Peter Dow
Active member
Well the starting point will be what the Afghan National Army have now in the way of machine guns. Wikipedia saysWhat Hathcock did with an M2 came about only because the M2 has a particular feature that allowed it to operate in single-shot mode. The vast array of modern machineguns do not have this feature and they are in fact designed to be less accurate than a rifle.
Hathcock was able to make use of this feature of the M2 because he was a supremely competent sniper. He was also able to pre-register the target and therefore had plenty of time to do all the ballistics calculations for the range he was shooting at - an enemy position that was well known with all the required distances to target already calculated.
It certainly was not something that he did in five minutes after spotting an enemy. As an analogy, what you're asking a bunch of local soldiers to do with a machinegun is like asking a Sunday driver to win the Formula One by driving a delivery truck.
Machine Gun / Calibre / How many units the Afghans have got now
M2 / 12.7mm / 19,500
M240 / 7.62mm / 30,152
M249 / 5.56mm / 16,248
I assume that those were bought and paid for by the US and other NATO countries so no complaints from Karzai will be entertained if and when most of those weapons are transferred with the soldiers to be used by the new NATO run Afghan auxiliary force we set up to secure our supply lines?
Not that we'd need them all.
For 1 x M2 every 1000 metres on one side of the supply route then you need 2 x M2s for both sides to defend 1 km of supply route.
So the routes shown in the map would need
4800 x M2s for 2400 km.
But actually since there are plenty of M2s in the Afghan arsenal already it would be cost effective to change the plan a bit and put one M2 in every fortified position every 333 metres which would be
6 x M2 s per 1 km
or 14,400 x M2s for 2400 km.
Well I don't suppose those M2s will be modified with sniper scopes etc so something would have to be spent on upgrading them to do sniper operation as well as full auto for emergencies.
With an M2 in every fortified position it would mean not having to lug the thing between positions, which is handy, but it does mean M2s requiring to be securely held in an unmanned gun position with the concern being that our weapons could be used against us if, as has been already mentioned, the enemy make it as far as an unmanned position.
Hmmm. Well it is something to think about. Just the 1 M2 per on-duty gun team, or 3 times as many, 1 M2 per fortified position?
Well it's nice to have the M2s available to be able to make that decision at a later date.
If only using 1 M2 per on duty crew then the positions can be reinforced in an emergency with reinforcements from the depot bringing M240s of which the Afghans have plenty. The reinforcements are for responding to a mass attack so the single shot mode is not required in that role.
The Afghans are not so well off with mortars though, only 500 x 82 mm Mortars.
Really you'd want the reinforcements to bring in a mortar to return fire in the event of a mortar attack.
I think a minimum for mortars would be one mortar per depot which covers 2km of the route, so that would be
1200 x mortars for 2400 km.
So if the Afghans have only got 500 x 82mm mortars I think they are short on mortars and could do with getting some more and maybe bigger 120 mm mortars as well? Possibly the issue is that they don't have enough people trained up on mortars so maybe that's why they've not got more?
Well the guards will be on duty on the same place from day to day, week to week, month to month and will become very familiar with the lie of the land and what they can hit in sniper mode with their M2s.Hathcock was able to make use of this feature of the M2 because he was a supremely competent sniper. He was also able to pre-register the target and therefore had plenty of time to do all the ballistics calculations for the range he was shooting at - an enemy position that was well known with all the required distances to target already calculated.
It certainly was not something that he did in five minutes after spotting an enemy. As an analogy, what you're asking a bunch of local soldiers to do with a machinegun is like asking a Sunday driver to win the Formula One by driving a delivery truck.
The enemy will be advancing through barbed wire, mines etc into machine gun fire and whether it is sniper or full auto, the advantage is with the defenders. Local Afghan soldiers or Indian / Pakistani / Tajik / Uzbek etc. mercenaries ought to be able to hold off anything the Taliban can bring to battle.
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