Murakhovsky described how tank employment in the Ukraine war has shifted toward survivability-focused tactics: “The tactics of combat vehicle crews within the framework of the special military operation have ceased to resemble previous ones. Commanders rely on the survivability of each individual piece of equipment. Shot – maneuver – withdrawal.”

I hate how journalists and writers are so willfully ignorant of war that we all continually gobble this stuff up uncritically.

This is NOT a new realization for every tank designer in the world except Russia. The basic way Abrams crews have been trained for decades debunks the idea these are novel realizations… the Abrams itself was specifically named after a general who emphasized combined arms as a primary virtue not limitless strength.

I could link an article but it is better to just watch how Abrams are trained to move and fight, they don’t rely on their armor to protect them, Abrams crews have NEVER been trained to do that.

https://inv.nadeko.net/watch?v=nD171uIEiAQ

Russia is attrociously bad at making main battle tanks or indeed really understanding them in the first place as a tool. The rest of the world however is not.

  • supersquirrel@sopuli.xyzOP
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    2 days ago

    Start with an overwhelming artillery and air attack to decimated defensive positions. Then send long columns of armored vehicles pushing straight across the front line with the tanks in the lead to soak up fire and clear mines. Then the infantry hops out and mops up defenders. This is WW2 level strategy.

    The strategy still works, but it requires competency and evolution in tactics and systems which Russia has failed to do with respect to armored maneuver.

    Also it requires tanks with a non-suicidally slow reverse speed.