Friday, October 20, 2023

Let's talk about tanks

 

There have been lots of interesting developments surrounding tanks and their battlefield use since the start of the Ukraine war.  Several of them have been highlighted by developments in Israel over the past couple of weeks.  Also, there's been an unusual development straight out of World War II history that has me scratching my head.

First, here's a "lessons learned" video about tank warfare in Ukraine over the past couple of years.  There are some conclusions that may surprise veterans used to more "traditional" armored warfare.




Following what has doubtless been very intensive analysis of battlefield "lessons learned", the US Army has overhauled its plans for future tanks.


The U.S. Army is scrapping its current upgrade plans for the Abrams main battle tank and pursuing a more significant modernization effort to increase its mobility and survivability on the battlefield, the service announced in a statement Wednesday.

The Army will end its M1A2 System Enhancement Package version 4 program, and instead develop the M1E3 Abrams focused on challenges the tank is likely to face on the battlefield of 2040 and beyond, the service said. The service was supposed to receive the M1A2 SEPv4 version this past spring.

The SEPv4 will not go into production as planned, Army Under Secretary Gabe Camarillo told Defense News in a Sept. 6 interview at the Defense News Conference in Arlington, Virginia. “We’re essentially going to invest those resources into the [research and] development on this new upgraded Abrams,” he said. “[I]t’s really threat-based, it’s everything that we’re seeing right now, even recently in Ukraine in terms of a native active protection system, lighter weight, more survivability, and of course reduced logistical burdens as well for the Army.”

The Abrams tank “can no longer grow its capabilities without adding weight, and we need to reduce its logistical footprint,” Maj. Gen. Glenn Dean, the Army’s program executive officer for ground combat systems, said in the statement. “The war in Ukraine has highlighted a critical need for integrated protections for soldiers, built from within instead of adding on.”

. . .

The M1E3 is expected to reach initial operational capability in the early 2030s, the Army said. “As longer-range threats increase in both lethality and survivability, the M1E3 Abrams will be able to defeat those threats,” the statement said.


There's more at the link.

I'm willing to bet that the next-generation tank's armor will have to be radically redistributed and upgraded to counter the threat of unmanned aerial vehicles, a.k.a. drones, on the modern battlefield.  Russia and Ukraine have lost hundreds, if not thousands of vehicles of all types to relatively unsophisticated drones that dive on them from above.  To exchange a drone costing up to a couple of hundred thousand dollars (for the most sophisticated models - some are much cheaper) for a main battle tank costing anywhere from $2-$5 million dollars is a very good bargain for the defense, and a lousy one for the attacker.






Add to that danger top-attack anti-tank missiles, artillery-launched submunitions such as the German SMArt 155, the US DPICM, BAT and SADARM and the Franco-Swedish BONUS, plus extended-range and very accurate carrier munitions, and no current-generation tank can consider itself secure on the battlefield.  It's going to take something much better protected to survive in a modern combat environment, and probably smaller, faster and lighter as well, to move around more quickly and get from one point of concealment to another before an enemy can identify and target it.

Another aspect of tank deployment is that they'll have to become much lighter and easier to move.  Main battle tanks have been getting heavier and heavier over the years as armor and equipment has been added on to them.  For example, the US M1 Abrams started out in the 1970's weighing 61.4 short tons.  The latest version, the SEP v3, comes in at 73.6 short tons, an increase of almost 20% over the original model.  As noted in the article cited above, the next-generation US main battle tank will have to be significantly lighter if it's to use current bridges and roads.  Anything heavier risks breaking them, and on a muddy battlefield such as those encountered during Ukraine's rasputitsa season tanks may find rapid movement impossible (something both sides learned during World War II:  Ukraine and Russia have recently had to re-learn that lesson to their cost).

There are other factors.  For example, the M1 Abrams' outstanding mobility (despite its weight) is derived from its very powerful gas turbine engine.  Unfortunately, this consumes a lot more fuel than a traditional diesel engine, and produces so much heat that its exhaust (and sometimes the metal over the tank's engine compartment) may be detected by infra-red sensors aboard satellites in orbit.  That doesn't do much to conceal the movement of an armored unit, and helps enemies to target it.  A longer range with a lighter overall weight will require a much more economical power plant, and concealment against modern sensors will require a much smaller heat (and possibly sound) signature.

Finally, the Ukraine war has thrown up a military mystery that's puzzling tank experts.  It seems a Panzer IV, the most widely used tank of the German forces during World War II, has appeared on a battlefield there.




I suspect someone had a sense of humor, as well as an innovative mind, to use that old relic as a battlefield decoy.  If only it could talk!  Where and when was it first deployed?  How was it damaged?  Where has it been since then, and how did it find its way back to the front, so to speak?  I doubt we'll ever know the full story, but it's intriguing.

Peter


7 comments:

McChuck said...

Gen Shinseki, much as I loathe him, was correct when he planned a future army with much lighter vehicles. He foresaw the preeminence of lethal weapons, and adding more and more armor was a losing proposition. If the vehicle can be killed by cheap weapons anyway, simply make cheaper vehicles. All IFV armor really has to do is be proof against small arms. Tanks just need to be armor proof against IFV autocannons.

The modern Ukrainian sort of trench and urban warfare is exactly why I've been advocating for lightly (wheeled) or moderately (tracked) armored vehicles armed with a 120mm gun-mortar (plus machine guns), fielded down to the infantry company level. The Russians have had them for 50 years (although they don't seem to use them). The Finns have had them for 15 years.

As far as drones defense goes, we had 40mm proximity fused rounds in 1943. When every IFV can also be air defense, that changes the equation yet again. Once again, David Drake's Hammer's Slammers was ahead of its time.

Anonymous said...

Military technology have always been a seesaw between offense and defense. When one aspect predominates, the other is studied and improved. The tank was originally invented to overcome the static defenses of WWI. Adjustments are a never ending evolution.

JoshO said...

Shinseki and Co. didn't foresee shit, they saw motorized infantry units in other countries, copied it and slapped a flashy new name on it to claim credit for reinventing the wheel.

JoshO said...

Also has there been any further word about metal foam armor or liquid armor developments that were briefly big news five or ten years ago?

Ray - SoCal said...

Simplicius had some information that differed from the tank video.

- Ukrainian tank losses are much higher
- Russia losses are over counted
- huge logistical repair issues for Western Equipment
- Mines are a huge issue, and the West does not have the needed mine clearing equipment.
- lots of anti Drone stuff being added to tanks, from cages over turret to ecm.
- tank tactics have changed due to advances in isr.
- Russia has delegated ability to call in Artillery fire to Lieutenant level, 5 minute response.
- Russia is upgrading their artillery and military as the war continues with newer models.

Col McGregor commented US is producing more of the same equipment he commanded. The U.S. military acquisition system is broken.

lynn said...

Uh oh. That means that the “experts” believe that our Abrams tanks would not survive long on today’s battlefield.

I have been thinking that we are using Ukraine as a proxy war. This confirms it.

lynn said...

“Cheap Russian drones overwhelm US-made Abrams tanks, taken out of action”
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/ar-AA1nIxGp

“A loud cheer went up amongst Ukraine’s support when the US announced in January 2023 it would deliver a battalion of Abrams tanks to Ukraine. The hope was that 31 US made tanks, which are far superior to the Russian T-72 tank that is in wide use by Russia’s forces, would be a game changer.”

“According to the US officials speaking to AP, the Russian drones have been very effective and led to the loss of five Abrams tanks on the battlefield, prompting a reassessment of their deployment.”

“The failure of the Abrams to make a difference is a costly miscalculation. The export cost of an Abrams tank can be around $10mn, while Col. Markus Reisner, an Austrian military trainer who follows the weapons being used in Ukraine, told the Euromaidan Press that the Russian suicide drones being used to destroy them can be as cheap as $500 each (a ratio of 20,000:1).”

“Likewise, Germany sent about five squadrons of its equally powerful Leopard main battle tanks that have been equally disappointing. At least 11 of the 21 sent have been destroyed or damaged and taken out of action, Forbes reported in December. The majority of the Leopard 2A6 tanks sent to Ukraine by Germany are no longer functioning, a senior politician for the German Greens said in January.”

“This investment is also altering the balance of power for tanks. Earlier this year, the Russian defence ministry announced that it had inducted over 1,500 new main battle tanks in 2023 to support its war campaign, whereas Forbes reported in December that Ukraine is down to 350, most of which are the Soviet warhorse, a modified T-72 tank.”

War has changed. More changes are coming. AI drones scare the you know what out of me.