The APC squadron is designed to be able to lift an infantry battalion. So with the Army having before (on paper) Beersheba 5 & 7 RAR and B (APC) Sqn, 3/4 Cav Regt that is a retention of the mechanised lift for three infantry battalions.
Okay, but so does my suggestion. Provides the same thing...
The Armoured Cavalry capability is not changing too much in the troops (18 to 14) though it is worth noting the Amry has struggled to provide (ie it hasn’t) 18 troops of ASLAVs with an operational deployment underway. The number of squadrons is reducing somewhat from six squadrons each with three troops to three squadrons each with four troops (not counting the ARE assets). But this is an area which will no doubt cause some debate into the future. It should be worth trialling at least at some time an ACR with two armd cav sqns each with two troops as it might be a better and more flexibile organisation. And with LAND 400 and ideas like a recce bn, RAR (to provide the dismounts) maybe a return to six squadrons with 18 troops in addition to the ARE armd cav element.
As to the tanks the Army has enough for three squadrons grouped as a regiment. The cut back to two squadrons was a financial saving demanded by the Gillard Govt.
Fair enough.
Well that’s where the Army is. In Townsville and Brisbane (and Adelaide) more than in Darwin. Why shouldn’t the Army be a balanced structure?
I actually couldn't agree more. I'm simply pessimistic that the Government will see it that way.
The tanks, most of the ASLAV's and M113's are already based and appropriately housed in Darwin and Adelaide.
They also have the artillery, ARH, combat support services and training areas in Darwin and Adelaide to conduct the combined arms training and generate the deployable capability that Army wants.
That would be a disaster for recruitment and retention of the RAAC not to mention a huge additional cost on maintenance for the A vehicle fleet. Concentration of all corps units in one area, and the least popular and effective area for training in the country, is not going to work.
It's the status quo and has been ever since APIN came around. The tanks, ASLAV's and APC's ARE already mostly based in Darwin, apart from the training schools.
Last I heard 3/4 Cav only had Bushmasters and 2/14 was the only ASLAV unit in the Country outside Darwin.
Beersheba would incur significant costs in moving units from Darwin to Townsville and Brisbane. I don't doubt the idea is good, but it's Army's idea and as we've all seen, Army's ideas aren't necessarily Government's ideas...
Those force packages are usually put together from co-located units. Its one of the lessons learned that putting together a force package from units across the country that is driving Beersheba. As to peace time vehicles that has a lot more to do with life in combat support units rather than the armoured corps. We don’t have any peacetime tanks and IFVs in the A vehicle fleet.
We don't have any wartime tanks or IFV's in reserve units any longer either. Again, purely a cost cutting exercise. I get that ridding the reserve of M113's or a decent replacement actually facilitates better training opportunities (individual and collective) but it's robbing Peter to pay Paul. It assumes we'll never actually need the combat capability of the reserve as a unit or sub-unit and they only exist in order to flesh out the ARA...
Beersheba is being implemented at an additional cost to improve the effectiveness of the Army. Its not being done to save money.
It hasn't even been fully approved by Government nor funded as far as I have seen. Where are the work announcements for facilities for the ACR's in Townsville or Brisbane?
To the best of my recollection it was adopted "in principal" and the fact that Army is trialling the structure in recent times, ahead of a major trial at TS, indicates that even Army isn't entirely sold on the idea, yet.
The irony of it is Beersheba is nothing new. It was the Army’s orbat before and after the VietNam War. It was only experimentation made permanent (para and mech inf) and the vagrancies of APIN that changed the order of battle away from a common multi role brigade. And there is been a solid push for over 10 years to return the Army to this structure. The only difference between the Beersheba brigade and that of the Army in the 1970s was the old structure had the tanks concentrated away from any brigade. But that was because they were seen as a divisional asset and the Army no longer has a divisional structure.
I get that, my point is purely that IF the money isn't forthcoming and so far it hasn't been, the plan will fall over, like so many Army plans before it and something else wil have to take it's place.
My point then would be to use the best parts of the deployment routine generated for our current operations and the cheapest aspect of the way we've trained in the past (B vehicles for training, A vehicles for work-ups and operations).