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Close Area Suppression Weapon (was Company Area Suppression Weapon)

  • Thread starter Thread starter Marc22
  • Start date Start date
The key objection to replacing the 60mm mortar with the CASW is the weight of the weapon prevents it from being used effectively in the dismounted role. A parallel idea for a dismounted platoon support weapon is to launch high velocity 40mm projectiles from weapons something like the Swiss Arpad 600. On firing the barrel recoiled out of the rear of the weapon a distance of 14"/35cm, controlled by a hydro-pneumatic buffer. There was no backblast and the 35mm 167gm projectile was propelled at 600m/s. Since the round took only a second to reach 500m the weapon had considerable potential against moving targets. It was intended for destroying point objectives such as machinegun nests, light vehicles and helicopters. The launcher weighed 6.8kgs and the rounds were light so 20-30 could be carried by the firer. The HE round contained 45gm of explosive and had considerably greater range and accuracy than a conventional rifle grenade.

For our purposes, reworking the weapon to fire a 40mm high velocity grenade provides the ability to attack DF targets with the available CASW ammunition. If the weapon has the proper sighting system and grenades have programmable fuses then they can provide airburst capabilities over dug in targets, otherwise, the weapon will need some sort of secondary sight and be fired aimed upwards with the soldier in the standing or kneeling position to drop rounds onto the target.

Not ideal, but better than having to leave the CASW behind all the time...
 
More convenient solutions than that are side-load style M203s that allow for medium velocity rounds that are too long to get in the current one.
 
I suppose the good news is that, in addition to 120 mm mortars, the people bringing us the CASW have also talked about medium velocity grenades and sole-purpose "grenade rifles" (MGL-105).

http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/74005.0.html
 
MCG said:
I suppose the good news is that, in addition to 120 mm mortars, the people bringing us the CASW have also talked about medium velocity grenades and sole-purpose "grenade rifles" (MGL-105).

http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/74005.0.html

DLR-5 Source?
 
Good paper, and an interesting description of the Soviet use of their AGL in Afghanistan in the dismounted role:

Taking Back the Infantry Half-Kilometer

Okay, time for a deep dive into the tactical. The point of departure is this paper by Army Maj. Thomas Ehrhart, Increasing Small Arms Lethality in Afghanistan: Taking Back the Infantry Half-Kilometer (.pdf), written last year at the Command and General Staff College, that says fighting in Afghanistan has exposed the fact that American infantry are poorly equipped and trained for long range firefights.

In Afghanistan, the infantryman’s “weapons, doctrine, and marksmanship training do not provide a precise, lethal fire capability to 500 meters and are therefore inappropriate,” Ehrhart says. Unlike on the streets of Iraq, where firefights were few and were typically fought under 300 meters, insurgents in Afghanistan skillfully use the wide open rural and mountainous terrain to stretch the battlefield. The following excerpt sums it up pretty well:

“Comments from returning non-commissioned officers and officers reveal that about fifty percent of engagements occur past 300 meters. The enemy tactics are to engage United States forces from high ground with medium and heavy weapons, often including mortars, knowing that we are restricted by our equipment limitations and the inability of our overburdened soldiers to maneuver at elevations exceeding 6000 feet. Current equipment, training, and doctrine are optimized for engagements under 300 meters and on level terrain.”

There’s a lot to unpack in this paper, the author gets into the relative merits and disadvantages of the 5.56mm round, reliability of the M4, the rifleman’s standard ACOG site, basic training, adding more marksmen to the squad and even the shortcomings of the standard issue magazines (Magpul gets a real big shout out for their PMAG M4 mag replacement). He concludes that only with significant changes to training, doctrine and weapons will infantry be able to engage targets out to 500 meters.

“In the table of organization for a light infantry company only the six –M240B 7.62-mm machineguns, two– 60-mm mortars and nine designated marksman armed with either 7.62-mm M14 rifles or accurized 5.56-mm M16A4’s rifles are able to effectively engage the enemy. These weapons systems represent 19 percent of the company’s firepower. This means that 81 percent of the company has little effect on the fight. This is unacceptable.”

I’m going to get into a number of these points throughout the week, but first off, I want to get into Ehrhart’s description of meeting engagements in Afghanistan and the standard U.S. tactical response. “The enemy travels light and employs supporting weapons from standoff, to include mortars and medium machineguns. Faced with these conditions, the modern [U.S.] infantry attempts to fix the enemy with direct fire and use supporting assets to kill the enemy,” he writes.

Supporting assets is either artillery, if in range, or more commonly air strikes. My question, can U.S. troops be provided enough organic lethality that they can overmatch the enemy with both direct and indirect fires without having to wait for air strikes? Prompt air support might not always be available and the infantry must have the weapons to overmatch the Taliban.

The Soviets in Afghanistan ran into the same tactical challenge. Read accounts of Soviet infantry firefights in Afghanistan in the 1980s and you’ll see they invariably hauled their AGS-17 30mm grenade launcher with them on most every dismounted operation, particularly in the mountains. It was cherished for its high rate of fire and nearly 1,700 meter range.

I know this gets into another important point the paper raises, which is an overly encumbered infantryman trying to run down Taliban light fighters. Yet, at around 50 pounds with tripod and ammo, the whole package was relatively light and mobile; it could be broken down into manageable parts. Soviet infantry valued the AGS-17 so much they built a special harness that attached to the assistant gunner’s back so that if they ran into a firefight he would drop down on his stomach and the gunner would mount the grenade thrower to his back and begin firing. The AGS-17 became the weapon around which the squad or fire team was organized, much like the light machine gun in U.S. and western armies.

U.S. infantry do not have a comparable weapon. The Mk. 19 40mm launcher weighs 73 pounds (the AGS-17 gun weighs 37 pounds), and that’s just the gun, add another 20 pounds for the tripod and then ammunition and you see why it’s typically mounted on vehicles. The weapon also has a bad reputation for rattling itself apart during sustained use.

The Soviets learned pretty quickly in Afghanistan that high rates of fire were vital. Lessons from Afghanistan led them to mount auto-cannon on their BMP infantry fighting vehicles, BTR wheeled vehicles and they rushed lots of ZSU 23–4 quad anti-aircraft guns to theater. The Soviets had lots of towed, rapid fire anti-aircraft guns organic to their infantry units and these were liberally placed about combat outposts in Afghanistan.

Another U.S. shortcoming in the small arms fight is the lack of a GPS guided mortar round. Only now is the Army developing a GPS round for its 60mm and 81mm mortars, and they have yet to reach the battlefield. With a 60mm mortar and GPS guided rounds, American infantry would be ale to accurately target Taliban fighters on the next ridgeline, and even behind it.

The American military, and particularly the Army, has been “platform focused,” doctrine and weapons development has focused on crews fighting a mounted weapons system, be it a tank, Bradley or what have you (the Army plans to spend $7 billion over the next few years to develop a new armored fighting vehicle to add to its massive fleet of armored fighting vehicles). The future of irregular conflict will predominantly be small-unit infantry fights, a fact the acquisition community has not grasped. It’s about time they did and begin fielding lightweight, highly accurate and lethal weapons that are easily carried by the infantry.

http://defensetech.org/2010/03/01/taking-back-the-infantry-half-kilometer/
 
daftandbarmy said:
Good paper, and an interesting description of the Soviet use of their AGL in Afghanistan in the dismounted role:

Taking Back the Infantry Half-Kilometer

Great article! Thanks.
 
Petamocto said:
More convenient solutions than that are side-load style M203s that allow for medium velocity rounds that are too long to get in the current one.

My understanding was the longer rounds were non lethal "baton"  type rounds. I'm not sure that either the weapon or the shooter could handle the increased recoil loads of medium velocity grenades (which explains the recoil system of the ARPAD-600).

Soviet era soldiers manpacking the AGS-30 is exactly the argument I am making against the current slate of CASW contenders; they are far larger and heavier and in no way "man portable".
The Russians have product improved their 30 mm AGL, and the Chinese have a very portable 35mm AGL (comparable to a GPMG in size and weight), which support the use of AGL's in all phases of war. Ours can be dug in for the defense, or vehicle mounted, but not brought up in the advance by dismounted infantry. (Another point is a light AGL will improve the performance of the carrying vehicle by reducing the amount of mass up top, and maintaining a low center of gravity).

Back to the drawing board.
 
I note with interest this thread sarted in 2005.

I recall hearing discussions that it was an urgent operational requirement.

I just hope that skynet doesn't send the current management team back to 1915 so they can work on the "Tank' project

Sheesh  ::)



 
*Bump*

4726650853_92122a5e9c_b.jpg

This came out as a requirement in 2004, before we engaged in combat operations in Kandahar.  We'll be out one year from now.  No CASW in sight. 
 
But if we'd had the CASW, everything would have turned out so much better...


If we don't succeed in Afghanistan, it's all the fault of the 60mm mortar.
 
dapaterson said:
But if we'd had the CASW, everything would have turned out so much better...


If we don't succeed in Afghanistan, it's all the fault of the 60mm mortar.
:rofl:

 
Wow, after six + years, the name has gone from:
Company Area Suppression Weapon, to
Close Area Suppression Weapon, to
C16 Automatic Grenade Launcher System

This, ladies and gentlemen, is progress. ::)


Oh, in case anyone failed to notice, we are in our fifth year of combat with an obselete weapon that this will replace and supercede.  Funny, our Leopard C2s were found to be "lacking", and we were able to get Leopard 2A6M's in theatre, and purchased 100 or so other models of that same tank in 1/8 the time.

 
Technoviking said:
Wow, after six + years, the name has gone from:
Company Area Suppression Weapon, to
Close Area Suppression Weapon, to
C16 Automatic Grenade Launcher System

This, ladies and gentlemen, is progress. ::)


Oh, in case anyone failed to notice, we are in our fifth year of combat with an obselete weapon that this will replace and supercede.  Funny, our Leopard C2s were found to be "lacking", and we were able to get Leopard 2A6M's in theatre, and purchased 100 or so other models of that same tank in 1/8 the time.
I keep wondering how long it would take if it wasn't an urgent requirement ?
 
GK .Dundas said:
I keep wondering how long it would take if it wasn't an urgent requirement ?

The CASW AGLS is not a UOR.  It is being treated as a routine procurement and hence follows normal timelines.
 
And since the 60mm fills a capability requirement quite well, we continue to have some self-licking ice-cream cone somewhere in Ottawa reminding us poor dumb grunts that we need a CASW C16 AGLS.  ::)
 
Technoviking said:
And since the 60mm fills a capability requirement quite well, we continue to have some self-licking ice-cream cone somewhere in Ottawa reminding us poor dumb grunts that we need a CASW C16 AGLS.  ::)

TV,

Perhaps it's not just Ottawa ;). Meanwhile, you may want to take a stick and try convince some of your peers of your case. :nod:
 
dapaterson said:
The CASW AGLS is not a UOR.  It is being treated as a routine procurement and hence follows normal timelines.
I'm sure there are a lot of words I could use to describe this program but I have to tell you the use of normal and routine for some reason scares the hell out of me .
I suspect that everyday People connected with this project  (as well as the rest the DND procurement projects) must thank God that truth in advertising laws do not apply to them.
 
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