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发表于 2023-4-14 02:52:11
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https://substack.com/inbox/post/112715127
链接中有这样一段俄罗斯军官的话很有意思。现代正规战争的精确打击让部队大规模集中出现困难,仅仅是杀伤敌方前线兵力已经不够,需要将敌方的精确打击力量削弱到相当的程度,才能为机动作战创造条件。
Peculiarities of decentralization of management and residence of personals ( 1/2 )
I have long wanted to clarify this point, because communicating with civilians, I see a misunderstanding regarding the arrangement of life, management and deployment of personnel in the combat zone.
Someone has an idea (no jokes), following the example of American militants, that there is a certain base in which cars drive back and forth, the paratroopers run at a marching pace, someone does push-ups against the background, all sweaty, some black commander walks and sends a group of guys on a combat mission - pushes a motivational speech. After that, the guys shouting "Hurrah!" get into the Urals and drive off into the sunset.
Someone has a more modest idea: there is a certain barracks where everyone sits, trains at a nearby training ground and goes on a combat mission.
In reality, everything looks something like this:
A brigade or division has about a hundred "locations" in which the minimum number of people lives - up to 30-40 in the "largest" and from 2 to 20 in standard ones.
Standard places of residence are basements, private houses, apartments, dugouts on 2-3 lines of defense, basements on 1 line.
Almost no one, except for the commanders, knows each other.
Privates (except for those who have survived since 2014) are not familiar with the remaining 99% of the unit's personnel.
Products are delivered to the main locations. The food is monotonous, but there are no problems with it.
It is not difficult to guess that everyone is scattered because of the threat of shelling by Khimari (HIMARs). If you bring together even 200 people, they will definitely fly by them.
Until now, the morons officers who, at a distance of 5-10 km from the front line, put next to several Urals with people and equipment, columns, have not been translated. Because it's so "convenient" for them and they don't understand how it can be otherwise - to arrange transport with personals and equipment at least 20-40 meters away. Until now, there are morons officers who, for the sake of convenience, are trying to crowd a company or an entire battalion in one place. You can't do that. But in the completely discredited "MOD academies" - they did not teach modern warfare. Here they can't.
What is the complexity of the location of personals ?
The rear officers (and there are no others) are used to the fact that there is a barracks where everyone sleeps in piles. They gave him this barracks - that's where it's supposed to live. These guys have not seen any other options in their lives.
Here you have a bunch of people, let's say 300 people. You arrived - where to put them? Who knows.
Those who are smarter turn to the officers of the LDNR, that is, to the local warriors, for help. Donbass is extremely saturated with bomb shelters and dual-use buildings - therefore, the best and easiest way to distribute personals is to negotiate with the owners of these premises (the majority go forward). Communicate with local residents in villages and towns - they can suggest broken-down empty buildings with good basements. Further, it is necessary to independently conduct electricity or buy a generator, gasoline and equip the economy in every possible way.
All transport must be kept under sheds, carefully camouflaged, all equipment must stand far from each other - it is wasteful to work on single targets - the enemy fires only clusters.
After arriving at the location, especially stupid rear chiefs have an idea in their heads that mobile phones, the Internet, etc. are to blame for everything - no.
Individual local residents (sympathizers with uprops) instantly report (for money) to the SBU all the latest news - including who drove in, who arrived in what quantity and where they are.
A local resident will easily come up, smoke with gullible soldiers who want to look in the best light - find out who has arrived, provide moral support and then go to write a report to the SBU. The same is done by individual servicemen who were greatly offended, or mobs, who were originally on the side of the dill.
The most important thing to understand is that the enemy knows everything. Where are all the command posts, equipment, where and when does it travel. And it's not about phones.
Therefore, the best way to protect personnel and equipment is decentralization.
Yes, management is very difficult, there is an increased need for means of communication, but it would be better for everyone to be troublesome and uncomfortable than everyone to be dead.
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