Takao
The Bunker Group
I agree - but only in theory. I am not convinced that those two Bde can consistently generate a BG; especially for more than three weeks. Furthermore, with no assets beyond small arms to practice with, is that BG actually capable of anything close to high-end? On top of all that, is the ARA Bde capable of absorbing another BG? Again we get back to a shortage of CS and CSS; but beyond that, the ACR cannot provide any extra forces. So that ARes BG is more like a Bn, and without combined arms, you die.All,
Regarding the concern that 'new' Beersheba Brigades structures not being able to sustain the desired ready forces of one Brigade plus one Battlegroup, this is not quite correct.
- Each Regular Combat Brigade has two associated Reserve Brigades (Heck, three Brigades is a Division but that is another discussion) that are required to provide a solitary Battlegroup to the associated Regular Brigade.
- The Solomon Islands and East Timor showed that Reservists are prepared to undertake tasks overseas and in numbers probably sufficient to sustain a Battlegroup.
- Army Reserve's Battle Group Cannan reinforced more than 30,000 Australian and international defence personnel participating in Exercise Talisman Sabre 2017 (TS17) at the Shoalwater Bay Training Area.
- I accept that such Reserve Battlegroups will not be as proficient as the Regulars and currently lack artillery and armour but the 'missing' Battlegroups are not 'missing'. They are committed and appear to be effective.
Have a great day, FR
I'd be leary of using SI and TL as examples of how useful the ARes have been. Those operations at that point were very minor, with insignificant numbers actually involved and no combat to speak of. I suggest that an Army focusing on HA/DR and no-intensity operations like these is not actually an Army.
I think that this is a symptom of AHQ's progressive screw-up with ARes. There is little appetite to change, despite it being poorly managed, utilised and resourced. Add on top politics and it has been put in the too hard basket for years. There has been a number of reviews and red-teaming exercises into the role and structure of the ARes - the last I know of in late-16, but the politics and 'old boys network' kills any decent reformation.
Let me be clear though - none of this lies at the feet of the ARes below LTCOL. It can't. And the men and women of the ARes contribute, within the limits they have imposed, the equal of anyone. We need an ARes - and it is these men and women who are being wasted.