Moonboy242 wrote:
I think carr hit on an interesting point: naval gunfire support draws all kinds of people out into all kinds of extreme arguments. The facts that settle these arguments are already written in stone: there is a time and place for direct air support, indirect air strikes (missiles), and good old gunfire support. World War Two, Korea, Vietnam, Lebanon, Desert Storm, all proved that naval gunfire support and direct air support complement each other, and that the use of missiles helps mitigates personnel casualties in politically charged scenarios (remember the “Powell Doctrine”).
Big guns had always been a part of the navy prior to 2000, and now that part of the balance equation is gone. It’s vital that the US Navy has that capability because sometimes there is simply no substitute for sheer weight of steel on a target. It’s why artillery is the king of the battlefield, and it’s why the Army and the Marines call for offshore support when there are no friendly guns ashore.
And this is the bit I struggle with the the great NGFS debate, it goes to extreme's too quickly.
Except for some slower than average people, there is no argument that the Army should ditch it's artillery regiments and replace them with armed reconnaissance / attack helicopter squadrons. After all, one Tp of Tiger ARH can put more HE onto a target than a Field Bty can, the Tp has a longer range, is more flexible (recce, 30 mm, rocket and Hellfire) and in some ways more accurate - but who in their right mind would remove all 105 and 155 mm guns for helicopters? They cost a hell of a lot, can only provide windows of cover, are effected badly by weather (hard to laser designate or use FLIR in a sandstorm) and require specialised (and expensive) logistics trains and support personnel. It takes ~3 years to train a helicopter mechanic; think it take that long for an artillery mechanic? Sure, a F/A-18 puts even more HE on target than a Tiger; but not as close, not as responsive and not as cheaply.
Compare to artillery. If it's in range it can provide rapid response in all weathers (for the ADF the Battle of Long Tan is proof of this) to a high degree of accuracy (with 25 m for 105 mm at Long Tan). It's cheap, can fire all day, can rope in untrained people to support and over a long period of time (ie, as long as the gun numbers and FO's are sorted, anyone can pack ammo up) and can put a massive amount of HE in. Artillery is still essential to the land army; it
compliments aviation assets and provides commanders on the ground
options.
So why is it different for the Navy. At RMC we were taught that you couldn't call in NGFS within one grid square. Speaking with Navy breathern caused much laughter; when HMAS
Brisbane missed her target (with her first round) by 60 m one one of her last shoots the gunnery officer was very embarrassed. Obviously a 16" shell has a larger zone of danger than a 5" (but then again a 155 mm has a larger danger zone than 105 mm), but it can still br brought in accurately in today's world.
So Iowa's? Maybe not. They are expensive. But all those pro-CVN/anti-gun people need to understand that they aren't replacements, they are compliments. 5" is probably too small; at only 127 mm it's smaller than the standard medium artillery piece (either 152 or 155 mm). 6" would tie in well with current Army understanding of offensive support (obviously the US military would have experience with up to 8"), but I would think 8 - 12" would provide a balance of cost, range, rate of fire and effect on target.