Ukraina har lært oss mye. Må Norge kjøpe nye tanks nå, eller bør vi satse på luftvernmissiler, anti panserraketter, Joint Strike Missiles etc.? For undertegnede er det lett å svare på det..... Husk at vi skal ha et forsvars-forsvar, ikke et angreps-forsvar.
Sjekk video lagt ut på kinesisk TV forleden. Den viser et angrep på en russisk T-72 ikke langt fra Mariupol. Du ser kanontårnet ta seg en tur: https://tinyurl.com/56497b97
(Red.)
Have surface ships and armoured vehicles passed
their peak?
02
MAY 2022
By: Reporter
Will surface ships and armoured vehicles still
play a critical role in the future battlespace?
Last month, the Commonwealth government gifted
Ukraine 20 Thales-built Bushmaster protected
mobility vehicles, including two ambulance variants, to support the country’s
military campaign against the Russian invasion.
This was in response to a request from President
Volodymyr Zelenskyy during his remote address to
a joint sitting of Federal Parliament on 31 March.
The request could be seen as a reflection on the
continued importance of armoured capability in the modern battlespace despite
Russia’s own difficulties deploying heavy combat vehicles to the frontline.
Continued investment in next-generation surface
vessels from modern defence forces, including the Australian Defence Force,
also suggests the capability would form a key part of future force postures.
However, Andrew Davies, senior fellow at ASPI and
former director of ASPI’s defence and strategy program, says both armoured
vehicles and surface ships are in “the decline phase of their history”.
Pointing to historical examples of the
“significantly reduced utility” of military capabilities, Davies concedes that
armoured vehicle and surface combatants could still be useful in future
warfighting scenarios, albeit in a limited capacity.
“Strictly speaking, no capability is ever entirely
useless. There are probably still occasional circumstances in which the
crossbow, horse cavalry charge or 16-inch guns of a battleship would still be
effective weapons,” he writes.
“But those instances are so rare that no one sees
the benefit of including them in modern force structures.”
He observes that militaries are conservative by
nature, stating they tend to preserve capabilities that have deployed
successfully in the past.
Subscribe to the Defence Connect
daily newsletter.
Be the first to hear the latest developments in the defence industry.
“So, weapons systems usually don’t disappear
overnight; instead, it happens gradually over time,” Davies writes.
“There were several horse cavalry charges during
World War II (and many of them were successful), and the last two Iowa
Class battleships (the Missouri and the Wisconsin) took part in shore bombardments during the
1991 Gulf War.
“There are just more reliable or cost-effective
ways to produce those effects these days.”
To support his thesis on the decline of surface
ships and armoured vehicles, Davies flags rapid changes in warfighting trends.
He begins by pointing to the “phenomenal increase”
in the swift and precise delivery of lethal force.
“It’s hard to exaggerate how rapid that increase
has been — it is well beyond exponential,” Davies continues.
“The result has been a steady, though less
mathematically dramatic, decline in the density of combatants on the
battlefield, as militaries take a small-target approach through dispersion.”
He goes on to claim tanks and ships are
“inherently lumpy”, and would increasingly become a liability as offensive
threats evolve.
“Up to now they’ve managed to get by with more or
less acceptable loss rates because the offensive weapons they face have
generally been just a little too slow in arriving or a little too inaccurate to
completely overwhelm the defences,” he writes.
“But it’s also clear that the speed and accuracy
of weapons systems are still improving, with the added complication of the
ubiquity of drones of various shapes, sizes and lethality.”
Davies claims while it is possible to develop new
defensive systems, they “tend to be more expensive than the weapons they are
defending against” and can “drive up the unit cost of the platforms they
protect” without delivering additional offensive value.
“All of the elements of the calculus weigh against
expensive lumpiness,” he adds.
“Like the weapons systems of the past that are now
universally agreed to be obsolete, today’s major systems will one day be
anachronisms.”
Davies concludes that surface ships and armoured
vehicles could become “anachronisms” as early as the 2030s.
“I’m tempted to say that they will not disappear
with a bang but will gradually fade away — but there will actually be quite a
few bangs in the process,” he writes.
Get involved with the discussion and
let us know your thoughts on Australia’s future role and position in the
Indo-Pacific region and what you would like to see from Australia's political
leaders in terms of partisan and bipartisan agenda setting in the comments
section below, or get in touch with charbel.kadib@momentummedia.com.au, liam.garman@momentummedia.com.au, or at editor@defenceconnect.com.au.
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.