Black Panther
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hi,
what is the role of a tank in war?
ur views needed.
regards.
what is the role of a tank in war?
ur views needed.
regards.
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In the even of war tanks should be supported by respective air force.
The best example is Battle of Longewala.
New Recruit
Tanks major role in a battlefield is to overwhelm the enemy positions and Infantry-held lines by using sheer fire power, mobility and manoeuvres, along with mechanized infantry which provides assistance and later helps in securing the confronted targets.
It's an "offensive" terror weapon on a battlefield and also serves as a "defensive" weapon.
On a side note, didn't you say that you were in the Army? How come you don't know this basic information about tank's role in a battlefield?
Yes that! Should I have said Gulf War 2 proved network-centric warfare instead? (i need to quit typing when i dunno what i'm on about)hj786 said:In GW1, the yanks proved the network-centric warfare concept.
No. We weren't fully digitally networked by any stretch. What GW1 validated was the AirLand Battle Concept (after-the-fact) and the combined warfare concept.
It was a post-mortem validation of NATO's warfighting operational theories and our ability to plan, budget, produce technologies, and implement doctrines that allowed for combined warfare.
"Joint" is inter-service. "Combined" is internat'l. It's a fair indication by the seamlessness with which the British 7th Armoured Div was integrated with III Corps mission of how those same operations may have been executed in the Fulda Gap.
The Iraqis willingly complied with our experiment by providing forces equipped in second-rate Soviet gear and operating on loose Soviet principles of defensive warfare.
It was a laboratory. The world took seven months to gather in an empty desert in the midst of nowhere and proceeded to knock the snot out of each other with their latest and greatest. 'Course, "each other" is a bit of a stretch.
We were all wondering...
ODS told us a lot though I doubt it'll have much use for the future. We'll see. What goes around usually comes around.
Also, what does it mean by "aggressively maneuvering defense"?hj said:"The Iraqi defenses didn't matter because not only were their tanks inferior, their supply lines and command structure were destroyed by air strikes. The yanks had lots of intelligence, they could find anything important and destroy it while the Iraqi tanks sat there eating depleted uranium rounds."
LMAO some of you guys have such big egos. Sorry, but no its not. (In Indian dreams, maybe.) The best examples are the German blitzkrieg assaults of World War 2 and the US tank assaults of Gulf War 1.
In WW2, the Germans proved that mechanised infantry supported by a tactically-minded air force could keep up such a fast-paced offensive that nobody could build effective defenses against it in time - if they did, the luftwaffe would come over and show em whats up.
In GW1, the yanks proved the network-centric warfare concept. The Iraqi defenses didn't matter because not only were their tanks inferior, their supply lines and command structure were destroyed by air strikes. The yanks had lots of intelligence, they could find anything important and destroy it while the Iraqi tanks sat there eating depleted uranium rounds.
I aint no expert on this, but in no way is some Indian offensive the best example of using tactical air support in a tank battle.
Whenever people talk about tank combat, they talk about WW2 and the Gulf War. NOT the Indo-Pak wars.
"Also, what does it mean by "aggressively maneuvering defense"?"
Prior to Air-Land Battle, our defense strategy in Europe was predicated on forward basing and "active defense". This was a concept where you manuever to stack forces at the point of emphasis or penetration by the opponent.
Problem was that the echeloned manner in which the Soviet Union intended to attack NATO meant that our forces would be defeated in detail over a series of attrition battles. It also committed our forces decisively and placed the Soviets inside our decision-cycle by dictating the battle's tempo.
Air-Land Battle reversed this. Not only did it liberate our smaller forces from being decisively engaged in a massive battle of attrition, it promised to allow us to ATTACK where possible into the operational depths of the enemy at those nodes that would degenerate and paralyze.
There was controversy. The German Army was displeased that we wouldn't throw everything into the balance with full participation in a forward defense. Needless to say, they preferred the notion of stopping the Soviets as far forward as possible.
We were more worried about how to stop them at all.
Deep attack became synonymous airland battle. FM 100-5 OPERATIONS (1983 I think) details the concept.