- Reaction score
- 22,141
- Points
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I keep looking at the US and UK (probably because more is written about them than other modern armies although I do occasionally look for things in German on the German army)
What strikes me about the US infantry is that the mortars have their own MOS. All riflemen (including the previous 11M Mechanized Infantry 11H Heavy Anti-armour are now 11B infantrymen while all infantry mortarmen are 11C Indirect Fire Infantryman.) They basically go from a common Army 10 week Basic Combat Trg (BCT) to a specialized Advanced Individual Trg (AIT) in separate streams.
Whether or not our engineers aren't impressed with pioneers isn't the issue. The issue is were the battalions satisfied with the pioneer product. That's what I see as a problem with handing pioneering and mortars over to the engineers and artillery. Pretty soon you have the "centre of excellence" try to turn everyone into engineers or gunners when you don't need all that.
Surely the role of the combat support company is not to have pioneers and mortarmen trained "just enough ... to be dangerous". That is being a tad condescending to the infantry in general. The aim of the training of the combat support companies is to be "trained to be effective in their role". Trying to produce a common engineer product and a common indirect fire product across the Army ignores the fact that both these skills exist on a spectrum and not a fixed point. We need to stop overthinking and overtraining folks - this is how we end up with manpower shortages in critical jobs.
I always believed the ONLY reason the Mortars, Pioneers, and ADP where stripped from the Inf BN's was it gave a guaranteed deployment role to the other cbt arms - who early on in the Afghan expedition where cooling their heels back in Canada.
It was then a way to spin that into helping the Inf put more bodies back into rifle coy's - as opposed to just giving the Inf more recruit slots...