NATO Survey, 1943 Pt 2
Дата: 14.01.2015 20:07:43
generalbunbun, on Jan 13 2015 - 11:03, said: Chief, Great article! It is fascinating to see what was on
our commanders' minds in North Africa.If I may expound on your statement about towed guns:
The_Chieftain: I'm afraid I'm going to disagree with you on your
statements. Armored Force doctrine was not so ignorant as to
think that they could break through and conduct an exploitation
without considering the possibility that the enemy might happen to
have a tank or two along. Note that FM 18-5, the TD manual, is
purely defensive (at least as regards enemy armor), while the
Armored Force Manual FM 17-10, states for example, on page 90 that
the role of the medium tank (i.e. M3 and M4) includes dealing with
hostile armor when on the offence. Further, the Armored Force FM
only prohibits attacking equal or stronger enemy armored forces,
which, in fairness, is pretty fundamental and would apply to any
branch. Note also that the later FM 18-5 (1944) states that an
armored division is capable of dealing with an enemy armored unit
on its own, and the TD battalion might not be called up to action,
though it is not recommended. The reason the M4 had a "plane
jane 75mm" was primarly because it took years to figure out how to
correctly implement the 76mm in the tank, and the field commanders
had no indication that they needed the ones which were available in
the UK for D-Day. There was no doctrinal resistance in Armored
Force to the concept of a bigger gun, and the US Army had changed
to 76mm production in 1943.
See http://worldoftanks.com/en/news/21/the_chieftains-hatch-end_of_75_M4/
and http://forum.worldoftanks.com/index.php?/topic/316113-general-barnes-makes-a-phone-call/, http://worldoftanks.com/en/news/pc-browser/21/chieftains-hatch-us-guns-vs-german-armour-part-1/
and
, http://worldoftanks.com/en/news/21/us-guns-german-armor-part-2/
NATO Survey, 1943 Pt 2














