KevinTheCynic
Active member
You look but you don't see.
Oh but I do see these Britons also using the M2 with a scope, here firing in semi-automatic mode as well. One of them is a Scot! :brave:You look but you don't see.
Oh but I do see these Britons also using the M2 with a scope, here firing in semi-automatic mode as well. One of them is a Scot! :brave:
Firing the Browning 50 Cal! - YouTube
My pickup does 38 mph in reverse. So what is your point?
I don't have a point in reply to your point about your pickup, unless it has a scoped-M2 mounted on it, in which case maybe you'd like to tell us if you can snipe with it because everyone else with a scoped-M2 looks like they can snipe with it but some people who have posted in this thread claim never to have seen it done and you know, I believe them, they haven't see it but seeing is believing so that's why I've posted a couple of videos showing scoped-M2s being fired and in one of them a US Marine saying said scoped-M2s would be good for an OP, Observation Post, and here's a fortified OPMy pickup does 38 mph in reverse. So what is your point?
Travellers will be warned off from going anywhere near those guard posts which are not on their routes but some miles distant.These posts with M2's will also make great revenue earners for those manning the posts to extort money from travellers.
Army Logistician
Supply Line Warfare by Dr. Cliff Welborn :read:
The U.S. military has also disrupted the enemy’s supply chain to weaken its fighting capabilities. When we think of a military supply line, we often think of the logistics considerations necessary to keep our own supply chain flowing. However, just as important to military success are tactics for disrupting the enemy supply line. A defensive strategy is to protect our own supply chain; an offensive strategy is to inhibit the supply chain of our enemy. The United States has used both offensive and defensive strategies in many wars, including the Revolutionary War in the 1770s and 1780s, the Civil War in the 1860s, the Plains Indian Wars in the late 19th century, World War II in the 1940s, and the Vietnam War in the 1960s and 1970s.
Peter, you are the most arrogant bastard I've ever met. :wink:
Irregular forces, Irregular tactics=Asymmetrical warfare.
Simply put, it is a strategy focusing on side-stepping a stronger enemy’s strengths and focusing all one’s limited resources at the enemy’s weakest points – hence the asymmetry
You are not trained in military strategy or leadership and one of the greatest barriers for you to understand defense matters is language. Familiar words such as “strategy” no longer mean what they did a century ago. New words and concepts enter the lexicon that both confuse and clarify. Military officers are specialists. They are intelligent people who understand the complexity that occurs during war or armed conflict. You are a layman in this field and you demean me and all the other fine men and women here on this forum that have or are currently wearing a uniform. You have not earned that right.
To prevent your plan from working, the Taliban merely have to attack your strategy. The only way you can beat the Taliban on their home turf, is by having your troops live and work with the civilian population in order to win their hearts and minds. But Taliban have a saying: “You have all of the watches, we have all the time” How much time are you willing to spend?
Well brinktk, you're probably right....he's not worth the time or effort to refute anymore.
Well brinktk, you're probably right.
For you Peter.
In a guerrilla war, what happens on the battlefield does not always determine ultimate victory or defeat. The US in Vietnam, the Portuguese in Africa, the French in Algeria and the Rhodesians were all winning militarily, but lost their wars. Thus, an understanding of what will happen in Afghanistan requires looking beyond the fighting men.
Well brinktk, you're probably right.
For you Peter.
In a guerrilla war, what happens on the battlefield does not always determine ultimate victory or defeat. The US in Vietnam, the Portuguese in Africa, the French in Algeria and the Rhodesians were all winning militarily, but lost their wars. Thus, an understanding of what will happen in Afghanistan requires looking beyond the fighting men.
When is a war lost or won? The general opinion about the Vietnam war is that the US lost it. The fact is that the war ended with a peace treaty between North Vietnam and the US after relentless and very heavy US bombardments of North Vietnam. The Americans adhered to the treaty and pulled out. After the US troops left the North started attacking the South again and conquered it, that war was between North and South Vietnam. The US lost South Vietnam, not the war.
The Taliban wil claim victory as soon as NATO and US forces leave. Wether Kaboel kan defend its country or not is irrelevant to the Taliban. Islamic radicals will always clame victory unless they are completely destroyed. A good example is the last Israel/Hamas conflict where Hamas got a terrible beating and was saved by a peace treaty. After the treaty Hamas claimed victory because they were not destroyed.
The Taliban are a proxy organisation of the Pakistani military intelligence organisation, the ISI. That means that the Taliban are agents of the ISI. The Taliban work for the ISI. The Taliban do the bidding of the ISI. The Taliban kill on the orders of the ISI.But that's the point isn't it. Of course they can't win decisively on the battlefield. If they could they wouldn't be fighting a guerrilla war in the first place. The key to winning an insurgency is causing your opponent to lose the will to fight any longer. They simply have to not lose to accomplish that point. One can never completely destroy the enemy in an insurgency with military might. It's virtually impossible. You have to defeat the will and the ideology. That's accomplished first by providing security to the locals. If they don't have to worry about getting intimidated into the service of the Taliban, Viet Cong, Hamas, whatever....the pool of recruits will dry up. After the locals feel secure, all of a sudden you'll start to get actionable intelligence. You can start forming informant networks. It gets much harder for the enemy to operate freely. The people start to see normalcy and that you're not such a bad dude...but most importantly...that you're winning.
People aren't dumb. Regardless of the regime that's backing whatever group...the people are going to back the side that is most likely to win. If they don't, then they get dead when that side eventually wins. The people mostly just want to live their lives without all the fuss about freedom or sharia...both sides are affecting that normalcy...they know we aren't going to stay, so most of them are hedging their bets with the Taliban...hence the Taliban will win.
We can win every battle against the Taliban and lose the whole war because we didn't fight hard enough for the battleground that was the most important to winning the war...the people.