Since the British Army plans for
Joint Force 2025 still are nowhere to be seen, there is space for suggestions. I
decided to write my own.
Combined Arms Regiments
How to transform the 3 armoured
infantry brigades of Army 2020 into two armoured infantry brigades for future
force 2025, not losing MBTs, keeping 3 main maneuver units (plus Cavalry for
recce and screening) and at the same time addressing the insufficiency of the
245 Warrior CSP in Infantry and Infantry Command variants?
If I was the one making the
decisions, my first pick would be the Combined Arms Regiment, on the model of
those adopted years ago by the US Army.
The current three tank regiments and
6 (on paper) armoured infantry battalions would be mixed to become 6 Combined
Arms Regiments. Each CAR would have 2 tank squadrons with 14 MBTs, and 2
armoured infantry companies, plus a Recce and Screening element and a Support
Weapons Company.
With 1 further MBT (and a Warrior)
in the RHQ, the regiment would line 29 MBTs and a similar number of Warrior
IFVs.
The reconnaissance and screening
element would be provided by a strong squadron with Ajax and Ares / Warrior / ABSV
apc carrying dismounts.
The Support Weapons Company would
deliver long range guided weapons capability (Javelin); snipers; assault
pioneers and mortars. In particular, it is highly desirable to invest in 120 mm
mortars for both ABSV mortar carriers (for the tracked, heavy brigades) and MIV mortar carriers (for use in the
Strike Brigades).
Combining the Tank Regiments and the
existing armoured infantry battalions means making do with what is already available / on order. Indeed, the passage from 9 regiments / battalions to 6
units allows savings which are easily quantified: 3 less REME LADs, 3 less
recce platoons on Ajax, a reduced requirement for ABSV vehicles and a reduction
in the number of armoured infantry companies (from 18 to 12).
A cut by any other name, but one
which looks more and more unavoidable: 245 updated Warriors just aren’t enough
for more.
Advantages include a more
appropriate ratio of MBTs to IFVs (the insufficient number of tanks in the
current Armoured Infantry Brigade structure has been evidenced in training) and
the CAR is, in its daily shape, much closer to a realistic Battlegroup
composition. Instead of being pieced together on deployment, the CAR is always in
typical battlegroup shape.
The number of tanks, overall, would
stay exactly the same: Army 2020 has 3 tank regiments with 58 tanks each, for a
total of 174. 6 CARs with 29 tanks each give exactly the same total, compatible
with the 227 tanks in holding post 2010 cuts. The new brigade would be able to pair each infantry company with a tank squadron. This is not possible in the Armoured Infantry Brigades as currently planned (58 tanks, of which the majority sits in three squadrons of 18 each).
The CAR could be given a stronger
reconnaissance and screening element by receiving more than 8 Ajax, and/or
complementing them with a greater dismounted element carried in Ares or ABSV.
The mortars are essential: moving up to the 120 mm opens up whole new lethality, range and precision opportunities: guided 120 mm mortar rounds are becoming available. Having mortars in direct support to tanks gives an excellent counter to enemy ATGW teams. Adding mortars into armoured regiments is something that elsewhere already happens, from the US to Israel, but the british army would not be able to afford adding a mortar element into the tank regiments unless they become one with the armoured infantry battalions.
The CAR concept allows the six existing mortar platoons to offer a (virtually) greater cover. The cover is evidently not actually greater, but just better placed to respond to the various needs.
The mortars are essential: moving up to the 120 mm opens up whole new lethality, range and precision opportunities: guided 120 mm mortar rounds are becoming available. Having mortars in direct support to tanks gives an excellent counter to enemy ATGW teams. Adding mortars into armoured regiments is something that elsewhere already happens, from the US to Israel, but the british army would not be able to afford adding a mortar element into the tank regiments unless they become one with the armoured infantry battalions.
The CAR concept allows the six existing mortar platoons to offer a (virtually) greater cover. The cover is evidently not actually greater, but just better placed to respond to the various needs.
With a powerful screening and recce
element; a powerful fire support element, tanks and armoured infantry, the CAR
is a battlegroup in itself. It has everything it needs to hit the ground
running if needs be. This is unlike the current Army 2020 Lead Armoured
Battlegroup, which has to be built up by taking one tank squadron plus HQ
(18 + 2 MBTs) from the brigade’s tank
regiment; two armoured infantry companies from one of the brigade’s battalions
and a company on Mastiff from the brigades’ Heavy Protected Mobility Infantry
battalion, as well as all relevant sub-units from artillery, medical, logistic and engineer regiments and battalions.
Capbadges chapter: moving from 9 to
6 units has obvious capbadges implications. But a CAR arrangement gives options
to keep all capbadges alive, with a bit of imagination. The tank and infantry
elements could keep their “battalion” status within the CAR, and thus preserve their
respective capbadges and identities while being joined at the hip into the new
combined units. Six CARs would actually allow the resurrection of lost cavalry capbadges,
as 3 tank regiments would become 6 “small battalions”… Not to mention that the CARs
themselves could take up some historic title of their own, if there was the will to make it happen.
The rich history of the british army
is added value, but it cannot shape the force structure. It must be considered,
absolutely, but not drive the strategy. Only capability should drive the
planning, with the capbadges preservation coming last on the list of
priorities.
Balance of change from Army 2020 to a Joint Force 2025 CAR
MBTs: same (174 tanks in the regular
regiments)
Warrior IFVs: same (245), but
equipping 12 instead of 18 rifle companies
Ajax: slightly less or same. There
will be 3 less Recce platoons to form, freeing up 24 Ajax. However, they could
just be assigned to the platoons remaining, to expand them from 8 to 12
vehicles each. Otherwise, they would go to the second Strike Brigade to ease
the formation of its recce Cavalry regiment.
ABSV: less. Same number of mortar
carriers and other variants, but reduced requirement in some other areas, due to the
reduction from 9 separate units to 6.
A reduction also comes from other units within the armoured brigades: going down to two armoured brigades mean just 2, rather than 3 armoured medical regiments, so less ABSV ambulances are required. Same goes for Close Support REME units.
A reduction also comes from other units within the armoured brigades: going down to two armoured brigades mean just 2, rather than 3 armoured medical regiments, so less ABSV ambulances are required. Same goes for Close Support REME units.
REME: 3 less LADs required due to the drop from 9 to 6 main armoured units, freeing up
resources to transfer to the Strike Brigades, the second of which will need the uplift as it changes from a mostly Light Role adaptable infantry brigade into a mechanized formation. More vehicles and kit means needing more REME (and more RLC logistic support too: another uplift needed there).
Strike Brigades
One Strike Brigade will be obtained
downgrading one of the three Armoured Infantry Brigades planned by Army 2020,
while another will be obtained by upgrading one of the seven adaptable
brigades.
The current 3 Heavy Protected
Mobility Infantry battalions (one in each armoured infantry brigade) can be expected to move across to the
Strike Brigades. At least a fourth regiment is needed, however, assuming that
the Strike Brigades will have at least 2 “heavy” mechanized formations
each (with Mastiff at first, and then with the new 8x8 MIV).
Since a mechanized infantry
battalion is close to 200 men larger than a Light Role battalion, the reduction
in armoured infantry caused by the CARs will be re-absorbed quite quickly to cover all the areas where growth is required.
Ideally, the Strike Brigades should
have 3 infantry battalions on MIV, but it takes quite some optimism to imagine
the british army with enough funds to purchase the hundreds of 8x8s needed for such structure.
An alternative could be a structure
with 2 heavy battalions and a light battalion, mounted on Foxhound. There are 6
such light battalions planned under Army 2020, with, crucially, 400 Foxhound
already on order.
Army 2020 includes 3 heavy cavalry regiments on Ajax, which means that the two armoured brigades and the first of the strike brigades are covered. A fourth regiment on Ajax is however needed for the second strike brigade. An Ajax regiment is
well over one hundred men larger than a Light Cavalry regiment on Jackal, but
the CAR reform will have freed up manpower to adjust the various areas without an increase in the total number of regulars. Planned numbers of
Ajax-family vehicles should suffice to form 4 regiments, but it might be necessary to make each regiment a bit smaller, and adjust the ratio of variants (Ajax, Ares).
General Dynamics UK is already working on a proposal for the MIV requirement |
What the Strike Brigades lack is a
direct fire support platform bringing heavy, tank-like firepower to the party.
The Ajax only has a 40 mm gun, and the MIV might end up having nothing more
than a .50 or GMG on RWS. A direct fire variant of the MIV would be a real
blessing, but, again, money is the obvious issue.
Infantry Brigades
The six remaining infantry brigades
should continue to include two “deployable” brigades, working to a two year
force generation cycle, with supports for one deployment, so that future
enduring operations will be sustainable.
Under Army 2020, three out of seven
adaptable brigades are the main deployable framework upon which a three-year force
generation cycle is built, forming each year a package including up to 5
infantry battalions (2 mounted on Foxhound, 3 Light Role plus paired reserve
battalions) and a Light Cavalry regiment (plus paired reserve).
Two sets of supports (artillery regiment,
engineer regiment, medical regiment, REME, logistic regiment) are also
available, so that the Adaptable force, when needs be, can support two
six-months deployments out of the 5 needed, in circle, for an enduring operation
if the “1 in 5” principle is to be respected.
In Joint Force 2025, the number of “deployable”
infantry brigades could shrink to two. And since one set of supports will have
to be upgraded to cover the second Strike Brigade, only one would remain.
The infantry brigades would be
tasked with a single deployment within a cycle of 5, instead of two.
The transition of supports
Plenty of questions remain on how
support units will be reconfigured. For example, artillery: while it is
reasonable to expect no changes for the artillery regiments associated to the
two remaining Armoured Infantry Brigades (3 batteries with AS90, 1 Precision
Fires battery with GMLRS and EXACTOR), the composition of the artillery
regiment for the Strike Brigades is anyone’s guess.
The AS90 appears too heavy and large
to fit within the “deployability” that the Strike Brigade is supposed to offer.
On the other hand, its firepower, protection and mobility would fit a
mechanized formation better than the L118 Light Gun.
The loss of one armoured brigade
could result in further reductions to the number of AS90 batteries, even though
one of the (several) lessons of the war in Ukraine is the enduring key
importance of artillery… and the fact that pretty much everyone in NATO is
really at a disadvantage against the kind of indirect firepower available to Russian-style
formations. Losing AS90s is really not something that should happen, yet it is
a quite likely outcome.
If the army decides to put AS90 in
the Strike Brigades, their total number (89 post 2010 cuts) means that adding a
net three batteries is going to be next to impossible.
The Strike Brigades could perhaps
receive only two AS90 batteries (+1 bty from Army 2020 planning), with the
balance made up by L118.
Towards 2030 (the OSD for both AS90
and L118), a new plan for artillery might be necessary, and again France could
provide an useful indication: their CAESAR truck-mounted howitzer would be a
perfect fit for the Strike Brigades. The Armee de Terre is also now planning to
procure the CAESAR NG, on an armored 8x8 platform, as replacement for their
remaining tracked heavy howitzers.
The UK could, and probably should,
follow the same direction when the time comes: while the tracked howitzer
brings several advantages (more armor, more mobility, 360° coverage due to the
turret), it costs more, it is harder to deploy and, ultimately, misses out on
part of its advantages due to its resupply chain.
The AS90 has the mobility of a MBT
and good protection, but in the end depends entirely on wheeled trucks carrying
the ammunition. Trucks which are less mobile and more vulnerable to
counter-battery fire.
Arguably, the advantages of the
tracked self-propelled howitzer are only enjoyed fully if, like in the british
army, a vehicle with the same protection and mobility features is used to carry
ammunition during shoot and scoot fire missions.
In absence of money for those, it
might be best to just go for the different advantages offered by a lighter,
cheaper, wheeled howitzer.
Crucially, the CAESAR comes with the
longer barrel (and thus the greater range) that AS90 sadly didn’t get when the
BRAVEHEART upgrade programme collapsed.
The L118’s replacement could be the
120mm towed mortar. Even easier to deploy, even smaller and lighter, it offers almost
as much range, same lethality and a greater variety of ammunition, already
including precision guided shells.
A French-style combination of CAESAR
and mortar batteries could give even 16 Air Assault and 3 Commando a good level
of capability, offering both the power and reach of the 155 and the strategic
and tactical mobility of the 120mm mortar.
But this is in future prospective.
The GMLRS is a key capability, for
its long range, its precision, its effects. Its weight and mass is not far from
the “defining form factor” for the Strike Brigade, which has its sweet spot at
around 30+ tons. Weight and mass which must be compatible with A400M Atlas transport
(even though air insertion alone will never be a realistic option for deploying
a brigade, and arguably not even a battlegroup, with the number of cargo
aircraft the UK can reasonably expect to have available).
The GMLRS comfortably fits within
that sweet spot, and because of what it brings to the fight, it is to be
recommended that a Precision Fires battery is included in the Strike Brigade’s
artillery element.
This means adding a fourth GMLRS
battery (up from 3 in Army 2020), but it should be doable: the army should have
some 36 launchers at B1 standard.
One issue is that the GMLRS is now a pin-point precision weapon only, having lost the ability to annihillate dispersed forces in a wide area with the withdrawal of the rockets loaded with submunitions. The US Army is beginning to put in service the Alternative Warhead rockets, which replace the submunitions with an enhanced fragmentation payload with zero risks of residual Unexploded Ordnance on the ground and restored wide-area attack capability. The Royal Artillery should buy a stock of these rockets as soon as possible.
One issue is that the GMLRS is now a pin-point precision weapon only, having lost the ability to annihillate dispersed forces in a wide area with the withdrawal of the rockets loaded with submunitions. The US Army is beginning to put in service the Alternative Warhead rockets, which replace the submunitions with an enhanced fragmentation payload with zero risks of residual Unexploded Ordnance on the ground and restored wide-area attack capability. The Royal Artillery should buy a stock of these rockets as soon as possible.
Engineer regiments will change, as
well. The loss of one armoured brigade means that less Titan and Trojan will be
required; even assuming that the remaining two regiments will increase their holding
to compensate.
The Terrier, at around 30 tons, will
be the key capability of the Strike Brigade’s own engineer regiments.
Bridgelaying will probably fall on
the shoulders of the ABLE systems and of the few REBS, which should have been
brought into core after the end of Op Herrick.
Medical regiments for the Armoured
Infantry Brigades are currently equipped with the medical variants of FV432
tracked vehicles, which might be replaced by suitable variants of the ABSV when
the programme finally progresses.
The Medical regiments for the Strike
Brigades could use an ambulance variant of MIV, eventually, although less
expensive options, such as the ambulance variant of the Multi Role Vehicle –
Protected, might be adopted instead.
Beyond the adjustments (less track
and heavy armor; more wheels and medium weights), the real key question in this
hundredth restructuring of the army must be a very basic one: does it make
sense to centralize support units away from the maneuver brigades? I’ve written
more than once to say that no, it doesn’t, and that remains my belief.
Now more than before. Since the
regiments are inexorably taking on a structure that reflects the brigade they
have to support, the benefits of centralization are quickly made irrelevant. It
would be far better if the key supports were part of the relative brigade (at
least for the armoured and strike brigades).
A reorganization of logistics also
appears necessary. With the army having won, at least in the talk, a renewed commitment
to the Division as operational, deployable level, the task should now be to reorganize
the divisional logistic brigade.
The maneuver brigade should include
the logistic elements it needs at the tactical level, to support its own
operations, whether as a full formation or broken into dispersed battlegroups.
The logistic brigade should have a theatre-wide responsibility, and be the
point of contact between the maneuver brigades and the main port (air and sea)
of debarkation of stores, equipment and materials, with these being, of course,
primarily the responsibility of 104 Log Bde with its theatre-opening
capabilities.
Between US and France
It appears clear that the British
Army is trying to position itself, structure-wise, somewhere between the US and
France. Concepts coming from either country clearly run into the british army’s
own planning. And in my proposal, due to the CARs, the resemblance with the
A-BCTs of the US Army would be even greater.
I think many will have noticed the
resemblance between Joint Force 2025 and the “Au Contact” plan of the French armee
de terre. The 2 heavy, 2 medium, 2 light plus airmobile brigade structure is
the same, with the British Army adding a number of further infantry brigades
of, honestly, dubious usefulness, but that are needed as containers for
infantry battalions busy on a variety of roles in the UK and abroad.
The French Au Contact plan, which
also puts renewed focus on the Division, has gone for a very rational spread of
capability: each Division commands 1 armoured, 1 medium and 1 infantry brigade.
In the French case, the “infantry” brigades are particularly capable and
specialized, since one is the Mountain brigade and one the PARA brigade.
The armee de terre then has an “airmobile”
brigade which is, really, an aviation brigade, since it does not include ground
maneuver units other than the logistic battalion. It contains the helicopter
squadrons, but the infantry would come from other brigades.
The French “airmobile” brigade
actually resembles more the “new” Joint Helicopter Command than it does 16 Air
Assault Brigade.
I call JHC “new” because, as part of
the restructuring, 16 Air Assault brigade has been pulled out of JHC and
assigned to Field Army Command. In the process, 16 Air Assault Brigade has lost
direct control of the helicopter regiments, that remain in JHC alongside the 7
Aviation Support Battalion REME (including 132 Aviation Supply Sqn RLC).
16 Air Assault now has all the
ground units (including 8 Field Company (PARA) REME, which has left 7 REME and
joined 13 Air Assault Support Regiment RLC instead) while the JHC has all the
major aviation units.
Major aviation units that, by August
2016, will include 47 Regiment Royal Artillery, with its 3 Watchkeeper
batteries: it has been decided that, despite its ISTAR role, a UAV of that size
and complexity should not be under direct command of the ISTAR brigade, but
rather under the aviation experts of JHC.
All Desert Hawk III mini-UAS instead
are to be grouped in 32 Regiment RA, within the ISTAR brigade.
Unlike the Armee de Terre, the
British Army seems determined not to split the brigades evenly across the two
Divisions. All armoured and strike brigades will be under 3(UK) Division, while
1(UK) Division will have the six infantry brigades.
This is probably in no small part
due to geography and infrastructure: the heavier and more complex brigades largely
gravitate around Salisbury Plain for both basing and training. Sitting under
the same Div HQ probably makes sense because of that. However, if the Division
is to be so important in the future of the british army, careful thought should
go into how to ensure that 1(UK) Div HQ can deploy, command and, through its
logistic brigade, support whatever brigade the UK is fielding in a determinate
moment.
Recommendations:
-
Re-arrange
heavy armour formations according to the Combined Arms Regiment structure
-
Use
the manpower savings obtained via CAR to uplift the units needed for the second
strike brigade. The first comes from downgrading one of the armoured brigades
of Army 2020.
-
Bring
CS and CSS units back into the maneuver brigades, and structure their sub-units
to support both full-brigade operations and the agile, quick deployment of
battlegroups formed from within a specific CAR
-
The
battlegroup mechanism should no longer be matter of making a complete dog’s
breakfast by pulling pieces from everywhere across the brigade, and even
beyond. As much as possible, the dogma should be: structure like you fight.
Battle-grouping must be thought into the very structure of the brigade, on the
lines of what happens within 16 Air Assault and 3 Commando due to their
specific readiness requirements. A basic battlegroup from the armoured brigade
should consist of a CAR, an artillery battery, an engineer squadron, a recce
squadron, plus all other elements up to a CAMM battery for air defence where
required.
-
If
the Division is key, plan accordingly, and uplift the capability of 1(UK) Div
HQ.
-
A
triple, two-year force generation cycle based on the alternation into readiness
of 2 armoured, 2 strike, 2 infantry brigades. This will make possible to deploy
a Division of three brigades, as from SDSR ambitions. Simultaneous deployment
of both armoured brigades, as has been indicated in the House of Lords,
promises to be quite challenging, and will require, at a very minimum, the
maintenance of high vehicle availability. It seems a “third world war”
desperation scenario, or something, otherwise, that the Army would only be able
to do if given ample notice to move (more than 1 year, surely).
-
ABSV
remains a fundamental part of the future of the army. It must be progressed at
all costs.
-
120
mm mortars should be introduced in the armoured and mechanized regiments and
battalions.
-
Once,
the MOD was looking at 8x8 in pure APC configuration, with nothing but a .50 or
GMG as main armament. This severely limits the usefulness of the 8x8 in a conflict
against a near peer adversary and even, as the French found out in Mali,
represents a serious weakness against enemies with ample access to 23 mm guns
and 14.5mm machine guns mounted on pick-ups. The French vehicles armed with .50
have found themselves repeatedly outmatched by the firepower and reach of the
enemy, so much so that they have brought old 20mm guns out of storage and put
them on trucks used as convoy escorts. The French VBCI has the 25mm gun, and
that is a key part of why it did so well in Mali (although the one-person
turret, did not prove entirely convincing). It is very important that at least
a share of the MIVs get fitted with an unmanned turret with the CTA 40mm
cannon, to ensure that each company has adequate firepower.
The
US Army is putting remotely operated, basket-less Kongsberg Protector MCRWS on
its Strykers to arm them with 30mm guns, and this hopefully will provide
further “inspiration” to the british army as well.
-
Another
lesson readily learnt by the Armee de Terre in Africa is the need for an escort
squadron within the Logistic regiments. The British Army is well aware of this
necessity as well, but probably unable to release manpower from elsewhere to
fix the problem. If some of the small light role infantry battalions that will
remain after the restructuring were looking for a role, this might just be it…
The
third Light Cavalry regiment should be assigned to 16 Air Assault Brigade to
become a IX unit including squadrons mounted on Jackal, the Pathfinders and the
framework for integrating EW teams and Air Defence troops, on the lines of what
30 Commando IX does for 3 Commando brigade. Ideally, a
small number of CVR(T) vehicles should be retained for this particular
regiment, to give a small, highly mobile, highly deployable armor element which
could prove invaluable in some situations.