Random defence media about APS developments.I'd be very interested to see the report.
Sure but as I mentioned before if Relic doesn’t have stand off attack against long rod KE penetrators then it won’t be as effective. No argument from me on this issue from the beginning.Given that Relikt offered as an upgrade package for T-72s includes the option of adding ARENA, and given that the actual NII Stali only claims that Relikt is a form of ERA with improved performance and increased modularity of design (allowing easy retro-fit of premanufactured screens in field conditions), all signs point to it not having any sort of active elements, sensors, or anything else.
Not in a tactical sense but a lot more Russians would have lived as many tanks would have been penetrated and not subsequently blown up catastrophically.Lets be real, even if the 131st Maykop was equipped with M1s going into Grozny, the outcome would not have been much different.
No you still don’t get the key issue. What I said in my first post and further explained to make it clearer is the proximity of the tank to the enemy force was changed. Bear in mind that during the Second Chechen War the assault on Grozny only happened after a long siege in which much of the resistance and indeed the city was destroyed by bombardment before Russian forcs moved in to mop up.No argument there. However this is not quite the same as what you said earlier. You said: "This is a terrible example. The reason the Russians didn’t lose as many tanks second time as well is they were kept back from direct assault. This meant more Russian infantry had to die from unsuppressed fire points and more Chechnyan civilians had to die from attempt to suppress via mass artillery barrages."
Tanks were indeed used in the direct assault and direct fire support role. The key distinction being that instead of marching into the city blind, deaf, in parade-style columns, there were huge numbers of dismounted infantry assault teams moving through the city, with the tanks providing direct fire support for them.
However as I’ve said quite a few times before the key difference was more than just the use of dismounts or the nature of the New Years Eve thunder run. It was in that the tank support to direct infantry assaults was stand off rather than close in the Second Chechen War.
No that was not a claim I have made at all. I have been repeatedly trying to show the difference in casulties to infantry between stand off tank support and close tank support. As in OIF with close tank support there were very low infantry casualties compared to Second Chechen War with stand off tank support very high infantry casulties.Your earlier claim was that there were greater infantry casualties between the first assault on Grozny, and the storm of Grozny in winter of 99-00.
You’re confusing wider tactical issues with tank survivability. In relation to tank survivability the point in the New Years Eve thunder run was not that the entire regiment was destroyed but that every tank engaged by the defences was totally destroyed. In the Baghdad thunder runs which were highly resisted – I don’t know where you get this crap about “too disorganized and unprepared, as well as positively lacking a desire to fight” – multiple tanks were engaged but none totally destroyed. The only tank crewman casualty was a commander hit while exposed outside the tank. The comparison of casualties between the two shows that when there is a four significant figure difference there is something hughly divergent rather than just the tactical nature of the particular engagement.No. It demonstrated the vulnerability of armored columns in a prepared urban environment against a determined and organized opponent. When you look at the Russian Army "thunder run" into Tshinval in '08 you notice that the Georgian army wasn't able to do much about Russian armor, not for lack of anti-tank weapons, but because they were too disorganized and unprepared, as well as positively lacking a desire to fight. When their comms went down, HQ and Arty got taken out by Tochkas and Iskanders, their infantry certainly didn't put up much of a fight, anti-tank weapons or otherwise.
Again that is not what I said at all. I was comparing the difference between stand off tank support and close tank support on infantry casualties. This is going around in circles fuelled by your lack of understanding of this argument: difference between stand off tank support and close tank support on infantry casualties. If you want to debate anything else find someone else to waste their time.I'd love to see a source on higher infantry casualties in the assault on Grozny winter 99-00 vs winter of 94-95.