I'm shocked but not surprised they stuck the Stryker brigades with towed artillery. Are those brigades worth anything in a war against an enemy with any sophistication?
Bkmk
Geez. I entered the Marine Corps in 81 and we trained in scenarios that assumed if you were on the radio more than 3 or 4 seconds, you were triangulated and a couple of years later we assumed after mortars or Artie fired they were triangulated. 3-4 hours would have been a luxury.
The South Africans have the RINO 6x6 SPA, the Czechs have the DANA 8x8 refitted from 152 to 155. My mortar plt in Germany in the late 70s was pretty low on the counter battery target list and we moved after 2 fire missions. 2-3 hours in same spot after firing is an invitation.
I have been saying since the freaking Cold War that towed artillery in a full-on mechanized war are just glorified targets. For my money, only airmobile and airborne units can justify having towed guns. And if the new HMMWV-mounted gun is practical, then that should be the standard gun for direct support cannon units in airborne and airmobile formations.