Bringing Out the Big Guns - the RUSI Report on British Army Artillery
The RUSI has published an excellent and extremely
thought-provoking report into the challenges facing the British Army and
its artillery capabilities, and the impact that this may have on operations.
The report by Jack
Watling is an extremely thoroughly well researched and comprehensive
analysis of the challenges in this area, coupled with a good credible look at
what this means for the British Army as a whole. It rightly deserves widespread
coverage and analysis.
The report was widely covered in the media in, perhaps,
somewhat more sensationalist terms than the report itself reads. Widespread
comments about how the British Army couldn’t defend itself against a Russian
attack and how it was outgunned led to a perception in some articles that the
UK couldn’t stand toe to toe with Russia in a fight.
There are two very different issues here that need
consideration – firstly, the issue of going head to head with Russia, and
secondly considering whether the criticisms made and challenges made are
reasonable?
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The risk with reports that talk about the threat from Russia
is that the immediate reaction in some areas is to try to compare like for
like. This is probably not the best course of action – were the British Army to
be foolish enough to advance across the Russian border and attack in a
conventional conflict, then it almost certainly would be wiped out.
Similarly, if the British Army were dug in waiting to receive
an attack from the Russian forces head to head on their borders, without any wider
support then it too is likely to be a painful experience. Be in no doubt that
the British Army may be fantastic, but it is not designed or able to go toe to toe
alone with the Russian Army on their borders – and nor should it be.
Any comparison needs to look at the wider picture that a Russian
attack on NATO member states would certainly be multi-national in nature, and quickly
bring in a variety of other actors. It remains to be seen how quickly it would
escalate, but there is a strong risk that such a move would quickly cross the
nuclear threshold and move beyond control.
From a practical perspective though, when looking at the
threat the Army faces from Russia, we need to look at two things. Firstly, how
likely is it that the deployable division will be deployed to face off on the
Russian border and secondly, where else could it occur and how does that change
the equation?
Given the UK deploys only a relatively small force in
Eastern Europe, to be at the stage where a full Division has been deployed
indicates not only a protracted period of increasing tensions, but also sufficient
indicators and warnings that a transition to war was likely enough to warrant
putting a UK division (and allies) in the field in the first place – a significant
escalatory measure in itself.
This lead in time means that to get multi-national NATO divisions
into the field with the expectation of war means that we’re unlikely to see a
traditional ORBAT deployed, but possibly an enhanced one as potential wartime
measures are put into play by various countries. In other words, if we get to
the stage when we have divisions deploying into the Baltic, then its going to
be potentially very messy.
What this means is not to try and write off the report as a
means of saying ‘don’t’ worry’ but actually try to contextualise that, if anything,
a Russian artillery attack on UK forces right now is likely to be even more
damaging than the media made out, because they will not be deployed at their
full operational strength.
While the Russian Army remains a very potent and capable potential
foe in their backyard though, are they credible beyond their own ‘near abroad’?
This is where things get harder to judge – the Russian logistics chain seems to
struggle to sustain credible longer range deployments, with the possible
exception of Syria, so it is likely that any encounter between the UK and Russia
outside of the Baltic would be far more evenly matched, as the UK’s arguably superior
logistics chain compensated for the weaker force levels.
But credibly the one place that the UK and Russia are likely
to come to blows kinetically is linked to NATO, so we must assume that any conflict
will involve NATO powers too. Again, this is not to say ‘don’t worry’, but it
is important that any match ups or ‘tank top trumps’ take into account that the
UK is going to be one of several countries involved in any fight and this
should be remembered – it is not going to be a one versus one conflict.
So from one perspective we should be careful not to read so
much into the media hype that we assume that the Russian Army could beat the British
Army outright in a straight fight. This scenario simply isn’t credible for the
reasons covered above – but equally we should be wary of assuming that the UK is
automatically going to triumph. In reality any conflict involving British and
Russian forces firing at each other is quickly going to escalate out of control
into a very dark place.
At the same time though the report raises some extremely
fair criticisms about the wider state of the British Army that do warrant
further thought. It is clear that for the last 30 years the Army has had to
balance off two very different drivers in order to try and make ends meet.
The first is the desire to remain a ‘proper’ Army – in other
words retain the ability to deploy and sustain a full spectrum fighting force,
probably at Divisional level that can integrate into the US plan and be seen as
a credible ‘day one’ force that planners want to deploy. In other words heavy
armour, heavy guns and lots of vehicles and infantry able to fight in some
really nasty places.
The counter driver though has been that the sort of operations
the Army has been involved in are nothing of the sort. For nearly 30 years it
has deployed lighter forces, with armour and artillery in relatively small numbers
and under tightly constrained Rules of Engagement. Outside of 1991 and 2003 the
‘heavy army’ has been a nice to have that has found itself employed on the
incredibly complex world of peace support operations.
For decades the Army has been forced to make some really difficult
funding and prioritisation decisions that have seen significant investment flow
into some areas, but at the expense of others. For example the modern infantry
unit compared to one in 1991 or 2001 is utterly different – vastly better equipped
and with modern equipment, there is a significantly different force in use now,
and one that is very capable.
The price paid for the investment in these areas though has
been what can at best be described as ‘benign neglect’ on other parts of the
Army. The Armour and Artillery worlds have seen a significant lack of
investment, with funding directed instead to either meet more pressing threats or
possibly taken as a savings measure. If you glance back at the programmes
mooted in the early 2000s for future artillery capability, so much of it fails
to have existed as more than a glint in a powerpoint slide authors eye.
This perhaps highlights the huge difficulty facing budgeteers
trying to work out what to invest in for the Army. If you were working on the
equipment plan in the MOD back in the mid 2000s the threat was clear – it was
about trying to upgun the infanteer and provide them with the ability to handle
the threat on the ground in Iraq and Afghanistan – a messy violent set of conflicts
that didn’t define themselves by being a clear tactical problem to be solved by
co-ordinated all arms violence, but very junior soldiers in patrol bases
needing to work with a hostile population to build good relations.
When it looked like this was going to be the future, this
meant prioritising funding for tasks like this – but it also meant finding the
money from elsewhere. A staff officer 10-15 years ago trying to make the case
for divisional level artillery to face the Russian threat would have been given
short shrift by people in daily contacts in Iraq and Afghanistan who needed
urgent solutions.
The problem is that entering a cycle of neglect, where funding
was deferred, and upgrades descoped or munitions stockpiles drawn down means
that hard choices were taken then that are biting now. Its clear that the Army
is increasingly finding it a challenge to maintain its ability to take part at
the highest levels of warfare.
On a practical level the ongoing cannibalisation of the
Challenger 2 and AS90 fleets make perfect sense in the context of when they
were taken – planners knew the focus of attention, and the likely fights then
were not going to need a full armoured division, and so risks were taken. The
question is whether this was too great a risk under the circumstances or if
mistakes have been made?
Its easy with hindsight to say ‘we shouldn’t have done X’
but perhaps harder to say what could have been done given the same problems and
funding levels other than take those decisions. In an ideal world the Army
would have had enough funding to support both current ops and retain a
genuinely credible divisional capability – but we don’t live in an ideal world
and it didn’t get enough funding, and really difficult decisions were taken.
Where we are now is that the Army seems to be trying to
regain at pace its divisional capability and in some areas it has very
significant reach and strengths. The logistical chain that enables the UK to
deploy globally is genuinely impressive, as is the attack helicopter force and low-level
infantry capability. But, what is lacking is a genuinely large enough set of modern
tanks and artillery to do the job required of it.
In part this is a challenge of funding – paradoxically the British
Army is probably overmanned for the jobs it must do. There are too many
soldiers in roles that the budget simply doesn’t exist to provide them with
modern vehicles and equipment – a smaller army would free up funds to fully equip
the forces it has, rather than trying to strike an uncomfortable balance. For
as long as the Army is tied by the force of emotion and cap badge politics to having
to keep 82000 troops (on paper at least) it will struggle to properly equip the
65000 it realistically needs.
Similarly, replacing vehicles isn’t a simple game. While
many in the British Army would probably deeply love to acquire M1A1 Abrams or Leopard
2 tanks from the US & Germany as a quick and cost-effective replacement for
the increasingly elderly Challenger 2, this would come at a huge price for the
UK domestic defence industry. In the medium term trying to understand what is
more important – is it fighting capability or is it protection of industrial
jobs is key. You could easily replace CR2 with a new tank very quickly and in
greater numbers for less cost, but the potential political uproar over the
perception of ‘lost jobs’ would be huge.
The wider challenge too is finding enough resources to
rebuild the stocks of munitions, the expendable equipment for exercises and
operations and focus on building a genuinely effective core of equipment that
works, not ‘sexy stuff in numbers that looks good in a league table’. The answer
may well be that for our allies the best thing the UK can do is invest in an enhanced
brigade, but one that has a stonking set of war shots available to it – but domestically
the pressure to say that ‘we’ve got an armoured division’ is more important –
even if keeping vehicles on strength that we cannot properly support or provide
full war loads for is the trade off.
Already the UK has hinted it is taking moves to increase stockpiles
of munitions, but this sort of thing costs money – and this is money that could
be spent on tangible tanks and planes that look good. Is this a price people
are prepared to pay – namely a smaller military front line, but one that has
deeper levels of supplies and equipment to keep it genuinely operationally
effective?
Finally the challenge is working out how to deliver a policy
compliant military that doesn’t break the law, but which somehow doesn’t get
killed. This may sound flippant, but the report notes the strong reliance in exercises
by the British Army on fire support through cluster munitions that are
delivered by international partners not privy to the Cluster Weapons
Convention.
This raises awkward questions about whether the Army
reliance on NATO partners to support them in exercises will work in real life,
or if the time has come to look again at whether ‘smart cluster munitions’ are
the answer. Again, what matters more – is it cost effective munitions that can
keep British troops safe, or trying to maintain a position of moral leadership
in the arms control arena – even if this results in the deaths of British
soldiers?
Defence is about taking tough choices based on the information
available to decision makers at the time. The decisions taken years ago are now
coming home to roost and frankly its pretty uncomfortable to look at. While it
is dangerous to use the power of hindsight to criticise decisions made, its
also hard not to feel that too great a risk has been taken in too many areas
and the consequences may be significant in a negative way. On balance, the British
Army has probably made some very difficult, but possibly long term wrong,
decisions, and the consequences of this may be very severe until they can be
fixed.
How fixable is the problem? On one level the British Army
remains a fantastic organisation, genuinely capable of working in a variety of
environments and conducting very challenging operations. But, while this may be
the case its also true that it needs time and money to buy itself back into the
very high end of divisional operations against a peer foe.
This will require wider difficult decisions about the role
and value of deployable ground forces, and whether the willpower remains to
want to invest in this capability. Putting a division on the ground is not only
a sign of capability, but also a sign of long-term commitment – whether you
want it or not. The UK deployed a divisional sized force in the 1990s to the
Middle East and nearly 30 years later is still there with significant military
deployments.
Whether the will exists to continue to fund this level of ‘door
opening’ capability remains, or if other projects like maritime and air power find
favour instead is not clear. To get the British Army to the state where it has
a genuinely credible divisional force with genuinely modern equipment in
numbers is going to take time and a lot of money – is this a price worth
paying, or is it time to pare back ambitions and focus on other areas and step
back from being a ‘top table Army’?
These are all questions that need to be answered soon,
because if funding decisions on projects like the Challenger life extension programme
aren’t taken quickly then whether the Army likes it or not, it will find itself
outgunned, outnumbered and out of business.
I think Sir Humphrey is wrong here - the drive behind operating at the Divisional scale is from NATO and observations from recent ops, so not simply domestic (if I was cynical, it suits the naval lobby to hint that this is the Army capbadge protection scheme in action - but I don't think it is following 3 years exposure to these issues in NATO). There is a deficit in understanding and practice on Div operations, and yet another Brigade is not what NATO needs. The combat power generated by a Div Arty Gp, Div Avn Gp and Div Engr Gp operating in conjunction with manoeuvre Bdes is what is needed to deter large scale Russian incursions (on interior lines over short distances with superb military rail - so I wouldn't be too sniffy about their logistics). Furthermore the experience of deploying enhanced Brigades to Afghanistan highlighted a number of issues with a Bde HQ trying to do too much - the utility of the Div level was a lesson identified from AFG, Finally there is complacency in Sir Humphrey's remarks about logistics. The RUSI report notes a lack of transport lift for the Div Arty - in peer to peer warfighting, 60-70% of your 2nd and 3rd line transport is humping arty ammo - we need more logistic mass.
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ReplyDeleteIf Russia were to invade Poland then all the Cap badges in the world won't count. It will be nuclear weapons.
But why would Russia invade Poland... having invaded through Ukrain first?
The notion that the UK is alone against Russia is risible.... suppose Germany says it's not bothered.
Thankyou Humphrey very informative and well timed read.
ReplyDeleteIn terms of your last paragraph - personally I think it's too late to save the army as a divisional level force. Too many capabilities would need to be replaced. The manpower gap is too large, there are too many competing priorities even before the big spend on Successor and Tempest kicks in. There's also the question of where exactly to put this army - unless there's a secret plan to create a "British Army of the Oder". But I just don't see it happening.
And some of the proposals are embarassing frankly putting a new Leo2 gun turret and engine in an old British tank so we can pretend it's British, it's Nimrod all over again.
IMO the practical option from here is to bite the bullet, cut our cloth slim down to a 65000 man medium weight expeditionary force with a full range of Boxer variants and Precision Fires.
BEF v2.0, everything else is vapourware.
Your suggestion makes a lot of sense to me.
DeleteA fully wheeled Division with plenty of fires would be very credible and able to deploy within the 21 days needed. If we do need a stiffening of a couple of Tank andd Ajax regiments then fine. But make it a tracked brigade able to generate a battle group as part of the Enhanced Forward Presence. It makes no sense having tracked forces as part of our 21 day Division, if we can't get all of the them and their logisitics tail to the party in time. As for which tanks, I daresay the Franco-German Leopard 3 will be available for license build by RBSL. If we ask nicely they might even let us into the consortium for the sake of BAES' know how on diesel-electric propulsion.
ReplyDeleteWhat is an armoured division meant to do? If the concept is deterrence by punishment, then why use armour, when we have nuclear weapons. For the escalation we need to have a sufficiently large number of poorly equipped troops on the ground who will act as a trigger. Conversely then the worse the troops are equipped, the safer they are, because the Russians will know that attacking them will result in mass casualties and a nuclear response.
ReplyDeleteIf, as seems unlikely, the concept is deterrence by denial then an armoured division in the UK is the worst way of spending our money to get the result.
If we don't like the idea of going straight to nuclear, then let's equip the Baltic countries in the Scandinavian tradition of mass mobilisation, defence in depth and make deterrent by denial a reality, but don't spend the money on armour in the UK.
Maybe I'm wrong, but I wasn't aware we had much of a tank manufacturing industry in the UK anymore? Sure, we maintain the CR2s we have, but that's about it isn't it?
ReplyDeleteI'm all for supporting the industries we have, and even creating more, but there is the cost factor. I see a route ahead for the army that the Navy had to go in order to get carrier strike; sacrificing and then making do for a couple of decades in order to get where they ultimately need/want to be.
A fully wheeled Division with plenty of fires would be very credible and able to deploy within the 21 days needed. If we do need a stiffening of a couple of Tank andd Ajax regiments then fine. But make it a tracked brigade able to generate a battle group as part of the Enhanced Forward Presence.But there is a hunting choice that is ever beneficial for those who do read just because of getting some reviews. For this just search Best AR 15 Scope Under $200
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