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U.S. Field artillery back to learning manual methods after Russian intervention in Ukraine
Defence Blog ^ | Jul 18, 2019 | Army, News

Posted on 07/18/2019 4:22:09 AM PDT by tlozo

The U.S. Army Field artillery going back again to manual methods of fire direction and gunnery after lessons of Russian intervention in Ukraine.

The U.S. Army has not had to contend with electronic warfare during the long wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, but the conflict in eastern Ukraine’s Donbass region showed an increase of electronic attack threat levels.

With the growing threat of cyberattacks, the U.S. Army Field Artillery School has placed a renewed emphasis on learning manual methods.

“Bringing back the charts is a big deal,” said Staff Sgt. Chad Payne, an instructor for the 13J fire control specialist course. “If you don’t understand the chart, you won’t actually understand what the automated system is doing for you.”

About a decade ago, the school began reducing its emphasis on teaching manual methods, said Col. Samuel Saine, assistant commandant. That’s because improvements to the Advanced Field Artillery Tactical Data System enabled AFATADS to be used effectively in all situations, he said, and it dramatically sped up the firing process.

Then electronic warfare in Crimea and Ukraine shut systems down there, and at the same time, cyberattacks began disabling automation systems at civilian firms. These attacks “woke some people up,” Saine said.

Over the past year, the Field Artillery School commandant has made it a priority to reinsert manual or degraded operations back into the program of instruction for all courses, Saine said.

The renewed emphasis is not only in advanced individual training for new Soldiers, he said, but also in all of the officer courses from basic up to the pre-command course for colonels.

Now students begin AIT using maps to plot and they learn the math behind firing solutions.

“They’ll do manual operations until we know they fully understand the basics,” Payne said, explaining only then do students move on to the automated system.

This method provides students with a better appreciation of the concepts, he said, enabling them to “hit the ground running” at their first units.

They are also better prepared when electronic warfare takes the AFATADS system offline, he said, and degraded operations are now part of the scenario during AIT field exercises.

When systems go down, Soldiers are now trained on how to transition between the automated and manual methods, confirmed Pvt. Cynthia Antaya, a 13J student at the school.

EW can affect communications, automated systems and access to GPS. So 13J Soldiers break out their charts, pencils, plotting pins and protractors for degraded operations.

“It’s going to be important to know your charts and darts and how to go manual and still be able to continue on with your job, even when everything’s down,” Antaya said.

It’s essential that artillery sections “never sway from our No. 1 task,” Saine emphasized, “and that No. 1 task is to provide uninterrupted fires to the maneuver elements of our Army — the infantry and armor.”

Manual or degraded operations for firing howitzers are actually a 20-level task for the gunner and primarily only 10-level tasks are taught at AIT, said Staff Sgt. Rodrick Stone, an instructor for the 13B cannon crewmember course.

Some instructors, however, still demonstrate manual sighting for the students, Stone said.

“I believe it’s very important that they learn both ways, because in the event that the digital goes down, you have to have a failsafe — a backup plan,” he said.

The Field Artillery School has helped work degraded operations into the program of instruction for the Advanced Leadership Course, Saine said. Since howitzer gunners are by doctrine sergeants, learning how to manually sight howitzers is emphasized in ALC, he said.

With degraded operations, the gunner switches to a panoramic telescopic sight, Stone said. Aiming poles and firing stakes are used. “We already have an additional primary aiming reference that’s set up; he instantly sights in off of that,” Stone said.

Then the traverse hand wheel is spun manually to raise or lower elevation of the howitzer tube, he explained.

“When I was coming in, degraded operations was the only thing that was going on,” Stone said. “There was no digital systems at the time.”

Now the threat of cyber warfare once again makes degraded operations of paramount importance, he said.

“We have more capacity and capability than they do,” Saine said of the enemy, “so they’re going to try to find creative ways to degrade and deny some of our systems.”

The emphasis on degraded operations is not only happening in the schoolhouse, it’s in the field as well, Saine said. Doctrine has been updated and so have performance standards.

Training Circular 3-09.8 for fire support was recently updated with increased performance standards for manual gunnery and degraded operations.

The chief of field artillery emphasizes degraded operations at fires conferences and at quarterly meetings with division artillery commanders, Saine said.

“It’s not just a Fort Sill thing,” Saine said. “He believes very strongly it needs to be informed by the operational force.”

Preparing for EW is not only practical, he said, but it also creates a more well-rounded force.

“What we found along the way is that we actually were increasing the proficiency of our Soldiers and our leaders,” Saine said, “because it helped them understand to a higher degree how everything worked together.”


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: artillery; military; us
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1 posted on 07/18/2019 4:22:09 AM PDT by tlozo
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To: tlozo

Pathetic, just pathetic to have abandoned “manual methods”. Imagine someone needing artillery support in a very bad way and their devices don’t work, or worse yet, have been hacked so fire is directed onto our own troops.

Maybe the navy best learn what a compass, sextant and navigation maps are good for too.


2 posted on 07/18/2019 4:28:30 AM PDT by redfreedom ( Setteled Science = Irrevocable Unmitigated Lie)
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To: tlozo

Great idea,glad to see it back.


3 posted on 07/18/2019 4:31:25 AM PDT by Cannon6
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To: redfreedom

Kind of like abandoning simple math as the calculator does it easier.


4 posted on 07/18/2019 4:33:44 AM PDT by tired&retired (Blessings)
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To: tlozo

Aye, sir. The more they overthink the plumbing, the easier it is to stop up the drain. [hands McCoy a fistful of computer chips] Here, Doctor, souvenirs from one surgeon to another. I took them out of her main transwarp computer drive.

Montgomery Scott Star Trek 3


5 posted on 07/18/2019 4:34:20 AM PDT by Vaquero ( Don't pick a fight with an old guy. If he is too old to fight, he'll just kill you.)
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To: redfreedom
Yes.....and the Army hopefully goes back to the good old land navigation systems with map and lensatic compass.

Now maybe Walmart and other retailers need to leach cashiers how to count change the old fashioned way.

6 posted on 07/18/2019 4:34:30 AM PDT by mosaicwolf
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To: tlozo

This reads as if the US Army had units in Ukraine fighting their dirty war for them.

... did we?


7 posted on 07/18/2019 4:36:19 AM PDT by thoughtomator (The Clinton Coup attempt was a worse attack on the USA than was 9/11)
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I recall reading where the KGB oh, I think that’s what they still call themselves, I have gone to manual typewriters at their headquarters to increase security of administrative functions.

I wonder if the US military or the US Uniformed Services have maintained their proficiencies in MF and HF Communications, Morse code (CW) is gone by the wayside but plenty of Old Timers l still know how to use it, CW might not be fast and it might not be efficient but when all else fails it is the mode that is going to keep Communications intact. I wonder if CW is going to make a comeback as well?

I wonder if the Navy and the Coast Guard still know how to navigate with a sextant? I don’t think they teach it anymore in fact, I think they might have all gone to electronic charting.


8 posted on 07/18/2019 4:36:23 AM PDT by Clutch Martin (The trouble ain't that there is too many fools, but that the lightning ain't distributed right.)
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To: tlozo
they might think about teaching Morris Code again too...
9 posted on 07/18/2019 4:40:09 AM PDT by Chode (Send bachelors, and come heavily armed!)
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To: redfreedom
Pathetic, just pathetic to have abandoned “manual methods”. Imagine someone needing artillery support in a very bad way and their devices don’t work, or worse yet, have been hacked so fire is directed onto our own troops.

Based on my contract work with the Air Force, it won't be long before in order to fire a weapon you'll have to insert your CAC card and log on to the device, hoping all the while that the all-eggs-in-one-basket network is still available, or that your card hasn't been locked, requiring a trip to the MTF to get it unlocked. Of course I'm being sarcastic ... but only a little.

10 posted on 07/18/2019 4:41:12 AM PDT by Mr Ramsbotham ("God is a spirit, and man His means of walking on the earth.")
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To: tlozo

One big benefit of being proficient in working without the computer, is being able to say “Hey, wait a minute” when the computer starts giving you bad answers.

There WILL come a day when we discover that foreign made components (or US made components designed by people not loyal to us) have a “remote trigger glitch”. As in the pilot episode of Battlestar Galactica.


11 posted on 07/18/2019 4:42:00 AM PDT by SauronOfMordor (Socialists want YOUR wealth redistributed, never THEIRS!)
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To: thoughtomator

Maybe they are just paying attention to what the Russians were doing in the Ukraine.


12 posted on 07/18/2019 4:43:10 AM PDT by USNBandit (Sarcasm engaged at all times)
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To: tlozo

No school like the old school.


13 posted on 07/18/2019 4:49:17 AM PDT by ealgeone
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To: tlozo

I just wonder without GPS how they will position the battery? Our exercises were kind of phony since the survey crew went out and found the position and gave us precise grid numbers, but I just don’t see it happening under fire.


14 posted on 07/18/2019 4:50:20 AM PDT by junta ("Peace is a racket", testimony from crime boss Barrack Hussein Obama.)
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To: Vaquero

“They are also better prepared when electronic warfare takes the AFATADS system offline, he said”

Notice he said “when”, not “if”.

L


15 posted on 07/18/2019 4:51:34 AM PDT by Lurker (Peaceful coexistence with the Left is not possible. Stop pretending that it is.)
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To: tlozo

The navy should take heed and remove the plugs from the 16” guns on those old battleships and get them seaworthy again. You never know when dumb technology is going to be needed again.


16 posted on 07/18/2019 4:51:40 AM PDT by Sgt_Schultze (When your business model depends on slave labor, you're always going to need more slaves.)
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To: mosaicwolf
actually, Walmart is going to self check out in a big way.

Most customers do not fool around with counting money and the nuisance of change

17 posted on 07/18/2019 4:55:34 AM PDT by bert ( (KE. NP. N.C. +12)There were Democrat espionage operations on Republican candidates)
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To: SauronOfMordor

“If you don’t understand the chart, you won’t actually understand what the automated system is doing for you.”


sane with the slide rule, statistics, lawyers, real estate agents.

Very few people understand the basics anymore. But they have a number

Maybe the surprising thing is the artillery still has a manual option.


18 posted on 07/18/2019 4:57:11 AM PDT by PeterPrinciple (Thinking Caps are no longer being issued but there must be a warehouse full of them somewhere.)
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To: SauronOfMordor

One big benefit of being proficient in working without the computer, is being able to say “Hey, wait a minute” when the computer starts giving you bad answers.


I have GPS in my car. I also have paper maps. Before traveling to a place I am not familiar with, I will check the paper map first and get an idea of the best route.

GPS are useful but I will not risk my life on them.


19 posted on 07/18/2019 4:58:32 AM PDT by CIB-173RDABN (I am not an expert in anything, and my opinion is just that, an opinion. I may be wrong.)
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To: junta

Do infantry and armor leaders carry printed maps these days? Does the DOD even print maps anymore?


20 posted on 07/18/2019 4:58:54 AM PDT by Stingray51
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