I was wondering about the role of light tanks today, as well as where exactly the line lies between a mobile gun system, and a light tank.
What got me thinking about this is the Sprut-SD used by the Russian VDV. It started life as the Sprut anti-tank gun project, and its first iteration was the Sprut-B, a replacement for the MT-12 Rapira towed AT gun used in anti-tank arty btlns. The Sprut-SD is the self-propelled air-droppable variant. However it's essentially a light tank, small armored chassis, turreted weapon system etc. Things are more complicated because the force org is that of an artillery btln (in Russian terminology arty is all high-caliber gun systems, not just the indirect fire ones). In other words 3 guns/tanks is a platoon, 6 is a battery/company, 18 is a btln. Also Russian military and press continue to refer to it as an SP anti-tank gun. Now this would be a mostly academic discussion, because the Sprut-SD is out of production, and only 45 have been purchased.
However the VDV has recently ordered a new light tank. This time they're calling it a light tank, and it's supposedly a 2A46 main gun, on a BMD-4M chassis and a new turret. It's unclear what force org it will use (tank btlns have two force orgs, 31 tanks, in 3 ten-tank companies, and 41, with 4 companies). It's also unclear at what level they will be inserted into the VDV structure (1 btln/regiment, per division, per brigade, and whether it will be all VDV units, para-assault ones, or paradrop ones). It's also unclear how they will relate to the current Sprut-SD, since the systems are less then a year old, and probably won't be getting phased out. They could just keep calling the Sprut-SD an anti-tank system, and the new vehicle a tank, and have them serve side by side, but it wouldn't change the fact that they'd be filling the same role.
It gets more interesting when you realize that self-propelled 125mm guns are planned on the Kurganets (IFV) and Bumerang (APC) chassis. The Bumerang-based variant has been repeatedly called a wheeled tank, and they may replace MBTs in the current Motor-Rifle Brigade force org. So this leads me to ask, what roles to light tanks fill current, and where exactly the line between a mobile gun system and a light tank lies.
What got me thinking about this is the Sprut-SD used by the Russian VDV. It started life as the Sprut anti-tank gun project, and its first iteration was the Sprut-B, a replacement for the MT-12 Rapira towed AT gun used in anti-tank arty btlns. The Sprut-SD is the self-propelled air-droppable variant. However it's essentially a light tank, small armored chassis, turreted weapon system etc. Things are more complicated because the force org is that of an artillery btln (in Russian terminology arty is all high-caliber gun systems, not just the indirect fire ones). In other words 3 guns/tanks is a platoon, 6 is a battery/company, 18 is a btln. Also Russian military and press continue to refer to it as an SP anti-tank gun. Now this would be a mostly academic discussion, because the Sprut-SD is out of production, and only 45 have been purchased.
However the VDV has recently ordered a new light tank. This time they're calling it a light tank, and it's supposedly a 2A46 main gun, on a BMD-4M chassis and a new turret. It's unclear what force org it will use (tank btlns have two force orgs, 31 tanks, in 3 ten-tank companies, and 41, with 4 companies). It's also unclear at what level they will be inserted into the VDV structure (1 btln/regiment, per division, per brigade, and whether it will be all VDV units, para-assault ones, or paradrop ones). It's also unclear how they will relate to the current Sprut-SD, since the systems are less then a year old, and probably won't be getting phased out. They could just keep calling the Sprut-SD an anti-tank system, and the new vehicle a tank, and have them serve side by side, but it wouldn't change the fact that they'd be filling the same role.
It gets more interesting when you realize that self-propelled 125mm guns are planned on the Kurganets (IFV) and Bumerang (APC) chassis. The Bumerang-based variant has been repeatedly called a wheeled tank, and they may replace MBTs in the current Motor-Rifle Brigade force org. So this leads me to ask, what roles to light tanks fill current, and where exactly the line between a mobile gun system and a light tank lies.