Do you know that I moderated at the request of other members? They felt you were offensive and reported your post.
Further response is certainly necessary. You mod a reply to yourself? Gives me alot of confidence indeed...
More importantly however, you post a rude and highly condescending reply to what is simply pure facts and expect me to be all flowers back?
And then you add ANOTHER insult in the mod editing berating MY "rudeness"? Marvelous.
Right now you are just throwing another tantrum.
The discussion in the previous
thread was pretty heated basically because some forum members were perceived to be inaccurately disparaging the capabilities and choices of other nations. One of my friends felt quite bruised after the exchange. The main reason I did an initial quick post in reply because I was worried that this thread would likewise become heated given your style of writing and wanted you to avoid the same experience. In this forum, you can either post 'information' or ask questions - which was the point of my initial post. There will be others to interact with you. How you choose to respond is up to you.
Let me quote my former post in full here again (there is no malice in that first post to you), so that the other members can clearly see how badly you over reacted:
OPSSG said:
@DIREWOLF75, please note that eckherl, DavidDCM, and Waylander are good sources of info on the Abrams and the Leopards, given their prior experience in operating them. They have access to actual operation POL usage data. So think of them as an expert resources - they are well aware on the fuel consumption issues having served on tanks. Frankly, if you look at American logistics (they really have a fantastic system), they don't have a problem with POL resupply for the Abrams and fundamentally MBTs need support. So the fuel consumption is not an issue at an operational level. As as Singaporean, I constantly stand in awe of American logistics capabilities - it is way ahead of my country's army.
One of the benefits of taking part here is that I can turn around and ask someone who knows more than me. Good opportunity for me to learn.
Kindly note that there's something called an APU. It enables US Abrams tankers to turn off their turbine engine (if they are stationary) to conserve fuel and I also note that Singapore's Leopard 2A4s also have an APU on each. In fact, quite a few Leopards have APUs. IIRC, the Leopard 2A6 also uses a 20 kW APU* (not really sure on this point). So what I'm saying is that fuel consumption is affected by other features and the nature of operational demands.
Cheers and enjoy learning from these guys.
A mature critique on US logistics during the Gulf War would take the trouble to describe the concept of logistics support, the five phases of the CSS plan, the role of LTG Pagonis as theatre logistic commander and explain where the gaps occurred.
An accurate description of American CSS efforts would set the ground work for analysis and critique - this of course would have to include the acknowledgment that LTG Pagonis went
beyond the doctrine at that time and constructed logistic bases in front of advancing troops so that supplies would be available as the forces advanced. Mobile supply points meant that logisticians could travel with combat forces; expendable assets meant that securing the bases was not an issue. LTG Pagonis assigned a specific CSS unit to run each logistic base and charged them with destroying the base if the enemy threatened to overrun it. However, IMO, you are not trying to conduct a mature critique in a constructive matter. Let me quote what you said:
DIREWOLF75 said:
USAs logistics are great yes, but obviously not great enough, in 1991 the original plan was to encircle and destroy the Iraqi Republican guard units moving out of Kuwait, this however could not be completed because of fuel shortages.
This despite having spent 6 months stocking up 39.000.000 gallons of fuel and continually delivering more.
("On armour" B.I. Gudmundsson and "Final report to congress: Conduct of the Persian Gulf War)
You provide a sole source and disingenuously assert a point rather than present a case to support your point. I am not persuaded by your flimsy assertion which does not even even bother to 'quote' relevant sections from your source. In fact, taking a look at Gudmundsson's book that you cited, and I quote:
Gudmundsson said:
Page 216 -
"2. Logistics units were
hard-pressed to keep the rapid pace of maneuver units. Both logistics structure and doctrine was found wanting in the high tempo offensive operation... and MSRs into Iraq few and constricted..."
If you had bothered to present the information fairly via a quote of Gudmundsson's conclusions, it would be clear that the logistics units were
hard-pressed but did not fail in their mission to keep up with the troops. In fact, if you bothered to read with more care, Gudmundsson was talking about the issue with limited MSRs. These are terrain driven constraints that any army would face in those specific sent of circumstances. Even a quick examination of your source shows your sloppy thinking and intellectual dishonesty - drawing an invalid conclusion from a limited set of facts without regard for real world constraints.
Further, you fail to connect the past to the present (ie. show that the current US logistics system has the same weakness). And finally unlike you, I provide a link so that others can draw their own conclusions from the source data.
Since this is not a thread on the US Army Logistics, your by the way comment on the M1's fuel consumption is really a barbed comment to troll for a response. If you have a genuine interest, feel free to start a thread looking at how logistics work for the US Army and in there you can also discuss its limitations. I see you have persisted with the same problematic behaviour in your last post that I would like to quote below:
DIREWOLF75 responding to a
post made by eckherl in the 'Singaporean Leopard 2A4s debut in Australia' thread.
eckherl said:
I also have to agree with Abraham Gubler that even though the AGT 1500 can be a little thirsty alot of the hype is over blown, the benefits that a turbine engine has to offer is still a good deciding factor to keep it.
DIREWOLF75 said:
It seems the world overall doesnt agree. Noone else uses turbine, except the Russian T-80s, and they very markedly prefer NOT to use them and are even switching the turbines for diesels, despite the negative impact that has on the tank. In Georgia they even rather used T-62s instead of T-80s! Turbine engines are great, but not for tanks.
However, Feanor has pointed out that your above point is rubbish in post #58.
I'm glad that I intervened and discovered that it is the other forum members that need to be shielded from your toxic persona. Evidently you do not need the Mods to look kindly on your posts, given that you have revealed your persona and agenda.
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* Note: This is a factual mistake and Waylander has kindly pointed out that the German Leopard IIA6M does not come with an APU.