFVs and Scimitar recon vehicles have ancient, unstabilized cannons that need to be reloaded BY HAND with 3 (!) round clips.
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For decades the British governments refused to properly fund the army... and so British armoured formations use now mostly antiques:

FV432: 60 years old
CVR(T): 53 years
Warrior: 37 years

Only the Challenger 2 tank and AS-90 self-propelled howitzers are still acceptable...
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but both need urgently new turrets. The Challenger is getting one and the AS-90 turret is in production in Poland for the AHS Krab.
But as long as British governments refuse to finance the British Army properly, the army will have to continue shrinking personnel and equipment
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Read 4 tweets
Jan 27
Soon Challenger 2, Leopard 2A5/6 and M1A1/2 Abrams will roam across the Ukrainian steppe to hunt and destroy russian armor.

All three are leagues better than what the russians field, but tanks on their own are useless. So, an easy to understand thread about combined arms 🧵:
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Western tanks like the M1A1/2 Abrams, Challenger 2, Leopard 2A5/6/7, Leclerc, Ariete AMV, Merkava IV, K2 Black Panther have way better armor than russian tanks.

An M1A2 Abrams is visibly larger than i.e. a T-72 or a T-80, and weighs (depending on model) 15-20 tons more.
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That extra weight is mostly armor. russian tanks are not able to penetrate the front armor of modern Western tanks at distances of 2 km (because the armor is twice as thick as what russian APFSDS projectiles can penetrate).

Photo of a Strv 122 APFSDS training round, which
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Read 26 tweets
Jan 23
Ukraine is about to get some 70+ self-propelled artillery systems... time for an artillery thread about:

🇺🇸 M109A6 Paladin (18x donated)
🇬🇧 AS-90 (24x donated)
🇫🇷 CAESAR 8x8 (19x donated by Denmark)
🇸🇪 Archer (probably 12x donated)

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Before I continue: do you know how NATO 155mm howitzers work? If not, please read my earlier thread about the M777 howitzer.
Once you know how the M777 works (and what primer, fuzes, and charges are), then you will easily understand this thread.

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The M109A6 Paladin is the sixth modification of the M109, which was introduced in 1963.
It's a good system, but AS-90, CAESAR, CAESAR 8x8, Archer, PzH 2000, AHS Krab, and Zuzana 2 are all better systems.

The Paladin still uses a 39 caliber barrel and thus has an 18 liter
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Read 20 tweets
Jan 23
People forget that all US M1A1 and M1A2 Abrams tanks in service with or stored by the US Army are filled with a ton of depleted uranium (DU).
Every Abrams built after 1 October 1988 has a DU mesh between its steel and ceramic armor plates. The US won't give those tanks to
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anyone. The M1A1 without DU mesh were sold years ago to Australia, Iraq, Kuwait, Morocco & Saudi Arabia.
The problem is that the mesh is top secret. Not even the workers building the Abrams at the Lima Tank Plant get to see it. It comes from a classified government facility
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and is enclosed in steel (1st, 2nd generation) or carbon (3rd generation). Workers only insert the plates into the Abrams. Export Abrams are taken apart completely so that the DU mesh plates can be replaced by Tungsten plates... and that takes weeks.
I am sure the German
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Read 4 tweets
Jan 19
🇺🇦Sweden and the CV90:

Sweden acquired 355 CV90 IFVs (+ 194 support variants). The 355 CV90 come in eight versions. The main versions are:
• 9040A (pic 1)
• 9040B/B1 (pic 2)
• 9040C/C+ (pic 3)

The photos everyone is posting are actually the CV90 MkIV for Slovakia (pic 4)
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The three main versions are currently being upgraded:

9040A -> 9040D1
9040B/B1 -> 9040D2
9040C/C+ -> 9040E

Ukraine won't get C/C+/E, because Sweden has 145 and 143 should be in use with eleven mechanized companies.
Btw. this version is easy to recognize as the coaxial
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machine gun has been removed and replaced by a machine gun on top of the tank's turret (see the photo with the firing machine gun).

There are 44 9040B/B1/D2 in Swedish inventory. I don't know if they are being used, but those would be an ideal package to send to Ukraine.
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Read 7 tweets
Jan 19
So much nonsense on twitter about the Ground-Launched Small Diameter Bomb (GLSDB)...

Ok, a thread 🧵

GLSDB uses a Lockheed Martin M26 MLRS rocket section with a Boeing GBU-39/B Small Diameter Bomb.
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The M26 was the original rocket used with the M270 to deliver cluster munitions. M26 rockets are being dismantled, which means lots of M26 rocket sections are available.
M26 rockets come in pods of six. Pods that are filled with rockets at Lockheed Martin's plant in Arkansas.
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The GBU-39/B Small Diameter Bomb is made by Boeing. It is an INS/GPS guided glide bomb.

Each BRU-61/A Bomb Rack Unit carries four GBU-39/B (or GBU-39A/B, GBU-39B/B).

Almost all NATO fighters and bombers can deploy GBU-39/B.
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Read 14 tweets

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