SumGui wrote:
No. You based your response on assumptions of what you read, not what I posted... .
Dude, whatever…
Your responses indicate a lack of understanding of modern artillery doctrines (western or “Soviet”), how MLRS fits doctrine, how MLRS systems are supported logistically; and more broadly: how artillery fires get integrated with maneuver plans, how artillery fires get integrated with air support, as well as an understanding of current Pentagon budgets (what weapons we are actually buying).
MLRS is a corps level asset (some divisions get an attached battery) for delivering *neutralization fires*. If you do not understand what neutralization fire is and why it is important, then you do not understand the implications of what you are talking about. If you do not understand what a division, corps or army level asset is, then you do not understand the implications of what you are talking about.
Not everything that can be built or bought should be…
SumGui wrote:
I referenced M30/31 as a range comparison and out of curiosity of rather M30/31s motor would really gain any range, since the M26 motor will already propel the SDB to 40k feet. There is no reference to 'upgrading' M30/31 to SDB within the documentation I read. …
Again whatever…
No cost accounting would cite refurbishing/converting a weapon as a net savings over anything other than a weapon of the equivalent type.
SumGui wrote:
M30/31 first flew after GW I - so if MLRS was used as part of your 'artillery rounds' calculation it would generate a false high number - ALL MLRS rounds were filled with submunitions - there was no other choice available for the M270 MLRS system in GW I.
MLRS is a subset of all artillery, both tube and rocket! You completely missed the point because you do not understand what neutralization fires are!
MLRS was designed specifically to deliver *submunitions* because those are the most effective munitions against division and corps level targets (artillery, command systems, FARPS, logistics depots, ammunition dumps, troop assembly areas, destruction of a key enemy units and so on).
Regardless of how it got delivered, DPICM is the preferred munition of choice on the conventional battlefield … because it works!
SumGui wrote:
The M26 rocket motor with an M31 warhead would not reach the approximately 40 miles of combined range. It could not loiter in glide or be re-directed after launch like SDB could.
And that is the problem! How often do you think that any artillery observer other than an airborne FAC/FO will be in a position to chase moving targets (vice spreading fires)? Ground FOs will be severely limited in ability to spot SDBs against moving targets. Having a weapon loiter, really glide, over the target is going to constrain every aircraft in the area, as well as other artillery. This is not insurmountable, but it really raises a lot of issues.
And how many moving targets require a 250 lb warhead?
SDBs makes huge sense for TACAIR, it makes a lot less sense to shoot from a ground launcher.
SumGui wrote:
Comparing M31 to M26/SDB is a red herring.
You raised the whole “cost savings” nonsense…
SumGui wrote:
MLRS is limited if it has only submunitions available to launch, and it is limited if it has only unitary warheads to launch.
I agree that having the capability is valid and have said so. The issue is that this is very limited use weapon, and combined with a broader procurement policy that favors unitary warhead weapons is eliminating the primary capability of the weapon.
MLRS is an organic corps level asset (some divisions get an attached battery) for delivering *neutralization fires* and forces can be task organized just as troops select munitions.
I would turn your argument on its head and ask when would deploy divisions or corps absent substantial threat from a major regional power. A major regional conflict (Iran or Korea) would see a far less restrictive ROE.
SumGui wrote:
…Edit to add - TACAIR is not always available, and if this would release TACAIR assets to other needs, then it in fact helps TACAIR. Drones would be a good platform to deliver SDBs, however they are limited in how much they can carry, and each weapon added diminishes endurance and complicates which hosts will allow you to fly (armed vs unarmed drones are treated differently). Ideally a drone would either focus on endurance, or carry 2 weapons for those cases where no other delivery asset could reach.
GMLRS and SDB type weapons represent a broader, fundamental shift in how fires get applied and I assure you that there is not a great deal of consensus on the topic even within the army and USMC, let alone amongst all of the services and our allies. Nice to have sure, but it seems like a niche weapon to be sure.
I am well aware that TACAIR is not always available; what you do not understand is the ramifications of firing a rocket 40,000 feet into the altitude and striking a target 40+ kilometers away is.
Do you think that just because ground visibility is limited that there will be no friendly aircraft flying (EW, TACAIR, drones etc.) that might be endangered by this weapon?
How far in advance do you think that the ground force commander has to coordinate with the air component commander before launching one of these weapons?
How many friendly troops do you think there are 40+ kilometers beyond the FLOT to spot for this weapon?
If the visibility is so poor that TACAIR cannot fly, how do you think the FO is going to range or designate for these weapons (hint lasers for ranging or designation are affected by rain, snow and dust too).
When you drill through these issues you will find that the target set that can only be serviced by a ground launched SDB equipped rocket is very limited. I am much more concerned about the cost of this munition, as well as the reduction in capability of the force to fight and win conventional wars rather than drop gold plated bombs on individual third world insurgents.]No. You based your response on assumptions of what you read, not what I posted... .[/quote]