SWC Member and author of Heavy Armour in Small Wars and Insurgencies from SWJ Magazine volume 7. Just got commissioned in the Canadian Forces.
SWC Member and author of Heavy Armour in Small Wars and Insurgencies from SWJ Magazine volume 7. Just got commissioned in the Canadian Forces.
Congratulations - Lt. Serbu!
Congratulations.
Thanks guys! I really appreciate it!
Second Lieutenant G. Gabriel Serbu
"In war, as in art, there are no general rules. In neither can talent be replaced by precept." von Moltke
Way to go!
Sic Bisquitus Disintegrat...
Marc W.D. Tyrrell, Ph.D.
Institute of Interdisciplinary Studies,
Senior Research Fellow,
The Canadian Centre for Intelligence and Security Studies, NPSIA
Carleton University
http://marctyrrell.com/
Training does not start before next week, which means that I still have a few days to focus on my research. I am currently studying in great detail the September 1996 Taliban offensive on Kabul, a swift and complex series of operations carried out over a wide area. Their use of Datsun pick-up trucks is fascinating. Somali Islamists used similar pick-up trucks during Operation Code Irene. There is shocking similarity between the use of pick-up trucks by terrorists and the Russian tachanka, a horse-drawn machine gun platform, employed by the Bolsheviks during the Civil War. The utilization of carts, open wagons or pickup trucks as machine gun ar recoilless rifle platforms is part of what I would call the poor man’s blitzkrieg.
During the Second World War, browning machine guns were mounted on jeeps, and today, various versions of the M240 are mounted on Humvees, but I seriously doubt that they were/are employed en masse in offensive operations and with the incredible tactical flexibility demonstrated by the Taliban. Moreover, a Humvee might not be the ideal platform for a machine gun...it is too heavy and too awkward. But, then again, I might be wrong.
Second Lieutenant G. Gabriel Serbu
"In war, as in art, there are no general rules. In neither can talent be replaced by precept." von Moltke
Bookmarks