Posted on 04/22/2011 9:04:11 PM PDT by sukhoi-30mki
New Designs Suit Tanks For Asymmetric War
Apr 22, 2011
By David Eshel, Bill Sweetman Tel Aviv, Washington
One trend in warfare and asymmetric combat (mostly urban) is the use of main battle tanks (MBTs) in small tactical assault forces. Tank versus tank fighting is virtually nonexistent. Even in high-intensity combat, tankers prefer firing at targets within visual range2,000-3,000 meters (6,500-9,800 ft.). Longer-distance targets can be attacked with high-precision missiles directed by unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) and laser designation.
Israel is among the countries adapting its MBTs, in this case the Merkava Mk4, for asymmetric combat. Evolving designs will enhance performance in a number of areas, notably firepower, protection, stealth and networked communications. Some tacticians tout the Mk4 as an infantry commanders dream, for the versatility it can provide in battle when linked with other armored vehicles and dismounted troops.
In Europe, two contractors, Krauss-Maffei Wegmann (KMW) and Rheinmetall, are working on armor protection and weapon systems for MBTs and infantry fighting vehicles (IFVs), which not only enhance performance and situational awareness, but give crews more time to make decisionsa key advantage in low-intensity combat.
The trends underway in armored platform design could soon have an influence on battlefield tactics and, in the process, affect the development of a new generation of armored vehicles, including the U.S. Armys Ground Combat Vehicle.
One area receiving attention is tank ammunition. Israel Aerospace Industries subsidiary MBT developed Lahat, a missile fired through the barrel of a tank, which eliminates expensive retrofit work. Using semi-active laser homing, Lahat can be designated by the firing tank or by an indirect designation, by another tank, UAV, helicopter or forward observers, so that the firing vehicle, using a hull-down position, is less exposed to counter-fire.
Lahat has a range of 8,000 meters when launched from a ground platform, and 13 km (8 mi.) when deployed from a high elevation. The missiles accuracy is 0.7 meters circular error probable, and at an attack angle of more than 30 deg. penetrates 800 mm (31 in.) of steel armor.
Apart from longer range, higher precision and controlled lethality are guidelines for new munitions. Israel Military Industries APAM high-explosive, multipurpose M339 tank round provides one munition for a range of targets and scenarios, decreasing the need for different rounds. The fuse of the APAM is programmable after loading, giving the crew flexibility in targeting choiceantipersonnel, fortification, light armored vehicles, antitank.
Survivability of a tank and crew on a fire-saturated battlefield drove the Merkavas design. A modular open-platform approach transformed the tank from a vehicle designed to fight other tanks into a versatile platform optimized for a changing battlefield. The Merkava shifts rapidly from low-intensity warfare to high-intensity counter-armor operations. It meets the rising antiarmor missile threat with active protection systems (APS). Mk4s are rolling off the assembly line with Rafaels Trophy APS as a standard element of the protection suite. The Trophy APS was successfully combat-tested in March, when a Gazan fired a rocket-propelled grenade (RPG) at a tank. Elta Systems EL/M 2133 WindGuard sensors detected the projectile and in milliseconds classified the threat as severe and alerted the crew. The Trophy APS tracked the missile. When it was within range, the APS automatically activated the hard-kill countermeasure and destroyed the threat at a safe distance. Longer-distance threatssuch as antitank guided missileswould leave more time for other countermeasures.
The Merkavas modular design permits changes at acceptable cost as operational requirements shift. Among changes envisioned by the IDF are those that address developments in ammunition, miniaturization of components, elevated observation needs in urban combat, advanced communications, APS radar, new camouflage materials, stealth technologies and enhanced life-support systems for crews.
As part of the evolution of the Merkava family, the MBT chassis is the basis for a family of heavily armored vehicles, designed for multimission operations in high- and low-intensity warfare. The first offshoot is the Namer IFV, which recently entered service and will deploy in large numbers.
Tactical and operational aspects of IDF tank deployment are being debated. Recent conflicts against hybrid opponents, such as Hezbollah, have forced the IDF to rethink the role of heavy forces in combat. The rapidly developing information technology domain presents a significant challenge for designers. The Mk4 is packed with sophisticated electronics, computers and network-centric connections. Rather than having specific processors committed to individual tasks, multiple processors in the Mk4 provide services to applications, each prioritized by parameters such as importance, urgency and process duration. The processors can be located in different areas of the tank and are connected by multiple networks, providing a resilient and survivable infrastructure.
In the past, tanks normally fought and survived within rigid formations. Today, they can operate in looser packs, seamlessly sharing targets, coordinating activities among themselves and cooperating with other elements over the IDFs new digital C4I network. Each tank is designed as a network-centric system managed by dedicated servers for the turret and hull. It also has a digitally controlled power-distribution system for the turret and all weapon and observation systems. Crewmembers use common workstations, which connect to the tanks intranet, for operations and to display data.
Enhanced and flexible firepower, ranging from a powerful 120-mm main gun, coaxial and remotely controlled machineguns and semi-automatic mortars, make the latest version of the Mk4 a flexible fighting machine. As the high-pressure gun will probably remain the main armament, extensive research will be invested in munitions technology to enhance the precision of long-range, direct-trajectory fire.
With its combination of firepower, mobility and protection, a Merkava/Namer team at the platoon level could in future operations present unprecedented flexibility for ground commanders. Although this capability has so far only been discussed, a four-vehicle platoon of two Merkava tanks and two Namer IFVs could make a well-balanced combat team, with the redundancy to split into two sub-units without degradation of firepower, especially in urban combat.
Rheinmetall and KMW, meanwhile, are collaborating on the Puma IFV, but disagree on some issues surrounding armor concepts, and in one case have found themselves in conflict. The problem arose with Rheinmetalls Revolution tank upgrade package, installed as a demonstrator on a Leopard 2A4 tank. Since the Leopard is a KMW product, Rheinmetall is not allowed to refer to Revolution as a Leopard upgrade.
Nevertheless, the Revolution concept shows how technology has changed the tank in the past decade and made it far more relevant to todays conflicts than it was when those conflicts started. The upgrade includes improved passive protection, but also features an APS with a proprietary defeat mechanism developed by a newly acquired Rheinmetall subsidiary. A state-of-the-art remotely controlled weapon system (RCWS) is on the turret.
Perhaps the most important element of the system is the digital turret. The advent of affordable, high-quality infrared and electro-optical sensors and flat-panel displays, combined with digital maps and networking, eliminates the classic limitation of the tank in situations other than frontal attackthe lack of 360-deg. situational awareness. The RCWS allows pop-up targets to be engaged quickly. The Revolution retains a four-man crew but with flexible tasking. The loader operates the RCWS and can fire the main gun.
KMW has not installed an APS on its own Leopard 2A7 urban demonstrator and the company is not a believer in the technology. The 2A7 is protected against multiple RPG shots, KMW says, and it has yet to see an APS that is able to defeat countermeasures such as new RPG systems that fire decoy precursor rounds.
Rheinmetall executives and engineers believe it is not so much that the MBT itself is going through a resurgence, but that its level of protection provides essential options in asymmetric and counterinsurgency operations. Rules of engagement do not favor immediate firepower response to an attack, and the MBTs level of protection gives the crew time to make decisions.
New armor technology and APS, says Rheinmetall, also make it possible to provide such a level of protection at sub-MBT weights. They argue that the 120-mm weapon is not needed for most vehiclesa 30-mm gun such as that on the Puma, firing PELE (Penetration with Enhanced Lateral Effects) rounds, will be adequate, but could be backed up by a vehicle with a dual-purpose (line-of-sight and high-elevation) 105-mm gun.
Not air transportable by C130, and with a bad habit of tipping over on its side if the "main gun" was fired to either side.
I always wondered about dropping a Sheridan turret on a Bradley, though. It'd have solved a lot of the automotive problems we had with the early M551s.
You should have known some of the guys on the 7th Army Airborne Delivery Test Board, tasked in the late 1960s with developing airdrop procedures for the Sheridans in USAREUR. Airborne Treadheads, the wildest and craziest of both worlds.
"Ever see a Sheridan burn? Keep watching Two-zero."
--Final line of The Way We Die by David Drake, collected in The Military Dimension. [Baen Books]
Not with six road wheels. See pic in post #41.
Maybe a stretch job, like the stretched M113s. But I don't think so.
Does it have an escape hatch for the driver? Let me know when they've got a version with a belly escape hatch for the driver.
After we kicked Iraq out of Kuwait, a Russian general said he was glad they never had to go up against our Air and Armored Forces in Europe.
He is dead flat correct. And I'm glad we never had to stop the Eighth Guards Army anywhere between Frankfurt/Gelnhausen/Fulda and Munich.
I figure we would have nailed them at a rate of about 15 to one. I also figure they would have thrown 25-1 or 30-1 at us.
They also discovered that the guidance wires on Dragon/Shillelagh/Malyutka AT missiles can be cut by intermediate WP smoke fires, one reason the Israeli merkavim have a 2-inch mortar mounted in the turret. Handy for infantry support in MOUT, too, as they found out in Lebanon.
I used to train my Infantry Soldiers to wear body armor in the assault. My little Ranger Lieutenants told me that body armor was worthless. It just slowed them down and made them hot. They thought the Kevlar helmet was worthless, too. They could just wear a patrol cap. But, when the shooting starts..everyone wants armor.
Daytime, yep. Nighttime, less so. Depends a lot on whether the patrol SOP is *shoot anyone with a helmet* or *shoot anyone without a helmet*
No problem getting tank crews to wear the CVC though. The commo systems work a lot better now than they did 30 years ago. I recently did a press tour ride in an Abrams, and brought my old Nomex frog suit and CVC helmet along. I got an offer to drive, to which I replied ***fork you, young sergeant, I'm a gunner....***
Damn. So was attrition on our side? Could we have won?
I expected it to go theater nuclear right adter Ivan's first chem attack. I didn't really figure I'd still be around by then, but figured I'd be at it for a week to ten days.
General Sir John Hackett, John Peters and Harold Coyle, among others, have a couple of novels out about what it might have been like. Gen. Hackett figured it'd go to strategic missile exchanges of cities, and he is a very smart old bunny.
We had them pretty much stopped about half way across West Germany, but losses were heavy.
Our expectation was that we'd fight as a battalion as directed for as long as we could, refuel and reammo, then break into company-sized hunting pack units of 17 tanks each, plus strays, then get one last refuel/ammo resupply and break into five and six tank platoons.
That would mean in our M60A1 that we had burned off 63 rounds worth of main gun ammo three times, probably plus a fudge factor, call it 200 main gun rounds per tank. That'd be 75-125 bad guy vehicle kills, depending on how many were first round hits, which were a second round *burst on target* and how many required a *repeat* second finishing shot. Plus 30,000 rounds of co-ax for Ivan's groundpounder Infantry dismount *crunchies*.
You guys would have been the cavalry coming to save the surrounded wagon train. But we had some really nasty surprises for the other folks, particularly in our AVLB scissors bridges.
Merkava MK-4
Would that have been right after they shut down the Armor School at Ft Knox and moved everything to Ft. Benning?
No, it's not. Tanks are expensive grave markers in the new battlefield. When HUMVEES are sporting rail guns and directed energy weapons, tanks are foolish.
We were all over northern Bavaria and Baden-Wurtemberg.
We were in a mech infantry division and would have been IIRC the first CONUS heavy unit to be sent to the rescue.
Fine with me. I'm partial to that good ol' Abrams.
Thank you very much for your service. I can’t imagine what you went through. That’s about as serious as it gets. Thank you for sharing.
I can recall Sky Raiders and the AC-47 Magic Dragons as being in high demand during the mid 60’s when I was in Nam. Then the C-130’s came into being and took over the job. I loved watching them at night.
I loved watching them at night.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.