Your right Norm per Technical v Javelin. That is why I found it an interesting comment from Buchannan. I am a little perplexed over this whole asymetrical v conventional capability debate at present. I though Buchannan would be able to distinguish that. There is a false view coming from the left wing political media that because asymmetrical warfare involves an enemy using low tech or ad-hoc weapons it therefore means an organisation like the NZDF only needs to have a comparatively unsophisticated capability as well. Per the Javelins are overkill mantra.
The lefts view is that the NZDF only needs to commit to Stability and Support Operations (SASO) operations with possibly the capability to assist in limited asymmetric warfare (And only in the South Pacific) and not have a conventional Small Scale Combat Contingency (SSCC) capability.
That is the whole nub of the issue at present regarding the 2008 Defence Force Report. We have lost a plausible SSCC capability.
The lefts view is that the NZDF only needs to commit to Stability and Support Operations (SASO) operations with possibly the capability to assist in limited asymmetric warfare (And only in the South Pacific) and not have a conventional Small Scale Combat Contingency (SSCC) capability.
That is the whole nub of the issue at present regarding the 2008 Defence Force Report. We have lost a plausible SSCC capability.