BostonB wrote: » On UN operations it seems the problem is a lack of will to use the firepower, than a lack of firepower. Though I accept that shock and awe and intimidation work wonders to stop things kicking off.
BostonB wrote: » Where there not other countries with MBT there too?
OS119 wrote: » ... what anybody else incountry had brought with them was pretty irrelevent.
BostonB wrote: » Why would we need MBTs? I know they are useful away big battles etc, ie in urban fighting, like in Iraq but thats not something we do either. We had/have thesehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FV101_Scorpion I'm all for having well equipped defense forces, but they should be appropriate to the role.
Manic Moran wrote: » What role does Ireland undertake that tanks are inappropriate? Let's look at some places Ireland has gone...... ...
so do ireland use u.n tanks when undertaking u.n operations ??
DylanJM wrote: » No. We don't have any tanks of our own to train in. You can't just hop in someone else's tank and without any training.
BostonB wrote: » Territorial and home security. I don't think we should have to massively upscale just for peace keeping missions. We can't afford it. Though perhaps some used MBT's would be of more practical use than the PC9's.
OS119 wrote: » ...those who can't do that, won't be able to go......
BostonB wrote: » Makes perfect sense not to go if we don't have the capability, or the means to fund it. The country is broke. Cut your cloth.
BostonB wrote: » Every deployment does not require MBTs, even for those countries that have them. Therefore there will always be opportunities, as there has been for decades.
iceage wrote: » I think it was Manic Moron ...
OS119 wrote: » absolutely, there will always be opportunities for constabulary-type, light-infantry role PK missions - the problem is that Ireland, like everyone else, doesn't just do PK ops for the goodness of them, it does them to gain international brownie points, and to test and develop its armed forces in a deployed, operational environment that increases the ability of those armed forces to perform their central role - warfighting. if Ireland doesn't keep up with the cutting edge of european peacekeeping/peace enforcement, it will lose its (already scant) ability to operate with european forces (or, as disturbingly, on its own) when Ireland really needs to, it will lose out politically in europe by not being 'one of us' - only being able to do 'vanilla' PK ops and with the kind of partners one might not automaticly believe to be paragons of military efficiency.
petergfiffin wrote: » Timely article on The Register (http://www.theregister.co.uk/2010/06/24/richards_interview/) where the guy tipped to be the new head of the UK's armed forces has said "...modern warfare has now left the tank behind as surely as it has the horse." I accept he's primarily talking about keeping tank regiments rather than anything we would be looking at in this country but the general thrust seems to be the nature of warfare will continue to be primarily dismounted infantry (like Afghanistan) rather than large scale armour. I accept the sight of an MBT rolling into town would tend to focus minds on a PK op but shouldn't a military like ours be really focusing on being light, (air) mobile and packing a heavy punch in a small package?
BostonB wrote: » But the Abrams came into its own in urban security/ fighting where it can takes hits from RPGs and all sorts, wheres some of the troop carriers were quite vulnerable to that and mines. Same in Afghanistan.
BostonB wrote: » So while massed tank battles seem unlikely there are still the meanest mother on the ground.
OS119 wrote: » someones looking for a ban!:D
petergfiffin wrote: » Timely article on The Register (http://www.theregister.co.uk/2010/06/24/richards_interview/) where the guy tipped to be the new head of the UK's armed forces has said "...modern warfare has now left the tank behind as surely as it has the horse."
gizmo555 wrote: » (Loved the closing line of the article - Of course the cavalry's real job on the battlefield, as the Punch cartoon caption of long ago put it so well, is "to lend tone to what would otherwise be a vulgar brawl")
concussion wrote: » That's an artillery quote, and it should be dignity, not tone.