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#1
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CONUS T2K Infantry Team Weapons
Something occured to me in that perhaps it may be beneficial to have a rifleman or two per infatry squad for CONUS campaigns equipped with a semi or full auto long rifle, like a M1 Garand or M14. My thought is that in rural areas where people actually know how to shoot well and learned on a 30 caliber class rifle (.30-06, .308, .300 Win Mag, etc), an infantry squad equipped soley with .223/5.56 weapons may be at a disadvantage. I've read stories over the years of the Soviets being at such a disadvantage versus Afghans using Lee Enfields in the 80's.
I would think that having a couple of guys who could shoot well (marksman or sharpshooter rated, not snipers) may give you an advantage over certain types of oposition (New American forces especially) and be at less of a disadvantage versus marauders/hostiles with hunting rifles. With rare exception, I would think fire discipline would be a way of life except in dire emergencies in 2000 AD for infantrymen. M1 garands to this day are still available due to their reliability and the sheer numbers produced and can be had in both .30-06 and .308/7.62N. M14's would be nicer (more due to magazine capacity, ease of scope fitment, and the whole Garand *PING* ejection than any full auto capability), but may not be as available at times, depending on the area. Any thoughts? |
#2
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And yes, this thread has nothing to do with fuel of any kind. Huzzah!
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#3
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I really think end of 1997 the effects of units armed with the 7.62 at squad level on their enemy would be an object lesson and learned quickly at least by NATO. Now filter down to Squad and Fire Team level after the TDM? Well it all depends on many units are listen to their higher HQ.
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#4
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My basic premise is that the charachters/unit in question is comprised largely of ETO infantry vets that learned these lessons the hard way. Pin the enemy down with weapons that have a range advantage and flank them.
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#5
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Any units raised late in the war are going to be equipped with whatever they can lay their hands on. Ideally it will all be the one calibre to ease resupply and sharing ammo between unit members, but a rifle is a rifle when it comes down to shooting the enemy.
Very late on you might find that civilian ownership of semi and fully automatic weapons is illegal - all weapons even resembling military issue may have been "requisitioned for official use". Depends a lot on the area though.
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If it moves, shoot it, if not push it, if it still doesn't move, use explosives. Nothing happens in isolation - it's called "the butterfly effect" Mors ante pudorem |
#6
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A .30 caliber rifle with iron sights is not much of an advantage over a 5.56mm rifle or one of the Soviet x39s -- you'll almost never be able to acquire and positively ID a target for the added range to matter, and then no one, even with lots of training, manages to make those longer range shots with iron sights with anything more than statistical static on two way ranges.
There is, ultimately, a reason why everyone on the planet quit using 30-06/308/8mm/etc full power rifles in favor of assault rifles. Assault rifles just work better for real combat. At the ranges where you can actually pick out a target who is not being really cooperative in assisting you in killing him (i.e. walking towards you in open order, WW1 1914 style) the assault rifle/intermediate round combo has all the range and hitting power you need. Quote:
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Garands would be more problematic -- lots out there through CMP, but on the .gov side, not so much, and 30-06 was not a particularly supported caliber any more by the 1990s, militarily speaking. 30-06 ammo is real common on the civilian side, but loads that don't replicate the USGI load can bend the op rod on a Garand and deadline it completely, so it's not a weapon where you can shoot anything you can scrounge without aftermarket alterations. Quote:
Basis of issue could have been greatly expanded on those, and the earlier Vietnam era Colt x4 power scopes might have been (re) adopted as well. |
#7
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The ping of an ejected Garand clip is unlikely to be heard under most battlefield conditions. What is more of a problem is that you can't top off the magazine while you are not being shot at.
Last edited by copeab; 04-18-2011 at 05:21 AM. |
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