Eliminatus said:
74OA said:
The missing piece is airpower. It is a key component of combined arms operations and particularly valuable for reaching into a defense in depth to disrupt it and interdict its supporting LOCs.
At the moment, however, air defenses are denying both sides the ability to effectively employ airpower in most of its traditional combat roles.
Within its range limits, HIMARS' responsiveness and accuracy do give Ukraine a facsimile of some aspects of airpower and it is more operationally impactful than are Russia's longer-ranged but intermittent and low-volume cruise missile/suicide drone strikes.
Most occupied territory is now within HIMARS range, so it will be interesting to see if it can substitute for airpower sufficiently to break open Russia's well-prepared defenses for a ground attack in the South.
Aye. Definitely not alone in thinking lack of air superiority is the number one failing of the Russians to date by a large margin. I think you are right in the role of HIMARS to some extent but I see it more as a strategic asset, going after supply dumps, command and control centers, troop barracks and repair shops, etc. Quick tactical long range assets still seems to fall to arty and maybe drones a bit. Which is not a real substitute for the Ukes I don't think.
Also question the numbers of HIMARS available. We don't make THAT many of them and the Russians are proving a very old theory of war. No matter how good your best weapon is, it usually is not enough to stop a determined enemy by itself. The Ukes have done great work with HIMARS to date but damn me if it doesn't look like whack a mole.
A breaching operation to get through those minefields should be at least a brigade level effort, with support from division and possibly corps level assets, and fixed wing air support if available.
The suppression needs to include counter-fire missions on as much enemy artillery as you can find that can range your breach site(s). HIMARS/MLRS is very good at this, assuming your intel/recon has found the targets. I don't know about how the Ukes have their units organized, but back in the pre-BCT days, each U.S. Army mech/armor division had a battalion of MLRS in their DIVARTY brigade. Note that you don't actually have to kill the enemy artillery - you just have to keep them from being able to set up and fire.
The obscuration needs to include jamming, shooting down, or otherwise neutralizing drones. Drones are OPs in the sky, and as long as they can see where you're trying to breach, you've got a problem. Even if you've neutralized the defender's artillery, knowing where you're at allows him to bring ground maneuver units in to kill your breachers. Actually, for at least some of those mine fields, drones might be the primary means of keeping eyes on the obstacle. Artillery (or mortar) smoke missions should then go in at multiple locations, not just the one where you're actually going to breach.
You're going to need a lot of artillery to make it work, especially in the absence of effective air support. That's why it's got to be, like I said, at least a brigade level operation, with heavy indirect fire and engineer support. That penny packet stuff just loses people and equipment to no purpose.
I was in a mech infantry battalion in Germany in the late 90s, and the biggest attack/breach missions we ever did at CMTC were battalion level (because that's all the sandbox there has space for). On one breach mission where my company had the primary breach, my company took something like 90% casualties. We lost 8 of 10 Brads, 3 of 4 dismount infantry squads, the entire attached tank platoon, most of the attached engineer platoon (I think they had 5 or 6 survivors), the CO, and the XO.
NTC at Ft Irwin has a bigger sandbox to play in, and they do brigade/BCT level rotations. I don't know if they still do breach missions like this, though.