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Old 09-10-2008, 03:56 AM
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Default Headcount in 2000 Formations

Webstral 07-28-2008, 02:17 PM I know it has been discussed before, but I’d like to take up the matter of headcount in Y2k and 2k1 formations. For instance, 95th Infantry Division (90th Corps, 5th US Army) has a given manpower strength of 2000 on or about 01 APR 01. In a pre-war infantry brigade, maybe half of those people would be combat arms. Obviously, things have changed somewhat by 2001.


Canon mentions that all of the armed forces turn increasingly to local civilians to handle administration. I presume this includes basically all CSS (combat service support) functions. A few of the less-risky combat support jobs might also be amenable to farming out to the locals. This leads me to two questions: how many riflemen does one get in 95th ID when the division has a headcount of two thousand, and does the presence of so many civilians turn a formation into a heavily-armed local defense force?


Obviously, the mix of civilians-to-soldiers is going to change from formation to formation. From mid-1997 onward there will be a diminishing level of standardization for anything. Nevertheless, the trend of putting those in uniform into rifle platoons will be pretty consistent everywhere. The vacated jobs will have to be done by somebody, even with belt-tightening measures in place.


I’m going to turn to 43rd MP Brigade for a moment, as I have been doing a bit of work on New England over the summer. “The Last Submarine” gives the combat strength of the brigade as 800 effectives in early 2001. Basically, this is a big battalion. The number of rifles can be significantly extended if the brigade staff is mostly civilians, the battalion commands and staffs are eliminated, and the transportation, maintenance, medical, and other support jobs are filled principally by civilians. It might be necessary to put an MP in charge of each section or platoon. In this event, as many as 700 MPs might be organized into rifle platoons, the remainder being command and staff, artillery and mortars, and other sorts that can’t be replaced by civilians.


With so many civilians performing support jobs, the MPs might not be capable of moving. The cantonment might become a permanent center of gravity, regardless of what MilGov might want (in the event the brigade were to accept orders from MilGov). Going back to 95th ID, the division might be locked into its cantonments by the presence of so many non-combatants. On the other hand, I know throughout history many armies have dragged significant trains of non-combatants behind them. It wouldn’t be hard to imagine that some commanders would insist that the civilians pack up and move out with the formation that employs them. On the other hand, it would be very easy for me to imagine that the civilians might simply refuse to budge—especially if the whole complex of CSS jobs was being filled by civilians. Add in the natural tendency of the troops to acquire wives among the local population, and the unit might grow some deep and powerful roots. It’s a real problem.


One of the issues I have been trying to work into my history of “Thunder Empire” is the struggle by Fort Huachuca to turn 111th MI Brigade from a powerful local defense force into a formation capable of taking to the field for an extended period. During the initial reorganization in 1998, 111th Brigade focuses on getting as many rifles into the field as possible. The CS jobs get filled by retirees brought back into service, EPWs who already possess the requisite skills, and those civilians who have the right skills. (There are lots of the first group around Fort Huachuca in 1997 in real life; there are several thousand EPWs living in temporary barracks at Huachuca in 1997 as a result of the war; and since the populations of Cochise and Pinal Counties don’t en masse of starvation and dehydration in the first half of 1998, there are some people with the right skills alive and available for drafting.)


One reason the Thunder Empire remains so small throughout the 1998-2000 timeframe is that the mass of manpower isn’t very deployable. There is, of course, the problem of hostile Mexican Army forces camped across the border. However, in conjunction with the threat to their cantonment, the rifles can’t go very far afield because they can’t be supported for very long in the interior of Arizona. Following the fighting of Summer 1998, the 111th rebuilds for maximum strength in a local defense. As a result, Arizona north and west of Cochise, Pinal, and Santa Cruz Counties are pretty much cut loose to go their own ways. Thus the state government receives no support whatsoever from the 111th when Phoenix descends into chaos in mid-1998.


In late 1999, Huachuca starts to get serious about building the power projection of the 111th. This means putting uniformed service members in more of the CS and CSS positions within the brigade because few civilians will go on a months-long campaign to liberate Phoenix from the surviving gangs, liberate Yuma from the Mexican Army, or destroy Mexican forces in southern New Mexico.


Elsewhere, commanders might have more luck with getting the civilians to accompany the troops on long-range missions. On the other hand, the iron-fisted might simply inspire rebellion amongst the civilians and/or some of the troops.


Getting back to the original questions, it seems to me that the listed manpower represents a much higher concentration of combat arms troops than would a similar pre-war headcount; by the same token, the number of civilians performing CSS jobs (and some CS jobs) would dramatically reduce the ability of the formation to undertake any kind of extended campaign. I wonder how NATO dealt with this during the Summer 2000 campaign into Poland?


Webstral

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Raellus 07-28-2008, 08:05 PM Good post Webstral.


One could assume that the unit strengths listed in the various T2K materials are for the numbers of combat troops in that unit. One could then come up with a number for non-combat, support troops, many of whom could be local volunteers or "civilian contractors". This would be easier than trying to figure out what proportion of the total unit strength listed is combat vs. what proportion is support. It would also make the units capable of more in the way of combat ops.


As for how logistics were handled in Poland c. 2000, I believe that armies would operate much like their pre-20th century counterparts did. I would suppose that the better part of the preceding spring would have been spent stockpiling food and other necessary goods. These goods would be loaded up into a modern day "wagon train" and would follow behind the combat arms' schwerpunkt [sic]. Once the stockpiled supplies ran out, the troops would rely on readily available forage and when that was exhausted, the offensive would end.


On a "raid" (a term used in canon to describe most offensive operations post '98), the unit would return to its cantonment after wreaking havoc in enemy (or disputed) territory. In this case, the civilians attached to CSS would be able to return to their homes after the operation, probably making this an attractive employment option for many of the able-bodied locals. In a true offensive, the goal would probably be occupation of a new, formerly enemy held or disputed, cantonment area. In this case, perhaps the local CSS folks would be given a parcel in the conquered territory as incentive for their loyal service. The Romans did it that way.

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copeab 07-29-2008, 07:27 AM One could assume that the unit strengths listed in the various T2K materials are for the numbers of combat troops in that unit.



Page 230 of V2:


"The following is a listing of major Warsaw Pact units in the area, along with their strength in combat troops ..."


Brandon

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Raellus 07-29-2008, 04:57 PM Brandon, I can never tell if you're trying to be helpful or merely snarky. I wonder if I've written something in the past that upset you.


Back to the topic at hand, I think that T2K armies would adopt the U.S.M.C.'s philosophy of "every man a rifleman". Especially with a fluid "front", everyone in uniform could expect to fight at some point or another.

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Law0369 07-29-2008, 07:26 PM I agree with rae...It takes us about 28 days to do Marine combat training. easy to do on large scale with enough people .

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DeaconR 07-29-2008, 07:58 PM Hm. There are a few factors that might be involved though.


1. General business. When is there time for this training and can the personnel be spared?


2. Arms and ammunition. Is there enough? I know we're talking about the USA in this case but would there be?


3. The ideas. Clearly if someone like say Law was in charge this would happen. Would people like the officers commanding the 43rd, wrapped up in their intrigues and paranoia really think ahead like that? Not every unit's senior officers are going to be so on the ball. In fact I think it makes it more interesting that they wouldn't be, human nature being what it is. And we've all known more than our share of authorities who fear change rather than roll with it.

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copeab 07-29-2008, 08:13 PM Brandon, I can never tell if you're trying to be helpful or merely snarky. I wonder if I've written something in the past that upset you.



I was just commenting on what's in the rules. I was trying to be helpful but obviously failed.


Brandon

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Raellus 07-29-2008, 08:23 PM 1. General business. When is there time for this training and can the personnel be spared?


2. Arms and ammunition. Is there enough? I know we're talking about the USA in this case but would there be?


3. The ideas. Clearly if someone like say Law was in charge this would happen. Would people like the officers commanding the 43rd, wrapped up in their intrigues and paranoia really think ahead like that? Not every unit's senior officers are going to be so on the ball. In fact I think it makes it more interesting that they wouldn't be, human nature being what it is. And we've all known more than our share of authorities who fear change rather than roll with it.


Glad to see you back on the board DeaconR!


Good questions. First off, let me clarify. I'm not quite suggesting that all units would be able to train their troops (many of them former CSS) as riflemen as well as the USMC does. Clearly, that would be the exception not the rule. My point was really that, with very few exceptions, there wouldn't be any "safe" , REMF-type jobs in the T2K world. Canon strongly suggests that there are very few secure, "rear areas" in central Europe, and danger abounds (rogue units, local warlords, marauders, the enemy, etc.). Everyone would have to be ready to fight at a moment's notice and folks would soon amass OTJ training that would supplement basic.


1. Winter in cantonment a-la Valley Forge. Supposedly, Baron Von Steuben did wonders teaching the Continental volunteers the finer points of European style drill. Since canon strongly suggests that major offensive operations are suspended in winter, it would be a decent time to conduct supplemental training.


2. This would be tough. Perhaps low-grade, locally produced reloads could be used for training, saving the better ammo for combat ops. Dry firing would be common, although not particularly helpful.


3. Sure, some units might neglect supplemental combat training. Some units might get away with it. Many of these units, however, would probably not last very long against those that took the time and put forth the effort. Darwin would be pleased.


I'm mostly thinking about units in central Europe but this would likely be applicable in the more contested parts of CONUS as well.

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Raellus 07-29-2008, 08:30 PM I was just commenting on what's in the rules. I was trying to be helpful but obviously failed.



My bad. I was just checking.

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Targan 07-30-2008, 12:15 AM I was trying to be helpful but obviously failed.That happens to me alot.

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thefusilier 07-30-2008, 02:03 AM Doesn't it mention somewhere in the main book that unit headcounts are about 10% bigger with non-combat support added in. It seems familiar to me but maybe I just made it up.


Brandon (the other one)

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kcdusk 07-30-2008, 02:53 AM i admit i have not read all the posts here, especially the long ones at the start. So i just have a general comment on troop numbers to add.


In my view, troop numbers (pact or nato) and even their rediness and equipment is largely irrellevant. Most T2K encounters, in my experience, are pre-determined or taken from the random tables. And so given that, troop numbers and fitting out is largely irrelevant. To me it doesnt impact on encounters, so working out troop numbers is a waste of time.


I know some posters here live by them, and others have gone so far as to work out troop details for different parts of the USA. But its not for me. I guess if my "hometown" or "state" was in a source book or something then i might be more interested. In my T2K work the "bigger picture" doesnt matter that much.

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TiggerCCW UK 07-30-2008, 03:28 AM i admit i have not read all the posts here, especially the long ones at the start. So i just have a general comment on troop numbers to add.


In my view, troop numbers (pact or nato) and even their rediness and equipment is largely irrellevant. Most T2K encounters, in my experience, are pre-determined or taken from the random tables. And so given that, troop numbers and fitting out is largely irrelevant. To me it doesnt impact on encounters, so working out troop numbers is a waste of time.


I know some posters here live by them, and others have gone so far as to work out troop details for different parts of the USA. But its not for me. I guess if my "hometown" or "state" was in a source book or something then i might be more interested. In my T2K work the "bigger picture" doesnt matter that much.


I could have written that - its pretty much exactly how I feel. In my Twilight world the PC's usually just want to steer clear of the big formations - either they'll end up getting killed, captured or press ganged!

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DeaconR 07-30-2008, 08:54 AM I find that fleshing out units with numbers, history etc is very helpful. The Poland adventures are good examples of this. I loved the amount of detail in them, right down to describing the bunkers in Krakow. You never know what a pc group will do and this kind of info can be invaluable. Also as a gm I like to have the big picture in mind. For example if the game material says that a Soviet division has gone marauder (at least towards foreigners and enemies) then reading things like that the 2000 man strong unit has broken into groups of about 200 tells me a lot. That pcs are likely to encounter large groups of marauders in a given area, that they will be wearing the same uniform and so on. Of course I could make all this up but then why am I paying for it or downloading it? If I'm going to pay for or download something I want someone else to do the work.

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simonmark6 07-30-2008, 09:30 AM I also agree with several posters that the given strengths of units would be combat strengths, but I feel a lot of the "combat troops" in 2000 would once have been "rear echelon", if you're going to replace front line troops, people trained in your way of doing things would be useful. Most Americans in an American Division, I think, would be combat troops with the rear echelons filled by locals apart from key skilled and organisational posts.


As for training, I think all divisions would be likely to do this, ammo would be a problem, I agree so it might be interesting to see what people would concentrate on training novices if ammo was short?

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copeab 07-30-2008, 09:46 AM I also agree with several posters that the given strengths of units would be combat strengths, but I feel a lot of the "combat troops" in 2000 would once have been "rear echelon", if you're going to replace front line troops, people trained in your way of doing things would be useful. Most Americans in an American Division, I think, would be combat troops with the rear echelons filled by locals apart from key skilled and organisational posts.


As I understand it, modern divisions tend to be more bloated by non-combat troops than WWII divisions. Given the breakdown of supply lines and all the lost vehicles, there may not be much need to replace most of the non-combat troops moved to combat roles.


I would imagine troops like clerks, cooks and such would tend to be given less important jobs than regular riflemen.


As for training, I think all divisions would be likely to do this, ammo would be a problem, I agree so it might be interesting to see what people would concentrate on training novices if ammo was short?


Single-shot black powder smoothbore muskets ...


then crossbows ...


then rocks ...


then pointed sticks


Brandon

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Webstral 07-30-2008, 05:04 PM Deacon, I tend to agree with your sentiments about knowing the big picture. Obviously, it's all a matter of personal taste. However, I feel like knowing who controls what area makes the encounters much more realistic. I remember playing D&D years ago. We had a couple of DMs. One would put together these random dungeons in which the pieces made no real sense together. We killed some creatures and acquired some treasure--all of which was fun. The other DM had created a whole world in which the adventure had a part, much like Middle Earth. Dungeons had designs and a purpose that fit with someone's scheme, whether past or present. Playing with this DM was fun in an entirely different way. It's all a matter of taste, of course. I tend to prefer feeling that there is intent--even to the random encounters.


Webstral

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TiggerCCW UK 07-30-2008, 05:22 PM I agree with what you say Web, and I would use source books as a guide to who the PC's are more likely to encounter in a given area. However, for the purposes of the game it doesn't relly matter whether there are 200 or 2000 soviet troops in an area - if the PC's run into a large group from either size they are likely to die anyway.

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copeab 07-30-2008, 05:49 PM I agree with what you say Web, and I would use source books as a guide to who the PC's are more likely to encounter in a given area. However, for the purposes of the game it doesn't relly matter whether there are 200 or 2000 soviet troops in an area - if the PC's run into a large group from either size they are likely to die anyway.


Even one skilled sniper can wipe out a party.


Brandon

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TiggerCCW UK 07-30-2008, 05:56 PM Very true, which is why the party needs to be careful regardless of where they think they are and how safe it appears to be.

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DeaconR 07-30-2008, 07:57 PM Getting back to the original topic, let's say we're talking about Europe. What happens to these civilians when their units move out for Operation Omega or for the British evacuations?

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thefusilier 07-30-2008, 08:25 PM Getting back to the original topic, let's say we're talking about Europe. What happens to these civilians when their units move out for Operation Omega or for the British evacuations?


Thats one of the themes to the only novelized work of Twilight2000 that I've come across. That 'Black Winter' work talks about how dependents and cantonments interact. The BAOR for example only has enough ships to pull out the troops first... that means who will protect the dependents? It goes into further detail than what I can remember but interesting nevertheless.


http://www.blackwinter.freeservers.com/Front.htm

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Raellus 07-30-2008, 10:38 PM Getting back to the original topic, let's say we're talking about Europe. What happens to these civilians when their units move out for Operation Omega or for the British evacuations?


I think that many of them would desert and head back home as their "parent" unit was preparing to board the ships, maybe earlier depending on where they were from (Poland mostly). I think this would be accepted if not encouraged by the brass. It would mean fewer ships and smaller amounts of provisions needed to get the "national" troops back home.


Of course, some of the indigenous recruits and perhaps their families would opt to leave along with their U.S./British units. Perhaps some of the Anglo-American troops would have married local women and sired children. I wonder how commanders would handle them.


I'm not sure if or how Going Home or other source materials address this issue. I suppose it would be up to the generals in charge of the evacuation, and to a lesser extent, the unit commanders.


But, since these units are leaving from Germany, with the blessing of the German military gov. (I have a few problems with this, but I won't muck up the thread by going into them again here...), I don't think that you would see a Fall of Saigon type frantic evacuation with thousands of fearful locals desperately clinging to heli skids trying to get out before the communists rush in and ship them off to reeducation camps (or worse).

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kcdusk 07-31-2008, 01:55 AM The only time i have been interested in troop strengths is when i had it in my head to try massed combat ... there are some rules in one of the mods (free city of Krakow maybe).

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Targan 07-31-2008, 02:02 AM The mass combat rules are in Ruins of Warsaw. Also the Last Battle boxed set.

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Old 05-24-2023, 10:53 AM
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Default Combined Arms Battalions as Divisions

I think that many T2kU "divisions", c. 2000, would be organized, roughly, like Russia's current Battalion Tactical Groups. The attached article explains the BTG's Cold War origins and evolution to today, and describes its current organization (including TOEs).

https://rusi.org/explore-our-researc...tactical-group

The rationale for the development of the BCT reads like a description of the battle space of the late Twilight War.

Quote:
"Over time, divisions and regiments became fairly proficient in combined arms combat, but the nature of the battlefield was changing. The future battlefield would be fragmented, with gaps between units, open flanks and combat not only at the front line, but also throughout the battlespace. The concept of the front line itself was being challenged. It thus became obvious that the battalion was a prime component of future war and battalions had to fight combined to win. The problem was how to combine branches into battalions and fight effectively."
As to formation head count, the generic BTG's TOE is pretty close to the average unit strengths for "divisions" described in the v1 books.

Quote:
"Most BTGs have between 700–800 personnel, but a few have around 900."
One could extrapolate that larger T2k "divisions", both NATO and Soviet/WTO, would therefore consist of 2-3 such sub-units (the IRL Russian army calls 2-3 BGTs a brigade).

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Old 05-25-2023, 08:34 PM
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One wonders if some armies might skip one or more command levels. Say, try to keep companies and platoons up to normal levels, but have many fewer companies by assigning companies directly to brigades/regiments rather than battalions, or skipping brigades and having divisions commanding fewer battalions (no brigades/regiments).
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Old 05-26-2023, 10:22 PM
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Originally Posted by Adm.Lee View Post
One wonders if some armies might skip one or more command levels. Say, try to keep companies and platoons up to normal levels, but have many fewer companies by assigning companies directly to brigades/regiments rather than battalions, or skipping brigades and having divisions commanding fewer battalions (no brigades/regiments).
It seems like consolidation would work best if everybody “played down”. I’d assume the focus would be on rebuilding as many complete to MTOE teams/squads/sections/platoons as possible and integrating them into troops/companies/batteries as feasible (companies train and enable squads, battalions train and enable platoons, brigades train and enable companies) with sustainment of 3-5 “brigade sized” element “corps” probably being the limit of a major logistics effort by 2000 (so a corps really has about a pre-war division or less of combat power). For example, a tank “company” may have four tanks operating tactically using platoon doctrine.

So, a US Army heavy division may look a lot like an OTL modular era brigade combat team with three combined arms battalion sized “brigades”; a DIVARTY “battalion” comprised of the remnants of the TA battery in its HHB, a battery with the surviving MLRS/M110/Lance assets, and a special weapons company; an “aviation” battalion with a div cav troop, a company with the the GSAB remnants, and a company with the the surviving RW attack assets; a “mighty five” composite battalion of MI, Signal, Engineer, ADA, and special troops (band, div HHC, MPs, chem) not attached to the “brigades”, and a support battalion with the remnants of the Discom, avim, MSB, and Med Bn in addition to whatever local support base the unit has built in its cantonment.

Maneuver “brigades” would have three “battalions” which are really company equivalent units, an artillery “battalion” (battery equivalent), an FSB (company equivalent), a special troops BN (Combat support co- ENG, ADA, MI, SIG, Mp, chem), and an HHC including a reconnaissance/cavalry element. A “battalion” may be further subdivided into “companies” of like major end items (a four M60A4 “company” or a three M109 “battery”). Efforts would be made to keep equipment homogenous by “battalion” or ideally “brigade”.

For example, a brigade may look like this:
HHC (1x M113 TAC, 2x M577 TOC, 1x expandovan ALOC)
(3x BRDM RCN TRP)
TANK BN (1 HQ M1A1, 2x 4 M1A1 COs)
MECH BN (1 HQ M2, 1x 4 M2 CO)
MECH BN (1 HQ M113, 1x 4 M113 CO, 1x 4 OT64 CO, 1x 2 M901 CO)
ARTY BN (1x BTR-60 FDC, 3x M109 BTTY, 4x M1064 BTTY)
STB (1x HQ M1025, 1 x stinger team, 1 x PPS-5 GSR, 1x ENG M113, 2x M1025 retrans)
FSB (2x HQ M1025, 3x HEMTT fueler, 1 x HEMTT wrecker, 2x PLS, 1 x 5 ton tool truck, 2 x FLA)

Scaling down has a couple of benefits. First, you can cross level equipment and personnel for best effect- a full strength platoon is better than a shot out company. Second, junior officers and NCOs moving up into “senior” leadership positions will be more familiar with the tactics and employment of smaller units (company maneuver isn’t generally taught at OBC, and not everyone gets to learn by doing as a LT, but every army and marine officer learns the rudiments of fighting a platoon). Finally, you can preserve the intangible links to unit heritage and identification- even though there are only four IPM1s left, this is still the 1-37 AR “Bandits”.

FWIW I always struggled with the composition of 5ID in “Death of a Division”. The battalions and brigades threw me, especially when I tried to reconcile it with the US Army guidebook vehicle densities. I finally ended up summing the number of tanks and dividing it by the MTOE number to get an “equipment factor” I applied to all the “combat systems” in the division (fighting vehicles, scout and attack avn, arty, major weapons systems). I did the same with the personnel, to give me a “personnel factor” that I applied to manpower and non-combat systems (soft skins, UHs, key support equipment). Putting this together I arrived at some basic end numbers, that I then consolidated to the nearest complete team/squad/section platoon. And thence into the rest of the division. Where I had discrepancies (not enough vehicle lift, too many vehicles) I assumed use of captured or commandeered items, use of techniques like the shuttle march, non-standard arrangements like cycles or horses, or contract personnel.

I ended up not going above the “division” level, but I did apply the system to an ACR as well. I think I ended up with two horse mounted “squadrons”, a troop sized squadron, a flight platoon sized RAS, and shrunken RSS, and separates at about squad or team level.

At any rate, I hope this helps the discussion.
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Old 05-31-2023, 05:58 PM
ToughOmbres ToughOmbres is offline
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Default Headcount and personnel levels

I could imagine NATO formations by 2000 doing away with HQ's below the battalion level effectively-with platoons and even companies being more of a paper nominal organization so no HQ at company level?

On a related note ironically I think many NATO formations by 2000 would resemble Red Army formations 1944/45 with a relatively sparse "tail" and straining to keep as many combat-capable riflemen on the front. By Vietnam, approximately 90% of a US division was in the "tail" with approximately 10-12% being available for combat. Could a reverse for NATO formations by the year 2000 be feasible?
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Old 05-31-2023, 06:06 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ToughOmbres View Post
I could imagine NATO formations by 2000 doing away with HQ's below the battalion level effectively-with platoons and even companies being more of a paper nominal organization so no HQ at company level?

On a related note ironically I think many NATO formations by 2000 would resemble Red Army formations 1944/45 with a relatively sparse "tail" and straining to keep as many combat-capable riflemen on the front. By Vietnam, approximately 90% of a US division was in the "tail" with approximately 10-12% being available for combat. Could a reverse for NATO formations by the year 2000 be feasible?
Yep-

Thats what my modeling came to. Platoons are untenable, and companies are shaky.

Id offer that theres still a bit of tail in 2000. Divisions may have a base of civilian laborers, craftsmen, etc who remain at the cantonment with a security force, while the division proper campaigns using a slim tail carrying prepackaged stores.
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Old 07-04-2023, 10:50 AM
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One question I have regarding consolidation is unit identity, heritage, and heraldry as they support unit morale and cohesion. At what level, if any, would commanders deem it necessary to retain prewar designations as a tool to help maintain unity and loyalty? Would "we're 1st Platoon, B Company, 3-143 Infantry" still invoke any sense of pride or purpose for the squad-sized collection of survivors and replacements?

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Old 07-04-2023, 09:08 PM
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I imagine that by 2000, there's probably very little difference between ex-military unit "marauders" and military units in practice besides notional affiliation to a higher HQ with military units. Notional because, even when military units remain "loyal", higher HQ can't really help them and they can't help HQ.

Does anyone think that by June 2000, US forces in Europe are getting any troops or supplies from the US?

Nope. They are living off of the "land". In the cantonments, they would be THE government with dictatorial powers - able to draft and direct civilian labor to do anything required. In some areas under some leadership, this would likely be a pretty benign dictatorship - the military unit(s) providing security, organization, and potentially reconstruction to a community or a group of communities. In other cases, it would be just as predatory as any other marauder group (and indeed, you can see this is the case with the 43rd Military Police Brigade in "The Last Submarine").

That being said, force levels are way too small (except maybe in contested Europe) to really control *anything*. For example, in Howling Wilderness, it's claimed that Colorado has 90% of it's pre-war population (so, ~4 million people). MilGov has 4,400 troops + 2,000 militia levies attached to the 100th ID in Colorado. That's...not enough.

For example, in 2023, Dallas has 3100 sworn police officers in the DPD for a population of 1.3 million (or ~425 people per sworn officer). Note, this doesn't count Dallas County SO or suburbs. Just DPD. MilGov has 6400 troops for 4,000,000 people, or 1 per 625 people. Dallas in 2023 is, all things considered, relatively peaceful. So...it's not enough to even "police" Denver, much less control and defend all of Colorado, much less anything else.

So the way I like to think of the book units is like the Roman comitatenses in the late empire. The last vestiges of the pre-war military trained and organized along pre-war TO&E with pre-war equipment and capable of maneuver (at least, maybe capable of maneuver). Not listed are the limitanei equivalent - the large militia contingent (which, for Colorado would be 200,000+ men and women) which would be locally raised and locally equipped with little to no training and variable experience. In some areas - particularly downstream from the reconstituted armories in Colorado Springs (and the equivalent organized areas in Europe), equipment of these militia units might be quite good - military small arms and light infantry support weapons (mortars, grenades, maybe some rocket launchers), but in most cases it would be men and women with mostly civilian rifles, shotguns, and pistols, and in some cases - worse (bows, sharp sticks, rocks...).

The demise (mostly) of mechanization for farming would mean that subsistence farming would be the norm. Today an acre of wheat will yield an average of 37.1 bushels of wheat or 1200 man days equivalent of food in calories (that's with modern fertilizers and pesticides) - or enough food to feed 3.3 people for a year. A person can farm 1-3 acres without animal labor or mechanization. So if yields are halved with the demise of fertilizer and pesticides, 2 adults could barely feed themselves and an (unproductive) child. There would be very little capacity for surplus, even with almost everyone farming, and so those 200,000+ militia would be needed locally to farm at least during sowing and harvest season.

Conversely, military units themselves would be all tooth AND all tail. Hardly anyone would have the luxury of being a pure 11B (infantryman) or 92G (culinary specialist)...and during non-operational phases would likely be planting and harvesting crops, felling trees, reloading ammo, scrounging, working construction, machining tools, or any number of sundry tasks a community would need - probably not unlike what happens today in North Korea. So we would be back to antiquity where armies could only campaign during limited periods of the year. Mobilization for war would mean that at least some of the population would starve at home/

For stateside scenarios though, what that also means is that neither MilGov nor CivGov has the maneuver forces necessary to conquer much of anything by force. A decent sized refugee camp can turn out as many fighters as any remaining US "division".

Operationally speaking, 2000 is probably the end year (for a decade or two) for high tempo military operations anywhere outside of areas of French involvement, and even the 2000 offensives used carefully husbanded supplies for one last hurrah.

Last edited by castlebravo92; 07-07-2023 at 06:53 AM.
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Old 07-06-2023, 07:54 PM
Higgipedia Higgipedia is offline
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Originally Posted by Tegyrius View Post
One question I have regarding consolidation is unit identity, heritage, and heraldry as they support unit morale and cohesion. At what level, if any, would commanders deem it necessary to retain prewar designations as a tool to help maintain unity and loyalty? Would "we're 1st Platoon, B Company, 3-143 Infantry" still invoke any sense of pride or purpose for the squad-sized collection of survivors and replacements?

- C.
Since it seems that units are anywhere between 5%-20% of their pre-war levels, an Infantry Battalion would be sitting at between 30-150 soldiers. This is roughly the natural size of human social networks, so I would see units really focusing on the battalion.

I'm not sure in the ruined force structure of mid-2000 that anyone is really holding too hard to the unit's heritage, given that substantial portions of the force may not even be nationals of the armies they're attached to. The units that settle and integrate into the community would probably start to identify more with the local heritage and identity than their previous unit.

High-morale units like special operations forces or airborne/air assault units might hold closer to their unit lineage.
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Old 07-07-2023, 01:07 PM
Heffe Heffe is offline
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Originally Posted by castlebravo92 View Post
I imagine that by 2000, there's probably very little difference between ex-military unit "marauders" and military units in practice besides notional affiliation to a higher HQ with military units. Notional because, even when military units remain "loyal", higher HQ can't really help them and they can't help HQ.

Does anyone think that by June 2000, US forces in Europe are getting any troops or supplies from the US?

Nope. They are living off of the "land". In the cantonments, they would be THE government with dictatorial powers - able to draft and direct civilian labor to do anything required. In some areas under some leadership, this would likely be a pretty benign dictatorship - the military unit(s) providing security, organization, and potentially reconstruction to a community or a group of communities. In other cases, it would be just as predatory as any other marauder group (and indeed, you can see this is the case with the 43rd Military Police Brigade in "The Last Submarine").

That being said, force levels are way too small (except maybe in contested Europe) to really control *anything*. For example, in Howling Wilderness, it's claimed that Colorado has 90% of it's pre-war population (so, ~4 million people). MilGov has 4,400 troops + 2,000 militia levies attached to the 100th ID in Colorado. That's...not enough.

For example, in 2023, Dallas has 3100 sworn police officers in the DPD for a population of 1.3 million (or ~425 people per sworn officer). Note, this doesn't count Dallas County SO or suburbs. Just DPD. MilGov has 6400 troops for 4,000,000 people, or 1 per 625 people. Dallas in 2023 is, all things considered, relatively peaceful. So...it's not enough to even "police" Denver, much less control and defend all of Colorado, much less anything else.

So the way I like to think of the book units is like the Roman comitatenses in the late empire. The last vestiges of the pre-war military trained and organized along pre-war TO&E with pre-war equipment and capable of maneuver (at least, maybe capable of maneuver). Not listed are the limitanei equivalent - the large militia contingent (which, for Colorado would be 200,000+ men and women) which would be locally raised and locally equipped with little to no training and variable experience. In some areas - particularly downstream from the reconstituted armories in Colorado Springs (and the equivalent organized areas in Europe), equipment of these militia units might be quite good - military small arms and light infantry support weapons (mortars, grenades, maybe some rocket launchers), but in most cases it would be men and women with mostly civilian rifles, shotguns, and pistols, and in some cases - worse (bows, sharp sticks, rocks...).

The demise (mostly) of mechanization for farming would mean that subsistence farming would be the norm. Today an acre of wheat will yield an average of 37.1 bushels of wheat or 1200 man days equivalent of food in calories (that's with modern fertilizers and pesticides) - or enough food to feed 3.3 people for a year. A person can farm 1-3 acres without animal labor or mechanization. So if yields are halved with the demise of fertilizer and pesticides, 2 adults could barely feed themselves and an (unproductive) child. There would be very little capacity for surplus, even with almost everyone farming, and so those 200,000+ militia would be needed locally to farm at least during sowing and harvest season.

Conversely, military units themselves would be all tooth AND all tail. Hardly anyone would have the luxury of being a pure 11B (infantryman) or 92G (culinary specialist)...and during non-operational phases would likely be planting and harvesting crops, felling trees, reloading ammo, scrounging, working construction, machining tools, or any number of sundry tasks a community would need - probably not unlike what happens today in North Korea. So we would be back to antiquity where armies could only campaign during limited periods of the year. Mobilization for war would mean that at least some of the population would starve at home/

For stateside scenarios though, what that also means is that neither MilGov nor CivGov has the maneuver forces necessary to conquer much of anything by force. A decent sized refugee camp can turn out as many fighters as any remaining US "division".

Operationally speaking, 2000 is probably the end year (for a decade or two) for high tempo military operations anywhere outside of areas of French involvement, and even the 2000 offensives used carefully husbanded supplies for one last hurrah.
Just wanted to call out that I really appreciate the thought and care that went into this post. This really clearly lays out how I've always viewed forces in the setting, and elegantly explains the reasoning behind such. Thanks for putting this together.
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