Agreed. The training for room clearing is actually quite fun (or at least I enjoyed it in my day in the late '80s), particularly, the night live firing - it's so loud even with ear plugs. It's almost as fun as going to a demolition live firing.Waylander's more or less hit the nail on the head here. Modern infantry units already train for MOUT and their leadership has established doctrines for going about doing it.
With all the new gear, they have changed the syllabus quite a bit. There are now modern training tools available and video replays are excellent for watching your own mistakes.
It depends on whether you have a choice - in every case of urban warfare in the 20thC, the defender/enemy chose to fight there. If you are a solider and your enemy chooses to fight your army in an urban area, it is unlikely that your generals and politicians will decline the invitation for too long.However, fighting in urban situations is very time- and casualty-intensive, making it a costly and often untenable enterprise
IMO, the alternative to not fighting in urban areas, is not to go to war at all (given increasing urbanization). Remember, in war, the enemy gets a vote. You can only by-pass concentrations of your enemy for so long before you need to engage/clear them (so that your can hopefully proceed with the next phase - stabilization) - unless you are talking about surrounding a city and starving them out just to 'win'.
I would think that MOUT is part of any modern army's training syllabus (so that implies a certain level of preparedness and some use of specialized tools/weapons).While specialization has its benefits, overspecialization can be a bad thing. You end up with tremendous redundancies and you don't make effective use of your manpower and expertise when you end up go to war.
I'm sure he did. It would be part of their training syllabus - the US guys are so well trained. Even I as a normal conscript went to the gas chamber (did a few exercises in the chamber) and for the finale, the instructors made us take-off our gas mask, our inner and outer gloves, expose our skin and recite our name and I/C number before letting us out - this is to ensure that the trainees take deep breaths of the gas. But that's not MOUT training per say, as that is the chemical warfare module of our training. I can tell you that it is F**king painful experience until you wash out your eyes with water and the important thing is not to scratch portions of your skin that was exposed after. I came out of the chamber and just held onto a wire fence nearby to avoid scratching.Feanor, just curious did you have the chance to go through the gas chamber during training? If you did, I'm really interested to hear your thoughts on the experience.
Edit: CS is unpleasant and soldiers are already conditioned by limited exposure to it - so it will not permanently degrade fighting ability as long as we move away from the source and wash out our eyes or get out our gas mask.
The outer boot that goes over your boots, the inner glove and outer glove and so on. The mask and so on come in different sizes. You have to make sure you have good seal. The biggest problem for us is the possibility of heat exhaustion (as we are in the tropics) and we've got on all this gear - typically we sweat so much in the suit.
Cheers
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