US-Army: Fahrzeugprojekte "Infantry Squad Vehicle"/"Light Reconnaissance Vehicle"/"Mobile Protected Firepower"

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theoderich
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Re: US-Army: Fahrzeugprojekte "Infantry Squad Vehicle"/"Light Reconnaissance Vehicle"/"Mobile Protected Firepower"

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DOT&E FY 2020 ANNUAL REPORT

https://www.dote.osd.mil/Publications/A ... al-Report/
  • Infantry Squad Vehicle (ISV)
    Assessment
    • Based on performance demonstrated in STP2 and DT, the ISV provides enhanced off-road mobility capability and enables infantry units to be less predictable in their movement necessary to accomplish airborne; air assault; offensive; and engagement, security cooperation, and deterrence (ESD) missions. The ISV expands a light infantry unit’s area of operations. Squads equipped with ISVs accomplished nine movement tasks consisting of 50 miles each during the STP2. All ISVs were capable of carrying a nine-soldier infantry squad with their personal weapons and equipment during movement.
    • The ISV has not demonstrated the capability to carry the required mission equipment, supplies, and water for a unit to sustain itself to cover a range of 300 miles within a 72-hour period. The lack of internal space to carry soldiers with their rucksacks in seats, mission-essential equipment, and sustainment loads may create a logistics and operational burden. This limits the type and duration of missions for which an ISV may be effective. Units operating for long duration will need to conduct mission planning, cross-level equipment across the unit, or may require additional ISVs to sustain operations.
    • The Army did not conduct airborne, air assault, offense, defense, and ESD missions during the STP2. All ISVs have the capability for internal transport by C-17 and CH-47F in support of airborne missions. Based on DT, all ISVs meet the weight and dimension requirements to fit inside a C-17 and CH-47F, and meet the 5,000-pound weight limit to permit sling loading with CH-47F and UH-60 helicopters. The Army plans to test and evaluate the ability of an ISV-equipped unit to accomplish these missions during IOT&E.
    • Units equipped with ISVs lack reliable communication capability using hand-held radios and manpack radios over the distances of 62 to 300 miles required to accomplish missions. The ISV does not have a requirement for a mounted communication capability. During the STP2, each squad depended on their squad radios while employing ISVs. Communication between the squad leader, soldiers, and the platoon leader was intermittent and not reliable.
    • General Motors Defense ISV demonstrated the highest reliability amongst the three vendors in DT. The General Motors Defense ISV demonstrated a 585 mean miles between operational mission failure (MMBOMF) versus the user requirement of 1,200 MMBOMF.
    • All vendors’ ISVs are cramped and soldiers cannot reach, stow, and secure equipment as needed, degrading and slowing mission operations. During the STP2, soldiers on all ISVs could not readily access items in their rucksacks without stopping the movement, dismounting, and removing their rucksacks from the vehicle.
    • The ISV does not have an underbody and ballistic survivability requirement. The ISV-equipped unit will be susceptible to enemy threats and actions. All ISVs have some design features to reduce a unit’s vulnerability to enemy detection such as speed, and a small, low profile design that minimize their visual detectability. In order for the ISV-equipped unit to avoid threats and traverse terrain that is covered and concealed, the ISV will give up some of its inherent speed advantage.
    https://www.dote.osd.mil/Portals/97/pub ... 8JtA%3d%3d
theoderich
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Re: US-Army: Fahrzeugprojekte "Infantry Squad Vehicle"/"Light Reconnaissance Vehicle"/"Mobile Protected Firepower"

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Infantry Squad Vehicle is a cramped ride, but US Army says it meets requirements
The U.S. Army’s new Infantry Squad Vehicle is a cramped ride and offers limited protection from certain threats, according to a recent report from the Pentagon’s chief weapons tester, but it still meets the service’s requirements in tests and evaluations, the product lead told Defense News.

The ISV “key requirements are being met and we are increasing soldier operational readiness by providing an operationally relevant vehicle that can transport small tactical units to a dismount point faster and in better physical and mental condition for the fight,” said Steven Herrick, the Army’s product lead for ground mobility vehicles within the Program Executive Office Combat Support and Combat Service Support.
But the Pentagon also noted the ISV “has not demonstrated the capability to carry the required mission equipment, supplies and water for a unit to sustain itself to cover a range of 300 miles within a 72-hour period.”

The Army, however, has assessed the ISV requirement and solution set is in alignment, Herrick said. The DOT&E report, he said, “indicates a desire to include more equipment than a standard nine-soldier squad would carry on a 72-hour mission.”

This lack of space, the report stated, “may create a logistics and operational burden” and might limit the type of missions and duration for ISVs.



The soldiers that participated in the touch point evaluating the vehicles were asked to bring their Advanced Combat Helmet and Improved Outer Tactical Vest with plates; individual weapon; night vision devices; and ruck with three days’ worth of supplies, Herrick said.

“All vendors’ ISVs are cramped and soldiers cannot reach, stow, and secure equipment as needed, degrading and slowing mission operations,” the report explained. During tests “soldiers on all ISVs could not readily access items in their rucksacks without stopping the movement, dismounting, and removing their rucksacks from the vehicle.”

The soldier touch point took into account soldier comfort, visibility and ability to execute the mission, Herrick said. This was all factored into the Army’s decision to choose GM Defense’s vehicle.

“Additionally, no current or planned combat or tactical vehicle allows access to rucksacks while moving to support operator safety,” Herrick noted. “Crew spaces on the ISV are designed to allow mission performance of specific duty tasks.”



Units also lacked reliable communication capability, according to the report, using hand-held or manpack radios between 62 and 300 miles. The ISV does not have a mounted radio requirement. “Communication between the squad leader, soldiers, and the platoon leader was intermittent and not reliable,” the report found.

Because of the concept of the ISV providing an effective aid to insert soldiers into combat operations, the requirements support just what the soldier carries, so there is no mounted requirement yet, Herrick said. That requirement could be added as a growth capability later.

The DOT&E report also noted that the ISV doesn’t have an underbody and ballistic survivability requirement, which could mean the unit would be susceptible to certain threats, but the ISV’s speed as well as its small, low profile might help deal with those issues. Adding protection to the vehicle would sacrifice the speed the squad needs to rapidly inject itself into operations.

Overall, GM Defense’s vehicle had the highest reliability among the three vendors, demonstrating 585 mean miles between operational mission failures. The Army’s user requirement is 1,200 mean miles for that situation.

Herrick noted that reliability and maintainability testing was not scheduled or conducted by Army Test and Evaluation Command or the program office, so the calculations used in the DOT&E report were “not supported by traditional [reliability and maintainability] RAM elements, such as scoring conferences and time for the vendor to implement changes.”

The mileage accumulated and referenced in the report was “not meant to evaluate RAM by the Army, but rather to provide the program office and contractor an initial insight on the capability of the system over 500 miles,” Herrick added. The vehicle’s RAM testing is scheduled to begin this month, he added..

The service wasn’t able to evaluate every aspect of the vehicle before moving into production, but it plans to test the vehicle’s ability to be carried by a Chinook during its initial operational test and evaluation this year.
https://www.defensenews.com/land/2021/0 ... uirements/
theoderich
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Re: US-Army: Fahrzeugprojekte "Infantry Squad Vehicle"/"Light Reconnaissance Vehicle"/"Mobile Protected Firepower"

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US Army begins ‘light tank' soldier assessment without BAE Systems' prototype
The army kicked off its Mobile Protected Firepower (MPF) soldier vehicle assessment (SVA) on 4 January and it is anticipated to continue through to June, Ashley John, director for public and congressional affairs for the Program Executive Office for Ground Combat Systems, told Janes on 27 January. Under the larger programme, both BAE Systems and GDLS are under contract to deliver 12 MPF prototypes to the army and soldiers are slated to test out four vehicles of each variant. However, this testing phase began with vehicles from only one company – GDLS.

“We have received 12 prototypes in total, and four ballistic hull and turrets,” John said. “We will continue to receive the remaining prototypes throughout fiscal year 2021.”

Although John did not disclose which company produced the delivered prototypes, a GDLS spokesperson confirmed that the company delivered its 12th and final prototype to the army at the end of December 2020. GDLS’s delivery completion means BAE Systems has delivered only two ballistic hulls to the service.
https://www.janes.com/defence-news/news ... prototype
theoderich
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Registriert: So 29. Apr 2018, 18:13

Re: US-Army: Fahrzeugprojekte "Infantry Squad Vehicle"/"Light Reconnaissance Vehicle"/"Mobile Protected Firepower"

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New Infantry Squad Vehicle tested at U.S. Army Yuma Proving Ground
Eventually, the Army intends to field 59 ISVs to each brigade, beginning with brigades within the 82nd Airborne Division in May.
https://www.army.mil/article/244249/
Berni88
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Re: US-Army: Fahrzeugprojekte "Infantry Squad Vehicle"/"Light Reconnaissance Vehicle"/"Mobile Protected Firepower"

Beitrag von Berni88 »

General Dynamics hat den Zuschlag für das Mobile Protected Firepower-Programm (leichter Kampfpanzer für die Infantry Brigade Combat Teams) erhalten

https://breakingdefense.com/2022/06/gen ... -contract/
theoderich
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Registriert: So 29. Apr 2018, 18:13

Re: US-Army: Fahrzeugprojekte "Infantry Squad Vehicle"/"Light Reconnaissance Vehicle"/"Mobile Protected Firepower"

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Army approves Milestone C and awards LRIP contract for the Mobile Protected Firepower program

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The Army announced today the award of a $1.14 billion contract to General Dynamics Land Systems, Sterling Heights, Michigan, for the production and fielding of up to 96 Mobile Protected Firepower, or MPF, vehicles. The award comes just days after the Army closed out the MPF middle-tier acquisition rapid-prototyping phase and transitioned to a major capability acquisition program with a favorable Milestone C decision — an incremental step in the Department of Defense’s acquisition process that moves into the production and deployment phase.
During the middle-tier acquisition rapid-prototyping phase, the Army successfully tested and evaluated 24 prototypes during a pandemic.
The MPF will be the Army’s first new design vehicle fielded in over four decades, with first unit equipped planned for late fiscal year 2025.
During the low-rate initial production phase the Army will take delivery of MPF vehicles and conduct production qualification testing to include lethality, mobility, survivability, full-up system live-fire, and reliability, Availability and maintainability testing. Additionally, an initial operational test and evaluation will also be conducted, all leading to the first unit equipped. The award of subsequent low-rate initial production vehicle options will be based on review of cost, schedule and performance metrics defined in the acquisition program baseline.
https://www.army.mil/article/257989/arm ... er_program


General Dynamics Land Systems Wins U.S. Army Competition for Mobile Protected Firepower Vehicles

https://www.gdls.com/news/mpf2022.html






27. Januar 2022

FY 2021 DOT&E Annual Report submitted to Congress

https://www.dote.osd.mil/News/News-Disp ... -congress/

https://www.dote.osd.mil/Annual-Reports ... al-Report/
  • Infantry Squad Vehicle
    Program

    The ISV is an Acquisition Category III program. The full-rate production decision is planned for May 2022 intended to support program objective of 649 vehicles.
    Effectiveness

    The ISV is operationally effective as a troop carrier for tactical transport. During IOT&E, a rifle company successfully employed ISVs over wooded and cross-country terrain to maneuver to their objectives and complete missions. The ISV is quiet, agile, and provides an enhanced off-road mobility capability for a nine-man infantry squad with their personal weapons and equipment. The ISV allows an infantry unit to move over extended distances rapidly, reducing fatigue.
    The ISV is not operationally effective for employment in combat and ESD missions against a near-peer threat, as identified in the Validated Online Lifecycle Threat report. The vehicle lacks the capability to deliver effective fires, provide reliable communication, and force protection. The rifle company equipped with the ISVs did not successfully avoid enemy detection, ambushes, and engagements during a majority of their missions. In order to traverse cross country routes and wooded terrain, the unit was forced to reduce their speed, resulting in slowed movement, or maneuvered on improved routes, negating any element of surprise. During missions, the unit experienced numerous casualties, delaying mission accomplishment and degrading its combat power for follow-on missions. The unit concealed their ISVs and drivers close to the objective and dismounted eight soldiers per vehicle to accomplish missions before recovering their ISVs. This action reduced their combat force, exposed the ISVs and drivers to opposing force attacks, and increased the risk of additional combat losses.

    During missions, personal weapons were not easily accessible on the move, degrading the ability of the squad to quickly react to enemy actions and ambushes. While the ISV can mount a swing arm for an M240 machine gun, the ability for the soldier to efficiently employ the weapon on the move was a challenge because the soldier’s field of fire was hindered by trees, foliage, and other obstructions when extending the swing mount. Protracting the swing mount also interfered with seated soldier egress from vehicle.

    Communication between soldiers, squad leaders, and platoon leader were intermittent and not reliable on the move, degrading their ability to gain and maintain situational awareness at extended range mission between 62 to 300 miles. The ISV does not have a requirement for a mounted communication capability, so each platoon depended on their manpack and leader radios.

    The ISV lacks the capability to carry the required mission equipment, supplies, and water for a unit to sustain itself within a 72-hour period. Units operating for longer durations will need to conduct mission planning, cross level-equipment across the unit, or may require additional ISVs to sustain operations.
    https://www.dote.osd.mil/Portals/97/pub ... 6_CQ%3d%3d
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theoderich
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Re: US-Army: Fahrzeugprojekte "Infantry Squad Vehicle"/"Light Reconnaissance Vehicle"/"Mobile Protected Firepower"

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US Army outfitting Infantry Squad Vehicle with 20 kW laser, DE M-SHORAD deliveries forthcoming
The US Army is integrating a 20 kW-class laser weapon system into its new Infantry Squad Vehicle (ISV) to help soldiers down smaller unmanned aerial systems (UASs), according to the director of the service's Rapid Capabilities and Critical Technologies Office Lieutenant General Neil Thurgood.

The three-star general spoke at the Space and Missile Defense symposium on 10 August about a host of programmes under his purview including directed energy initiatives. At the event, he announced that senior service leaders recently approved the development of an Army Multi-Purpose High Energy Laser (AMP-HEL) prototype that they want completed by the end of September 2023.

Tentative plans involve outfitting General Motors (GM) Defense's ISV with a pallatised 20 kW-class laser weapon system to enable soldiers to down Group 1 and 2 UAS, Lt Gen Thurgood added.
https://www.janes.com/defence-news/land ... orthcoming
  • Soldiers Conduct High Energy Laser Training and Demonstration at Yuma Proving Ground
    YUMA PROVING GROUND, Ariz. (May 26, 2022) -- Designed to protect fixed and semi-fixed sites from drone threats, the Army recently completed its demonstration and training event of a 10kW-class prototype laser weapon system. Known as the Palletized-High Energy Laser (P-HEL), the prototype weapon system is part of an emerging industry of innovative technologies that the Army Rapid Capabilities and Critical Technologies Office (RCCTO), in support of the Joint Counter small Unmanned Aircraft System Office (JCO), is accelerating.
    The RCCTO developed the P-HEL prototype weapon system in a short 10-month period, from contract award to this demonstration at YPG. Next, this effort will lead to the development of a 20kW-class P-HEL prototype weapon system.
    The prime contractor, SAIC is responsible for integrating the prototype C-sUAS 10kW-class HEL weapon System. Liteye Systems and Anduril Industries are providing external sensors, Rocky Research is providing the thermal control and power generation system and BlueHalo is providing the laser system. The 20kW-class HEL is being developed by Radiance Technologies.
    https://rapidcapabilitiesoffice.army.mi ... gh-energy/

Infantry Squad Vehicles Will Prove Costly on the Battlefield (20. Juli 2022)
The Army’s plan for the light division proposes the addition of an Infantry Squad Vehicle for every rifle squad in an infantry brigade. Incorporating squad vehicles could greatly increase infantry mobility, but also incur significant costs. Motorizing the infantry also would limit the tactical deployment of light infantry, further complicate movement control and do little to solve the Army’s greater transportation needs.

Transportation shortfalls have consistently represented the key constraint for large-scale combat operations, as detailed in the Army University Press’ 2018 collection The Long Haul: Historical Case Studies of Sustainment in Large-Scale Combat Operations. Couple that limitation with congestion caused by more squad vehicles on poor or otherwise clogged roads, and the Army’s transportation problem only becomes more untenable.

For these reasons, pooling transportation assets for the new divisions would serve the infantry’s mobility requirement more efficiently while simultaneously allowing for greater movement control and the maximization of transportation assets to move not only troops, but also equipment and supplies.

Difficult Choices

The presence of squad vehicles imposes tactical choices on leaders at echelon. First, a nine-person infantry squad with a vehicle loses two of those soldiers to driving and truck commander duties, reducing the squad’s maneuver elements. Commanders must maintain the vehicles, plan for recovery operations and field maintenance, and also secure the vehicles during combat. So, not only does each vehicle impose a manpower cost, but it also inhibits the tactical methods an infantry formation can employ in combat.

These impositions on how infantry units fight, then, include not only how many soldiers a unit can field, but also how the unit must employ them. The cost also limits where infantry units can deploy. Infantry units no longer will be able to move through severely restricted terrain without leaving their vehicles behind. All this begs the question: What scenario are these mobile infantry units designed for? It would help to look at historical mobility issues and infantry in large-scale combat.
What both the Pacific and European theaters of World War II have in common with today’s planning is the requirement to ship equipment from the homeland to overseas theaters of operation. The increase of rolling stock in the infantry brigades will create more shipping demands that simply may not be met in times of war.

Tactical Limitations

In addition to the transportation issues, light infantry units equipped with Infantry Squad Vehicles will not be able to do what they train to do. The infantry branch has a natural tendency to focus training and combat action on rifle companies fighting on foot. How the infantry fights as part of the maneuver force matters more than how it gets to the battle.

Light infantry formations are dramatically different from Stryker and Bradley vehicle formations, which employ their platforms as fire support assets. Those platforms provide mobility, along with protection and firepower.

By contrast, the Infantry Squad Vehicle offers only mobility, and comes with an increased cost to the infantryman’s survivability. The infantry, when maneuvering on foot, relies on stealth for protection, not armor. Infantry Squad Vehicles will take away that stealth, leaving the infantry easier to find and destroy.

As a result, infantry leaders will have to decide when to use Infantry Squad Vehicles and when to leave those vehicles behind at a rallying point. Of course, the latter requires splitting forces to provide security for those vehicles. Existing infantry brigade combat teams do not have vehicles to consider at all.

If the Army transitions to infantry formations with Infantry Squad Vehicles, doctrine will have to undergo substantial adjustments to account for both the vehicles themselves as well as for the soldiers lost for the fight who instead are at the rallying point securing the vehicles.

It’s still too early to tell what lessons the Army can learn from Russia’s war in Ukraine, but it is evident how effectively Ukrainian infantry, largely fighting on foot, have used antitank fire to defeat Russia’s road-bound mobile and mechanized forces. Russia’s army has many problems, but its inability to deploy light infantry away from their vehicles to attack through restricted terrain and the inability to sustain its mechanized forces seem chief among them.

Mobile and mechanized forces have their advantages—speed, armor protection and firepower. But an army solely made up of these forces carries inherent weaknesses, limitations imposed by those very vehicles that provide advantages in other situations. Just as paper beats rock, the Javelin-toting infantry beats a main battle tank, particularly in the restrictive terrain that characterizes the modern operating environment, whether in Ukrainian cities like Kyiv or in swamps of the Dnipro and Don River deltas.

Pooling Transportation

For the U.S. Army, a better investment in mobility would be structuring the division with more immediately available pooled transportation. This could mean the addition of medium or heavy trucks pooled at division transportation companies, or even a modified Palletized Load System capable of carrying infantry.

This latter idea could consist of a flat rack with a roll cage and seats that could carry up to two squads of infantry. With each Palletized Load System able to move two flat racks, one load system could move an infantry platoon. A single Palletized Load System truck company with 60 trucks could simultaneously transport two brigades, with 27 infantry platoons each. Most important, this would give commanders and logisticians the ability to transport equipment and supplies when the vehicles are not needed to move the infantry.

Pooling transportation at division would give light infantry the mobility it needs while removing the limitations of vehicles in light infantry formations. It would keep the infantry foot-mobile and ready to deploy in time-tested dismounted combat formations. It would keep maintenance and recovery responsibilities within transportation organizations and allow for greater synchronization through movement control.

Simultaneously, adding these transportation assets to the light division allows maximization of transportation assets that would move troops, equipment and supplies.

Simply put, pooling transportation assets for the infantry would both increase light infantry mobility and also assist in solving the Army’s greater transportation efforts.

Maj. Noah Emery-Morris is a military intelligence officer with the 21st Theater Sustainment Command, Kaiserslautern, Germany. Previously, he commanded the military intelligence company of the 1st Armored Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division, South Korea. He also served as brigade intelligence officer for the 2nd Armored Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division, Fort Stewart, Georgia.

Maj. Ryan Hovatter is a Florida Army National Guard infantry officer assigned to the 21st Theater Sustainment Command. Previously, he was a student in the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College Art of War Scholars Program and before that, he was a policy adviser in the Office of the Secretary of Defense.
https://www.ausa.org/articles/infantry- ... attlefield
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