FJAG
Army.ca Legend
- Reaction score
- 14,248
- Points
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Using them "like a tank" is what everyone criticized about the MGS and similarly lightly protected direct fire support vehicles. That's why MGS were originally deployed in a platoon of three in a Stryker rifle company - to discourage "massing" as an armoured fist but to leave them as a support tool for the rifle company. Even distributing them as a company of MPFs with a brigade is flirting with slipping into "tank-like" tactics.Perhaps this is to allow the Divisional commander the option for the MPF battalion to maneuver independently somewhat like a Tank Battalion if facing a non-peer enemy that doesn't have an armour threat?
I can't really see a need to mass MPFs against non-peer enemies.
My head is with a proper tank equipped armoured regiment in a heavy brigade as long as we continue with the pretense of having a full spectrum army. And I believe we should have at least one of those in Europe as a part of a NATO deterrent force. I tend to believe that we need more than one of those but recognize the reality of funding so one brigade will have to do for starters.I think in a Canadian Divisional context a Tank Regiment would make sense for this slot.
For me the greatest value that the MPF has is that it is lighter and more easily transported to a theatre and then easier to feed and water once it gets there, but, quite frankly you can provide direct fire support of the bunker busting or anti-armour type from man pack or light vehicles as well. To me the MPF falls into a very narrow niche that I really don't think is worth the cost. You could get all the benefit that the new MPF gives by putting a new fire control system into an old AMX-30 at the cost of a couple of tons more but at a tremendous per unit cost saving.
I think that the MGS was a bad choice for Canada in the '00s and the MPF is a bad choice for the '30s.