NATO members, led by Poland, have been pressuring Germany to allow the transfer of Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine over the past few weeks.

It now appears that the United States, the United Kingdom and some European allies will send armour to the front lines against Russia, a move that was previously unthinkable.


This article is the opinion of the author and not necessarily that of the UK Defence Journal. If you would like to submit your own article on this topic or any other, please see our submission guidelines


This choice is significant for a number of reasons.

The deployment of advanced Western battle tanks, including the M1 Abrams of the United States, the Leopard 2 of Germany, and the Challenger 2 of the United Kingdom, to Ukraine, has the potential to enhance the capabilities of Ukrainian military forces significantly. These tanks have superior mobility, firepower, and armour compared to the Soviet-era T-72 tanks used by Russian and Ukrainian forces.

While these modern tanks are heavier, which could provide an advantage to the lighter Russian tanks on difficult terrain, the advanced control and navigation systems of the western tanks give them a distinct advantage in combined manoeuvres involving artillery and infantry, including night operations.

An Abrams tank.

Giving Ukraine leverage

By deploying these tanks, Ukrainian forces may be able to breach Russian defences and influence the outcome of the conflict in a significant amount of occupied territory. Additionally, they can be crucial in protecting Ukrainian positions from counterattacks. For Ukraine and its allies, the most important potential of these weapons is that, if they are as effective as anticipated, they might give Ukraine leverage in dictating ceasefire and peace terms to Moscow.

Two things should be noted.

First off, unlike air defence systems or anti-tank missiles, tanks are not purely defensive weapons. They are offensive platforms, and their sending is about Ukraine retaking territory. They are intended to hit Russia’s troops hard in a ground offensive.

Secondly, this decision to send tanks to Ukraine is not the display of fractious democracies it may appear to be. Throughout the weeks of dispute and pressure around Berlin’s reluctance to assist Kyiv, some in Moscow may have heard something different: a West contemplating sending its most capable armour to a state it considered unfit even to discuss NATO membership seriously with a year ago. This shows NATO as a unified bloc.

A Challenger 2 tank.

Red lines becoming increasingly pale

There has recently been a significant shift in how NATO members perceive the risks involved, as evidenced by their decision to send tanks and other weapons to help Ukraine. This action shows that these countries are unconcerned with crossing Russian “red lines,” and it disproves the long-held notion that some forms of NATO assistance to Ukraine might put a nuclear power in danger of being provoked.

Additionally, this choice implies that these NATO members are less concerned about the possibility of an immediate attack by Russia. A testament to this is their willingness to offer supplies that would be urgently required in the event of a conflict, such as the Caesar artillery from Denmark and a sizable number of Leopards from Norway.

These actions imply that NATO members believe that any decisive conflict with Russia will be in Ukraine and that Moscow will not win.

German Leopard 2 Tanks

Caution must be urged

Furthermore, the fact that NATO members are pledging equipment at such a rapid pace, with new announcements being made before the previous ones are implemented, highlights the urgency and seriousness of the situation.

When evaluating the current state of affairs with Russia, caution must be used. It would be dangerous for the West to become complacent if it assumed that Russia had no restrictions on its behaviour. In a similar vein, it is crucial to avoid caving in to Russian threats to use nuclear weapons as leverage. Although Moscow may appear to be in a vulnerable position right now, it’s important to keep in mind that the nature of this conflict is known to change quickly.

It is possible that this discussion is being used to show Moscow that the West is being cautious and respectful of the Kremlin’s actions and is still sensitive to their political concerns as the West continues to discuss the possibility of increasing aid to Ukraine. It is crucial to remember that the situation as it stands now is very different from what was previously conceivable, with Ukraine now in control of advanced NATO technology and Russia appearing to have limited options for retaliation.

It should not be assumed that the conflict is about to end because more Western tanks are heading to Ukraine. The current decisions are a strategic shift rather than a complete reversal of course because the war in Ukraine is likely to last for a considerable amount of time.

George Allison
George has a degree in Cyber Security from Glasgow Caledonian University and has a keen interest in naval and cyber security matters and has appeared on national radio and television to discuss current events. George is on Twitter at @geoallison

263 COMMENTS

  1. I know that it is likely that some here have been in the UK’s Armoured Brigades so are well aware of the amount of training that is needed to reach the level of skill needed to operate complex modern heavy tanks effectively. Would they care to put a timescale on it? Perhaps also giving a time for just driving from A to B, stopping and accurately firing a round?

      • Yes, Let us tell the Russians what to expect in advance when they will arrive and what the timescale is between rounds 😉

        I’m sure Vlad will greatly appreciate this!

        “Momentum is building for a long-awaiting transfer of Western combat aircraft to Kyiv, with at least one NATO country stating publicly it stands ready to respond to Ukrainian requests.”

        • I’m sure that Russian intel is up to that task and I’m pretty sure that we have proudly stated our prowess at firing rounds. Quite whether semi trained Ukrainians will achieve anything like that I doubt.

          Our experience and developed strategies with MBT have grown over decades where we had:-
          Control of the airspace
          Intact transport facilities including usable bridges
          Lots of logistics transport including fuel, especially for the Abrams
          Good access to repair and maintenance facilities
          Highly trained crews in and out of the tanks.

          None will apply to the fighting in Ukraine.

          • I think you’ll find Ukrainian troops to be very quick learners of new equipment as they have already shown to date.

            Providing we supply them with adequate numbers it will be a game-changer and send what’s left of the Russian rapists packing.

            The sooner the better for all western nations and with these next on the shopping list. It only takes one country to get the ball rolling!

            “The Dutch government has said it is ready to consider the delivery of F-16 fighters to Ukraine with an “open mind.”
             
            The position was expressed by Dutch Minister of Foreign Affairs Wopke Hoekstra on January 19, 2022, a day before a meeting of the U.S.-led Ukraine Defense Contact Group in Ramstein, Germany.”

            I never realised these would also be on the cards as well as the Leopards.

          • This is the escalation I’ve been dreading and warning about, ever since the west started supplying Ukraine with weapons.

            These initial numbers of MBTs are likely just the tip of the iceberg, once Leopard 2 tanks are prepared for delivery. 200 is not an unreasonable number, considering how many have been produced of different variants. There will also be sufficient equipment and training, to give the tanks the all arms support they require to survive. Of that we can be sure.

            The Russian propaganda machine is already using the story to prepare their people for an all out war with NATO. Sky News Australia have segments of Russian News programmes warning their people. German panzers once again crossing the Ukrainian Steppe to attack the Rodina and Moscow. This could solve their recruiting problems and lead to full mobilisation, complete with battlefield chemical and nuclear weapon deployment.

            There needs to be an immediate peace initiative to stop this running completely out of control.

          • Meaningful peace talks are a telephone call away. Putin gives up this ‘special operation’ and withdraws.

            The west cannot afford to let Putin gain anything. He has to fail and be seen to fail.

          • That is exactly why they have not taken place. First, all sides need to agree a ceasefire in place. Then start to address each point that ultimately gave us a shooting war. There are just too many to list here. Remember the shooting started back in 2014 or in some places even before that. Polarisation of the ethnic populations started somewhere.

          • Why on earth would Ukraine agree to a ceasefire in place? That’s as good as letting Pootin keep what he has captured! A ceasefire will happen when he pulls back to Orcland.

          • Let me play devils advocate here. They would do it to seek peace, recognise the rights of ethnic Russians to self determination and live free from persecution.
            Any bilateral peace initiative must start with the stated reasons for the conflict. Otherwise it will never end, until the Ukrainians take Moscow and all of European Russia.
            Bugger Putin.

          • I think Pootin has already stated his reasons for this war the cessation of Ukraine as a sovereign state! Funny though isn’t it theOrcs think nothing of flattening any objective they want to take yet the Ukr is refraining from doing the same in Orc occupied land using precision strikes to not cause unnecessary casualties in the ‘ethnic’ population.

          • George, The conditions you mention sound very much like the Minsk agreement, the agreement Merkel, Hollande and the chocolate man sign but have said in interviews they never intended to honour. How can Russian take anyone in the west and talks seriously?

          • You make valid points with reference to the OSCE and the numerous Minsk meetings but things are somewhat different now. Ukraine and Russia (plus Luhansk and Donetsk PRs) have suffered greatly. While most of the contested territories have been devastated and populations displaced from the cities. In addition, western powers of NATO are now preparing to give Ukraine seriously potent capabilities. Giving them the ability to go on the offensive.

            It is likely Ukraine will capture all of Luhansk, Donetsk and possibly Crimea too. There is also the potential to cross over into the Russian heartland, seize additional territory and/or drive on Moscow. With all the calamitous ramifications that would bring.

            Now is the time for all parties to get together and thrash out an acceptable compromise. Leaders from the Donetsk, Luhansk and Crimean regions included. They are central to the peace process. Where do you come from and what do you say Ulya?

          • Thank you George for your reply, to answer your first question, i am Russian. I will not comment on how you think war will go, that become a pointless argument about who has the best propaganda, but we see the cause of war and its out come very different and will never agree, but that is why our sides are at war. I think there will be talks but not for some time, there must be a military solution first, someone must win, someone must loose, one of us will be unhappy. I do not think there can be talks before that anymore, that was tried for many years with no success and there is no trust that the west will honour its word, too many agreements broken or ignored. Sorry for any mistakes, it has been some time since i have used english. Have a very good weekend

          • Ulya, as a Russian, do you think what Russia is doing is justified and do you think NATO is the aggressor? Can you provide me with clear reasons from your perspective. This isn’t an intentionally loaded question I’m just interested in how you view what is happening.

          • Hello Andy,
            I am not going to try and justify the war. I think this war is very stupid and should not be happening but unfortunately I think a war between our blocks was always going to happen, I just did not think it would happen last year.

            As to who I think is agressor, maybe the best way to answer is to ask my own questions

            Why is Ukraine so important to the west?

            Why did Nuland and friends need to make coup in Kiev in 2014, why not wait a few months for election?

            Why did Europe not honour the Minsk agreement?

            Why does the West need to keep moving east to put NATO on our border?

            Why pull out of AMB, INF and open sky’s treaty?

            Why did no Western media ever go to DPR, LPR to actually talk to the people? Maybe this help with western understanding.

            Why did the West never make serious talks with Putin about how we see NATO expansion as a serious security threat? He has been talking about it for a very long time.

          • Hello Ulya,

            Your comments above do indicate we are coming at these issues from what are almost alternative realities. I am curious as to how common this is in Russia.

            Please answer two questions to clarify this.

            In the 30s Stalin murdered between four and eight million Ukrainians. This was one of the ‘excesses’ Khrushchev apologised for when he denounced Stalin in the 50s, although the full numbers were not revealed until the fall of Communism.

            Is this acknowledged in Russia’s education system or is it covered up the way the Turks cover up the Armenian genocide?

            WW2 started when the Russian Empire as the USSR and Nazi Germany decided to carve up eastern Europe between them. You got the NE quarter of Romania, the eastern quarter of Poland, the Baltic States and Finland, although the Finns beat you off at first. The other areas were occupied with such brutality that many there ended up fighting for the Nazis as they were the lessor evil.

            Then we had one year when Britain and France faced the Nazis while Russia supported them with oil and minerals, Then another year when Britain stood alone against the Nazis while Russia supported them.

            Then you fell out with them and changed sides. We then defeated the Nazis with American support.

            Does the Russian Education system acknowledge Russia’s guilt in WW2? The rest of Europe remembers 40-50 million dead and the fact that only one part of the evil alliance that started it got punished.

          • Hello Chris,

            Interesting questions

            I was born after the CCCP collapse so cannot answer with any knowledge of what was learned at school during communist times, I would have to ask my brothers but I did learn about it at school. It was not just Ukrainian who was killed, Stalin was an equal opportunity mass murderer. I am Tatar, my people got killed or exiled, our language and cultue banned and millions of Slav also murdered so to me trying to make a point with just 1 ethnic group is pointless, no one was left out. You could not hide this even during communist times i think, every family would have its own stories of loss, people just would not talk about it.

            Your second question is limited and one sided, yes Stalin made agreement with Hitler, this is common knowledge,
            For 18 months before the war he tried to make agreement with UK and France to make united front towards Hitler and was turned down each time and UK betrayed Czechoslovakia. From memory last time he tried for agreement was just after Hitler occupied Czechoslovakia. This should be easy enough to research yourself. After that Stalin took only option to buy time, we where not in a position to fight war with Germany, Stalin purges had destroyed the army leaders. Do not mistake my words as trying to make excuses for Stalin’s actions, he can never be defended but there are always 2 sides.
            Your question about Russian guilt and punishment, this is a very western question lol, it comes from a sense of moral high ground not earned. Russians know our history, how you say, the good, the bad the ugly.
            Maybe I will take your words about guilt more seriously when western countries punish your politicians for millions of dead and hurt in your recent wars in the Iraq and Afghanistan, Libya.

          • I personally think we were doing the right thing in all those cases and helping to undo all the evil Russia caused in all three of those countries. It is very similar to the evil Russia did via its neo-colonial regime before the Ukrainians freed themselves in 2014 and Russia invaded.

            Trying to compare that to Russia backing Hitler is desperate. If you need to do that it just highlights that Putin is our Hitler today and we need to stop him whatever that takes.

          • So you managed to justify your own actions in the ME by blaming Russia and take no responsibility at all lol. How very western of you. I guess this is why our counties are at war.
            If you want to ‘stop him whatever that takes’ then ask your government to send more than 14 tanks, send all your Army, go volunteer yourself, the options are there for you, commit to the righteous cause Chris

          • Welcome back, Ulya; understand that you are forced by current circumstances to be very circumspect in your commentary. Take care; stay safe. Remember, all conflicts eventually end.

          • Hello FormerUSAF,
            Sorry, why am i forced to be very circumspect?
            I have not been talking here for some time simply because we are at war but i have still been reading as normal. I only comment this time because George comment make me curious

          • Sorry, an assumption, based on a possible 10-15 yr. prison sentence for those daring to critique government policy.

          • Ulya, Thank you very much for your replies to all of us.
            I have tried very hard to understand this conflict from the Russian and Ukrainian viewpoints. My conclusion were either there are unreconcilable differences between you both. Or there are some outside influences at work actively polarising the Ukrainian population along ethnic lines. The reality is likely a little of both. Historical hatreds and old scores to be settled, combined with western influences trying to gain a financial hold in Ukraine. In your opinion is my assessment correct.

            We are told in the media and by politicians. That in Ukraine the right wing neo-fascists groups such as Azov are very small and not influential. Yet reports from before 2014 in the same media, call them a serious threat and accused of persecuting ethnic Russians, Rusyns and Romani. What are you being told and do you have any reports from Luhansk, Donetsk and Crimea?

            Is it OK if I occasionally communicate with you in a public forum like this. Will it cause you any trouble in Russia with the authorities?

            I wish you well and hope you and your family remain safe.

          • Good morning George,

            “Will it cause you any trouble in Russia with the authorities?”. I do not mean to be rude this has made me laugh very much, at first  i think you tried to be funny but now i think you are serious. There is a very different understanding of your view to mine, i will not be sharing state secrets with you simply because i do not know any and you face more risk of being ‘cancelled’ for talking to a orc than i risk for talking to you. It might surpise the world but Stalin is dead, we can speak our mind, there are social media restrictions but 1/ i dont have social media and 2/ we have more freedom of speach than you. Also, my partner is Spanish, if i was going to get in trouble for talking to a west person it would of happened by now ;). But to answer your question, yes i am happy to talk, i try to read this site every day because i enjoy the comment section so will do my best to see you.

            Ukraine
            From what i see Azov, Right sector etc is not talked about or under reported in your media, in mine it is talked about often, from reports i see from DPR/LPR and from what family and tribemens who have been there tell me, Azov etc is central to many concerns, i will be please when they all die and we are clean of them. As for wider Ukraine issue, i am not Slavic so dont have family connection, but Ukraine is made up of many different ethnic groups with different concerns, maybe this should of been sorted out after fall of CCCP but didnt, 7 years of talks did not work so now it will be fixed by war.
            To me Ukraine is only a part of the bigger problem between Russia and west, we simply see the world very different and to me Putin has been talking about these for many years and been ignored so now we have war.
            The west wants to keep its dominance, we want an alternative, our future is south and east, not the west. Because of this war instead of slow move east and a slow walk away from the west it has been dramatic. I have been trying to make this happen for many years and thought it would take many years to achieve, thanks to west action it has happened so totally i am very happy, long term this is better for Russia. Relationship between west and east is dead for a long time, maybe many generations and things will not start to get better until after chinese/american war happens

          • Thank you again Ulya for your very enlightening and honest reply. It is very refreshing to read the opinions of someone on the other side of the divide. I apologise if my assumptions about the degree of authoritarianism in modern Russia was insulting. My honest concern was for your safety, so I’m pleased it is not an issue.

            During the Cold War and my youth, I served in the military. The CCCP and Warsaw Pact were my enemies. Like many others, when the USSR fell without a major European war, I was ecstatic. Hopeful for the future and peace. Not just peace but friendship between distant cousins reuniting after a family feud. Naïve perhaps but for me, Russia has always been part of Europe. Geographically, west of the Urals where the majority of the population live. In imperial times the royal families of Europe were related. Culturally and ethically, we have Judaeo-Christian roots. Even genetically we are very close indeed. Thanks to the exploits and travels of our shared Viking Norse ancestors and natural interactions between neighbours. A tradition I see you have continued with a Spanish partner. I wish you both well.

            Not everyone in Great Britain has ill feelings towards Russian people, I know it is the same in Russia with regards to the British. Our countries are not officially at war, so let us keep these lines of communications open.

            Удачи в будущем, мой друг. Пожалуйста, извините мой плохой письменный русский. Мне сказали, что мой разговорный русский еще хуже.

          • Forgive me, this must be fast reply but it is important for me to say, no offence was taken by me, I like honest questions and replies otherwise we never learn.
            Your Russian is good, better than my English I think.
            I look forward to more talks
            Your friendly orc 😉

          • George, agree w/ your reasoning, including possibly a small buffer zone on border, carved from existing Russian territory, but a drive on Moscow? Sorry to use old terminology, but, ‘a bridge too far.’ NATO would not supply the requisite logistical support, and Putin wouldn’t hesitate to nuke Ukraine and anyone/everyone otherwise involved.

          • Until very recently, supplies have been relatively small scale. But that seems to have changed. Once training and logistic support has been delivered. NATO cannot dictate what separatist militia groups will use it for. Unless they are being supervised.
            Can you guarantee that Right Sector, Azov and the other groups, now officially integrated into the regular army. (Yet very much a separate entity.) Will feel the same way if the opportunity to cross that border presents itself. I’m sure Ulya and other Russians are thinking about this quite seriously. As would we if the roles were reversed. The questions he has asked Andy are very interesting. There are always two sides to an argument.

            If reports coming out of Russia are to be believed. Some oblast local government officials, have reactivated Cold War bunkers and tasked civilian volunteers to construct defences. Crackpot leaders aside, Russians are a fiercely proud and patriotic people, just like us.

          • By the same token why doesn’t Russia recognise the rights of ethnic Chinese living in Outer Manchuria in giving them a vote to return their historical lands back to China? Mmmm let me think.

          • Bugger me mate, I’ve no idea. One problem at a time.
            Just an aside, who the hell would want to return to the hell hole that is communist china. That’s the place where your organs can be harvest if your tissue type is the same as some ill party official.
            Putin may be a demon but the CCP are proper devils. Several orders of magnitude worse.

          • But is China waging aggressive war beyond its borders – Russia keeps on doing this – and threatens European security.

          • That’s going to be a bit difficult. The only reason(s) for this war is Putins distorted belief that Ukraine should not exist in any form as a sovereign and independent country, his hatred of western democracy and freedoms, his contempt for any culture that isn’t nationalist ethno Russian etc. You can’t negotiate with a crocodile.

          • Actually, the best counter argument I’ve seen. Putin and his KGB STASI mindset is half the problem. Of course he is propped up by the real powerbroker Oligarchs.

          • ‘You can’t negotiate w/ a crocodile.’ Sorry, going to have to request permission to reuse that line, under license of course. 😁

          • Yes, even the start date of 2014, the 100th anniversary of the first fiasco; one can almost hear the words of a ghostly Rod Sterling welcoming all to ‘The Twilight Zone’…

          • There is a long, bitter and twisted history to this conflict. It has many similarities to Yugoslavia.

          • George, I am not sure many would share your view. I am fully behind the West supplying Ukraine with weapons that have offensive capability. We should not cave in to Russian aggression each and every time it appears, whether it is in Georgia, Salisbury, Ukraine. NATO exists to oppose Russia and defend the West. Putin’s war must be stopped – a peace initiative would not achieve all that Ukraine wants.
            We need to suply Ukraine with far more tanks – the full 300. Then F-16s..and whatever else Zelensky needs.
            We stood up for Belgium in WW1 and Poland in WW2 – we have moral values.

          • NATO was indeed started to oppose the USSR. A defunct enterprise, assigned to the history books. Yes we stood up for them both and each time there were world wars. Are you perhaps hoping this time there will be a different outcome. Third time lucky.

            People on this forum know better than most that WWIII will be somewhat final. A quick recovery being impossible.

            I’m no pacifist as many of my posts on here will support. Wanting a vast British military infrastructure. The rationale being; peace is best achieved by the deterrent of superior firepower.

            This Russia v Ukrainian (Rus vs Rus) thing is basically unfinished business between former very close USSR comrades. The two nations who have jockeyed for pole position as Europe’s most corrupt regimes. When it comes to post soviet governing culture, they have more “wrongs” in common than “rights.” To include an unhealthy obsession with Stalinist/fascist ill deeds and methods. They are Oligarchist corrupt states with some very shady characters pulling the strings of their puppet leaders.

            Do you honestly believe NATO will not be inextricably pulled into a war. By it’s leaders locked in a virtue signalling competition, with little or no long term planning for peace.

          • My perspective is historical and moral. For the first 16 years of my army service the USSR and the Warsaw Pact were my enemy – and I was ready for WWIII, although not hoping for it.
            Certainly the stakes are high and get higher when the West delivers offensive weaponry but we in the west started doing that some time ago with delivery of HIMARS, MLRS etc. The Rubicon was crossed some time ago.

            If peace talks occur between Russia and Ukraine, then Zelensky would not get all that he wanted – Russia’s obnoxious invasion would be in part at least, rewarded.

            How about peace talks with a wider participation? That sounds like the Munich conference of Sep 1938 to me – and it still did not stop Hitler from further aggression in eastern Europe.

          • It seems we share a similar service history, at least in terms of the era covered. I too trained to face off against the Warsaw Pact and Soviet Russia. Learning as much about the enemy as possible to the point of near obsession in a very specialist area. Quite ironic that my war came in the middle east in the deserts of Saudi, Iraq and Kuwait. Typical!

            I would suggest MBTs are somewhat different to long range rocket artillery. Artillery threatens and can deny ground but tanks have no purpose other than to seize it. I accept in an integrated battlespace it’s a moot point. Also, dug in armour can be a useful defensive asset but it is not their raison d’etre. “Hell for Leather!” Death or Glory. Etc etc.

            Peace talks and appeasement are not necessarily the same thing. If conducted correctly by military minded men. The time for an agreement is now, while neither belligerent has been defeated. As things stand, both are bloodied enough to appreciate what is coming next. A compromise can be found and ideally would be equally disagreeable to both parties. The price of war.

          • Thanks for the comments. Neither leader wants a peace summit, let alone a peace agreement. I saw Zelensky being interviewed by Kay Burley on Sky News yesterday – he said he didn’t trust Putin and that he would not keep his part in any agreement.

            If I was Zelensky I would want: Russian forces out of Ukraine including Crimea; the return of Crimea to Ukraine; cancellation of the documentation relating to annexation of the 4 provinces; reparations in full to repair the whole of Ukraine’s infrastructure; prisoner exchange; surrendering of those suspected of war crimes to face a Court; security guarantees for the future which could include Russia’s acceptance that Ukraine could join NATO.

            So much of that would never happen – Zelensky is in no mood to compromise and his people aren’t either.

            This war will go on and on, probably until Putin leaves office, one way or another.

          • Did you see Ulya’s reply to Andy B. Interesting questions that quite clearly outline the Russian point of view. Left with few alternatives but to invade.
            Unfortunately, it is true what historians say about truth being the first victim of war. It is not always deliberate but always applies to both sides equally. A lack of communication makes matters worse.

            Bringing them both to the UN negotiating table is absolutely vital. As this extends far beyond the Ukraine/Russia borders.

          • Yes, I found Ulya’s reply very interesting and shows the mindset of the Russian hawk. I can’t see the UN managing to get both sides to the negotiating table.

            I also can’t see any leader in the West trying to facilitate this.
            Perhaps China might exert pressure on Putin to withdraw or make peace overtures? But again, perhaps they want to see Russia weakened.

          • Understanding that mindset is crucial if this conflict is to be prevented from turning into something much bigger.

            The only real beneficiary of this utter shambles, will be the CCP and possibly Iran. I can’t imagine either of them wanting the war to end. Don’t know about you but I’m fully expecting them to strike a deal. Acquiring Russian weapon designs and access to Siberian raw materials. In return for mass producing armaments to be shipped overland to Russia.

            This conflict will push them closer together than ever before. I just hope we can keep the Ukrainian militia factions, within their armed forces. From using the MBT’s and IFVs to cross the Russian border.

          • I agree that the beneficiaries of this conflict are the CCP and Iran – and that means they will not want to see Russia negotiate a peace deal. The deal you suggest may well happen and would prolong the war – depressing.
            Russia will need help (from China) patching its economy which must have been mauled by western sanctions and greatly increased military expenditure.

            Ukraine is struggling to reclaim the 20% of territory it has lost – it has no combat power to cross the border into Russia – and it knows that the retribution would be terrible for doing so, possibly including the Russian use of WMD. Sneaky, deniable attacks on the odd airbase in Russia, will doubtless continue.

          • The weak Ukrainian government cannot control the country. It has many factions and little oligarch empires to contend with. Not least of which are the former C14 and Azov leadership, in high ranking military and local government positions.

            You will recall that in Feb/March last year, Zelenski sacked the pro-Russian military leaders left over from Red Army days. Replacing them with all manner of dubious friends and leaders of his oligarchs private armies. He also was desperate enough to legitimise all the guard militias and bring them into the army. Now well trained by British troops and others. They have a completely different agenda to the stated official policy. A quick browse of their history and intentions is most enlightening. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S14_(Ukrainian_group) The reference section is a trip down the rabbit hole. Keep your tin foil skull cap handy.

            100 MBT’s in the hands of the militias pose no threat to Russian territory. But that is the tip of the iceberg. It is only a field test for the logistical support needed. There is talk of numbers exceeding 500 Leo 2 alone, with F16s for top cover and more advanced mobile anti-air weapons systems already being supplies. NATO politicians are competing in the virtue signalling “Arms to Ukraine Steeplechase.” That level of integrated western armour, would be sufficient for a determined try at Moscow. Who knows how far would they need to go, before Russia decides enough is enough.

            This is just me exploring the worst case scenario. Bringing the nationalist sub culture out of the shadows and into the mix. The neo fascists are still there. Gaining combat experience and recruiting from the gung-ho youth. We just don’t hear about it.

          • Thanks George. Ukrainian society is far from perfect and I was aware of the historic corruption and the fascist labels attached to extreme nationalists.
            Perhaps the least worse option is the most pragmatic (and better) option ie for Zlensky to have sacked pro-Russian Ukrainian commanders and replacing them with somewhat dubious but patriotic successors.
            I would be surprised to see as many as 500 Leo2s in Ukraine – and F-16 supply is not ‘a given’. But it is surprising that Moscow’s response to the announcement about western tanks has been somewhat muted – Putin is keeping his powder dry until they arrive in theatre, I guess.

          • Graham, forgive me that this is so delayed, but how are my questions a ‘Russian hawk’?
            I read here time after time of westerners trying to understand Russian actions and then coming to your own conclusions, but your conclusions are based on a western mindset and a western view of the world, yet when a Russian gives you a point of view it is dismissed as being hawk because it does not fit your view. All very interesting to me. One reason I read western media and sites like this is to try and understand your view, even if I don’t agree, I wonder how many westerners do the same.

          • Ulya, If you are opposed to Putin’s war, then I should not have called you a hawk. So I apologise for that. I served in the British Army for 34 years and for some of those years I was in West Germany as a member of 1 (BR) Corps, facing 3rd Shock Army GSFG. I was a military opponent of the USSR and the Warsaw Pact. Yet I fully respected the USSR’s phenomenal role in the Second World War – the Great Patriotic War. Facism would not have been defeated without the Red Army. Your people (military and civilian) suffered terribly at the hands of the Nazis.
            Yet today your political leader wages aggressive war against Russia’s neighbour, as Hitler did. Putin shares many psychological characteristics to Hitler.
            I cannot identify with Putin’s world view, his view on Ukraine (its people and its leadership), his attempt at creating some glorious legacy and his callous disregard for his soldiers who are being sent into battle often poorly led, poorly trained and with some poor equipment.
            I side with Ukraine, but accept that they are not a perfect society and that there is corruption (as there is in Russia).
            I wish that Ukrainian and Russian mothers did not have to mourn their dead sons, and that the war concludes soon and that peace is restored.
            I will continue to listen to your views and will try to be more understanding of them. I am pleased that you post your views on a western site and that you learn of our collective views on the war. I should be more understanding of your point of view. That way we all develop as human beings. I send you and your family my best greetings – and hope you are not called to serve in this terrible war. Я посылаю вам и вашей семье мои самые лучшие приветствия – и надеюсь, что вы не призваны служить в этой ужасной

          • Thank you for your reply, you make me smile regarding your service in West Germany, I have 5 brothers, all much older than me, all have been in military, the oldest 2 based for some time in East Germany maybe at some time you faced off against each other (I think that is correct term).
            I have always supported the LPR/DPR but was all so a big supporter of Minsk agreement, to me it kept Ukraine whole but protected ethnic Russian but I have lost any faith of future agreement with the west. I do not think westerners truly understand the disappointment many Russian feel when Merkel and co admitted they never planned to honour this agreement, in the west this is dismissed as being unimportant but here it means we wasted 8 years and let thousands of people in the republics die waiting for the west to do its part and as more and more stories come out about actions of Azov, right sector etc against ethnic Russian it becomes worse and prooves Putin was righ, again, something the west likes to ignore. Now there can be no peace on western terms, no agreement, no faith the west will honour its word.
            Thank you for your words in Russian, God willing this will be over soon.
            Уля Мустафина

          • Hi Ulya, I can see how Russians would wish for the Russian-speakers of the Donbas to live their lives free from interference and violence. It was a tragedy that fighting broke out in 2014 between Russian seperatists and the Ukraine Army and then that it escalated following reinforcement from Mother Russia, and many more lives were lost.

            A tragedy too that the Minsk agreement did not work out following breakdown by both sides of a ceasefire.

            Years later, President Putin assessed that the only way to solve this situation was to launch a full-scale invasion, which I do not agree with. The brutality and loss of life has been appalling. Russian soldiers are suffering as well as Ukrainian soldiers and civilians. Many non-military targets are being hit.
            Brutality by ill-disciplined troops is much in evidence.
            A peace agreement seems unlikely as neither side trusts each other to conduct effective negotiations and then to honour any arrangement.

            Most expect a Spring offensive by your army. It will go badly for your army. Many more lives, mainly Russian, will be lost.

            Russia’s reputation and image is bad. Russia is weakening itelf. More countries are joining NATO. Russia’s economy and European countries economies are suffering. Many western nations will continue to supply Ukraine with military equipment and munitions of ever greater capability.

            Perhaps only Putin can end this war by withdrawing his forces or leaving office. I can see no other way to end it.
            Best wishes to Russians who want peace. Наилучшие пожелания россиянам, которые хотят мира

          • Si Vis Pacem, Para Bellum (apologies in advance to my Latin instructor). Always subscribed to that philosophy; always will in the future. 👍👍

          • I see you were looking out of the window too, during the Latin lessons. Oh the benefits of a classical education. Class will conjugate the verb PHUQ.

          • God in Heaven. NATO was never brought into being to oppose the SOVIET UNION, it was created to defend NATO MS, BEFORE the Warsaw Pact was created.

            It might come as a surprise but, the West will not always be remembered as the good guys.

            In the meantime, let’s help the AUK kick 7⃣ bells out of the Russians.

          • Straight from NATO website.
            Why was NATO founded?The North Atlantic Alliance was founded in the aftermath of the Second World War. Its purpose was to secure peace in Europe, to promote cooperation among its members and to guard their freedom – all of this in the context of countering the threat posed at the time by the Soviet Union. The Alliance’s founding treaty was signed in Washington in 1949 by a dozen European and North American countries. It commits the Allies to democracy, individual liberty and the rule of law, as well as to peaceful resolution of disputes. Importantly, the treaty sets out the idea of collective defence, meaning that an attack against one Ally is considered as an attack against all Allies. The North Atlantic Treaty Organization – or NATO – ensures that the security of its European member countries is inseparably linked to that of its North American member countries. The Organization also provides a unique forum for dialogue and cooperation across the Atlantic.

          • Yes, to counter the threat, oppose as in opposition suggests something much stronger. Semantics dear, semantics.

          • Both you and George make excellent arguments; perceive wisdom in both POV. 🤔 War is both somewhat messy, and disconcerting. when both sides hold the means to end civilization. Hope we don’t have to test the validity of that last statement. 🤞

          • Amen to that brother I’ll pray we never find out. I’m an atheist but always hedge my bets. Go figure.

          • Although I never occupied one, my understanding is there are relatively few totally committed atheists in foxholes.

            Instead of labeling people as atheists or agnostics, I prefer the term pre-religious. My limited perspective on Christianity is it functions like life insurance; you would wish to delay the event as long as feasible, but someone will eventually cash in the policy. Guaranteed. 🤔

          • Thanks mate. George and I will surely agree to disagree.
            I often think back to the origin of WW2. Appeasement failed to stop Hitler’s war machine and I doubt he would also have been persuaded to negotiate at peace talks at the point his armoured forces had seized 20% of Poland.

          • Sir. NATO does not exist “to oppose Russia.”

            NATO exists to defend NATO States.

            However, in my little shop in Grasmere last night, I asked someone where she was from. I then introduced myself in my best Latvian; she was a tad shocked and asked me if I was Latvian, I replied no, ah, you are English. Nope, I’m British, I was born in Germany, her head is scrambling.

            Then you are German! Nope, I’m British and explained in English that I was the son of a British soldier (Welsh) and English mother.

            As we talked, she said something quite startling for me, the war in part is down to the UKR in that they’ve done, allegedly, what the Latvians have done to their domestic Russians, fact.

            In the meantime, I think the Chally is the wrong tank for the UAF and we should buy a Div’s worth of Leopard armour with all arms Div support.

            And gift them our Tranche 1 tiffies, fitted for and with weapons, for the missile pain they can inflict on the Russians; and long may it last.

          • You take issue with my sentence “NATO exists to oppose Russia and defend the West”.
            NATO was founded in 1949 to oppose the Soviet Union (by deterrence, not fighting) and its aggressive expansionist stance westwards, which resulted in them dominating many eastern European countries, cancelling democracy there and imposing communist regimes and stationing troops in their countries for over 45 years.

            NATO today is a counter to Russia, NATOs forces being deployed in eastern European states (eFP) to provide deterrence and reassurance to those nations who were once dominated by the USSR. I am not sure my sentence was so wrong.

            I think you met one of the few pro-Russian Latvians around. What exactly did she accuse Ukraine of? Badly treating Russian speakers in the Donbas?

            A rough parallel is the friction between Greek and Turkish Cypriots, Nicosia’s growing closeness to Greece (not disimilar to Kyiv’s growing closeness to NATO an dthe EU) – the result a brutal Turkish invasion – Republic of Cyprus has still lost 40% of its territory.

            Chally is a good tank for Ukraine – great armour, great gun, solid combat reputation, fuel efficient and less maintenance intensive than Abrams. Why do you say otherwise? Better would be Leopard though – we got the ball rolling on Leo deliveries by offering Challys.

            Why should UK buy a division’s worth of Leo2s for Ukraine? Thats about 200 tanks. Where would we get them from? Leo2-owning nations. It is for them to gift their tanks…and Div support? I presume you mean equipment for armoured infantry, tube and rocket artillery, combat engineers, signals units, maintenance units….That is impossible. Or did you mean that kit for the British Army?

            Tranche 1 tiffies? To me a tiffy is a REME artificer but I am sure you mean Typhoons. I think they want F-16s, though.

          • Peace initiative?
            Sure. Putin started the war.
            He can finish it quickly and simply.
            Just withdraw from Ukraine.

          • Devils advocate time. Did he, and what is Ukraine?
            Who overthrew an elected pro-Russian government?
            What about the Luhansk and Donetsk peoples republics, who invaded them?

            Is the entire tihs show worthy of WWIII.

          • I think using the term ‘elected ‘ when describing a pro Russian government is being disingenuous. Russia has had a long and nasty history of interference in Ukrainian affairs . That said however, the ‘yellow revolution ‘ was a popular uprising by the Ukrainian public against a government that was really only a cipher for the Kremlin, it wasn’t any different than the popular uprisings against the governments of Honecker, Jarolelski, Ceaucescu etc in Eastern Europe during the late eighties, early nineties. But, and as you’ve alluded to above, Putins stasi/KGB mindset and memory of East Germany falling to civil protest meant that him sending in the tanks was inevitable, firstly to Luhansk/ Donetsk, then Kyiv.

            I’ve no doubt that Ukraine has experienced problems with corruption, this however is likely to be a hangover from old Soviet times with oligarchs trying their best to cling on. The desire of the new Ukrainian government and its people to look westwards towards Europe was a clear expression of its desire to rid itself of old Soviet/Russian interference and corrupt politics. That is their inalienable right.

            Perhaps nothing is worth WW3. But freedom and sovereignty are sacrosanct. If Russia isn’t stopped at the borders of Ukraine, they’ll have to be stopped at the borders of Poland, Romania, Czech Republic etc. And that will mean WW3.

          • Thank you for the detailed reply. It is appreciated. As is the reply from Ulya, have you seen it.

          • It’s reverse speak. Like bravery tihs is brown and runs down the trouser leg when the going gets tough. Unless parachuting, then it appears to defy gravity and travels upwards.

          • Does seem perhaps a little eerily reminiscent of WW I, including trench warfare and the British first introduction of (then prototypes, now modern) MBTs, forecasted then and now to be a game changer. Don’t know whether the TV series ‘The Twilight Zone’ ever made it across the Pond in syndication, but it would be a good plotline. Hope this dust-up falls short of the four-year, twenty million-casualties mark; the West has other potential crises to address.

          • You ask a question and then, in a follow up, answer it. For the past year the Ukrainians have demonstrated rapid development of their forces and command structures and adapted to a wide range of new weapon systems with aplomb. Russia has concentrated from the outset of the ‘special operation’ on killing civilians and committing war crimes.

            The overview supplied above is another in long a series of peculiar interpretations, always negative, of the issues facing Ukraine.

            Do you condemn the aggression by Russia on Ukraine?

          • Er, Russian intel? They did well didn’t they on their initial planning phase for the invasion of Ukraine 😂😂😂

      • I know you are trying to take the p out of me, fat chance, but do you really think that the Russians are not aware of this kind of information? Do you think its secret or classified or something?

        Its me, plus I suspect many readers here, that don’t know and might find it of interest in a good defence forum like this. You know, spread a bit of hard earned knowledge.

        Instead, you and others below just ignore the opportunity to educate others and go for the trite option.

        • Odd that you’d mention spreading hard earned knowledge and educating others when all that you’ve done since before the Russian invasion began is spread baseless myths, lies and propaganda straight from the Kremlin.

          Not an iota of what you’ve ever posted is knowledge, it never stands up to any scrutiny.

        • The thinking on display in your comment to Jim is peak troll. How do you know what you don’t know? What do you need to know? Why? Go and find out, consult the internet. Don’t play innocent.

        • Oh my, your pulling them right out of your arse at the moment! Your posts are now desperate and flaccid, get a grip or the low flying turret display team is on the cards for you my son!

    • Why would we supply answers to a Kremlin mole and Putinbot?
      I think the correct responses is get knotted mate. Or stick your question up your a**e.

    • You can’t compare the amount of time Western tank crews spend training anyway. The Ukrainians are likely to send already experienced tankers to cross-train on new tank types, and like all training for Ukraine, it will be accelerated. Who knows, John? It may have already happened.

    • In fact operating the challenger technically will take about 6 weeks, driving, gunnery using the more modern optics and new loading methods, basic driver/mech stuff! It’s the combat tactics which take time to be proficient at, which isn’t actually a problem for the Ukrainians as they have a years worth of combat experience thanks to Putin and his Jimmy Saville plastic military, therefore you will see a fully crewed Chally/etc on the ground within 6-8 weeks. Anyway, why, do you have a problem with us supplying the Ukrainians my little English patriot?

  2. I was thinking about the furnishing of Ukraine with Leopard 2 Tanks (hopefully A6 and not A4) which got me thinking about the use of Leo2 by Turkey in Syria at the village of Al Bab where they lost 10 of them (Battle of Al Bab). Anyway after such a heavy loss in armour to Jundies in flip flops , Ankara went to the Ukraine and purchased the rights to build their Zaslin active protection system which they then renamed as Akkor-Pulat and claimed to be Turkish. Anyway the Turks have already fitted their Leo 2 tanks in Syria with the Zaslin/ Akkor-Pulat, so I wonder will Kyiv be doing similar with their Leopard 2s seeing as the Turks (and no doubt with a few Ukrainian engineers) have already done all the hard work of fitting their Leo2s out with the APS

    • A little more on how the Zaslin works:

      “”Zaslin is one of the more “crude” hard-kill active protection systems on the market, relying on multiple explosive “tubes” that are normally retracted into the side of a vehicle on which it is being installed. When in a high threat area, the tube is extended, and a radar in the tube is activated, searching for a target. When a threat is detected by radar, the tube detonates, creating a wave of debris that destroys or weakens the projectile. Zaslon’s creators say it is effective even against kinetic energy rounds, but this is doubtful…However, the nature of Zaslon makes it an ideal candidate for retrofitting to existing vehicles. Zaslon doesn’t require an additional turret-mounted radar module, and the Zaslon modules are typically placed on the hull rather than the turret, so additional strain on turret drive (as seen with Trophy on the M1 Abrams) is not imparted. Ukrainian sources also state that Zaslon’s simple “detonate” nature is faster than directed active-protection systems like Trophy, as the “hard kill” countermeasure does not need to turn and aim at a target first.””

      • Fantastic work Farouk. Lets hope the Chally’s get some tbh. Given their small numbers survivability is key to their effectiveness.

        • They should get reactive armour and possibly an APS although I doubt it in the timeframe. Delivery is reported to be by March by Alex Chalk deputy defence minister. No time for APS but reactive armour and fully serviceable vehicles driven by hopefully elite Ukranian tanker crews.
          I’m sure the UA will be delighted to have some tanks that are hard hitting, resilient and not equipped with the Russian turret ejection system.

      • Yes, very good work and well presented. From what you have written, it seems that Zaslin is even more deadly to accompanying infantry than Trophy. It should give considerable pucker factor to section commanders wishing to use the infantry telephone on the back of MBTs. I assume Leo 2 still has such a thing to cut down on radio chatter.

        • Given how the Turkis army were using their tanks in Syria (i.e. without any infantry support), then I guess they’re not so worried by that!
          But, if the Ukrainians are benefitting from their western combined arms training, then I imagine they’ll certainly be feeling at least some moderate pucker…

    • From jane’s

      A set of electro-optical (EO) sensors is under development for the EuroTrophy active protection system (APS) that will enable it to operate without activating its phased-array doppler radars, Dan Kalfus, managing director of EuroTrophy GmbH, announced at Defence IQ’s International Armoured Vehicles (IAV) 2023 conference in London.

      The development follows work in Israel to equip Merkava Mk 4 main battle tanks and Namer armoured personnel carriers with a variant of the Trophy-HV APS that also utilises EO sensors.

      Technical details regarding the EO sensors – dubbed ‘Othello’ – were not released, but it was disclosed that they can be used in conjunction with or in place of Trophy’s Elta EL/M-2133 doppler radars.

      Pending further information from the manufacturers, Janes

  3. So it does seems that the UK deciding to give 14 Challenger 2’s has resulted in multiple uncorking of some bottles. But mainly all in lots of 14;s which will not really assist the Ukraine to actually roll the Russians back to the pre 2014 Borders in the East.

    I think it is now our turn to turn over another card in this game of MBT Top Trumps.

    So it seems we do actaully have another 75 C2 Tanks stashed away somewhere in Non Operational Long Term Storage which we didn’t scrap.I dare say they have been canabalised to blazes but given the amount of work required to upgrade to C3 they are essentialy hulls.

    That is in addition to the 227 we have that are presently operational or in the operational reserve.

    So why not put our Big Boys Pants on and do a bit of creative thinking. I think we have an opportunity to really help the UA, encourage others to do likewise and gain up to date, real time experience of what we really need for the C3 upgrade.

    We use the 75 Non Operational ones to start the conversion process which allows us to mainatian our present Operational strength and we send the UA say 56 C2’s instead of 14. We just need to be building Ammunition and a spares and repar facility.

    • In reply to Rodney let’s see how many additional tanks come from Leopard users at 5 have promised then so far, but anyway there are only so many that Ukraine can absorb for a while till training seriously builds up so what will be over 50 at the moment most like is a good start others will follow too.

      In reply to wolf I think Ukraine announced early this month it has agreement with about 6 foreign Companies to liaise on external military production. Few details were understandably given mind so not sure exactly who and what is envisaged but I suspect ammunition for certain.

        • The offer of four Leopards is, like the U.K.’s offer of fourteen Challenger 2’s, essentially political and helps smaller, but better supplied countries with Leopards to take the step to provide these. It’s symbolic but isn’t unimportant.

        • I wonder where they will all muster for upgrading and crew familiarity. It would need to be in Germany or somewhere very close. If anyone knows, please don’t post it on here.

      • These are the latest estimates I have been able to find.

        Germany – 14 2A6

        Poland – 14 probably 2A4. Poland has 105 2A5, 102 2A4 with 45 of the latter upgraded to the level of Leopard 2PL.

        Spain – 12 2A4s seem to have been allocated with general plans to transfer all 53 2A4s in storage. Spain has 219 2E and 108 2A4 (the 53 in storage).

        Netherlands – they plan to buy out and transfer to Ukraine all 18 of their own former 2A6NL, currently leased from Germany.

        Portugal – 4 2A6PO tanks, out of 37 available.

        Norway – allocates eight Leopard 2A4NO tanks, out of 53 available (16 of which are in storage).

          • The Germans can still supply spares and refurbish them given sufficient incentive, cash and time.

            I just hope really good NBC air filtration is given top priority. Few weapons strip a tank squadron of it’s vital infantry support like G, GV and V agents. Even Q, HD and T mustard gases would cause something of a reluctance to debus from the IFV/APC. Certainly a good quality test for the hatch seals.

            What the situation calls for more than anything else, is a serious peace imitative. In a location well up wind from any advancing Panzer formations.

          • Very interesting hypothetical scenario; would certainly accelerate the timeline to at least a tactical nuke exchange. 🤔😳

          • Could they not get refitted, maybe using others as spare parts to get a few dozen to Ukraine in time for spring fighting season?

        • Suddenly the man who ‘doesn’t know anything’ has a detailed breakdown of several western countries holdings and models and their current offers of Leopard tanks for Ukraine. I do wish you would slither back under your rock.

      • Well what do we expect, I am by no means jingoistic but let us be quite honest about this. For over 200 years our poor, dilapidated, self loathing country has actually been the moral and militarily unyielding backbone to all of European freedom.
        If we are prepared to lead they will follow, they have too much to lose if they don’t.
        As for Canada, I have a large number of family over there and to be honest their contribution compared to their GDP is pitiful.
        Those previous Generations would be ashamed and ask why did they bother.

        • Canada seems to be the 4th or 5th largest contributor to Ukraine aid (vastly higher than France or Italy among G7 nations).

          Percentage-wise it is among the top contributors who are not direct neighbors of Ukraine (who are obviously contributing more out of immediate necessity). Excluding states such as Poland, Czech Republic, and the Baltics who are directly threatened and would thus rather the Russians be stopped in Ukraine because they might be next, the top contributors by GDP were (1) Norway (2) UK (3) tied US and Canada. Everyone else was less than 2/3 that, usually a lot less. Figures as of end 2022, obviously.

          • I maybe should have clarified that the Canadian contribution in terms of being a member of NATO is pitiful.
            Nowhere near the 2% required. So they are giving lots of aid to UA but only 4 tanks !
            Canada has an amazing military History (I’m related to lots of the participants from Winnipeg, Manitoba and Newfoundland).
            Canada has a massive coast on 3 Oceans, colossal natural resources and the 10th highest GDP in the world.
            But only 1.27% of GDP is spent on defence which is less than Bulgaria, Albania and Montenegro which are some of the poorest countries in Europe.
            Shameful. Sorry but it is.

          • Well, I agree Canada’s NATO contribution is quite low. We were discussing Ukraine, however. Perhaps if Canada had twice the NATO contribution (2%) it could donate eight tanks instead of four… Given the US has about 20x the GDP of Canada and over twice the contribution, presumably it is giving 40x as many tanks and 160 are going? Hmm, no, it seems to be sending 30. Well, perhaps the contribution is not that far off, given the relative sizes of their economies then? 4 tanks is certainly a much bigger percentage of Canada’s tank force than 30 is of the US force…

            Such silliness aside, of course, the US contribution has been huge. The two big contributors to Ukraine are the US (in military and other aid) and the EU institutions (in vital financial aid), with Poland and UK also very important.

            While Canada’s NATO contribution has been weak, one should also look at this with a certain degree of realism. There are tfour types of NATO members: the ones that are faced by direct existential threat (e.g. Baltics or Poland), the ones faced by a credible threat of land and tactical air attack (e.g., Germany or Norway), the ones at risk in a wider european war (e.g., UK, France, Italy) and the ones that are mostly at risk if the war spirals into global conflict (Canada, USA, to some extent Spain out on the periphery of Europe, etc.). The US has massive military bases across the world and its role as “leader of the west,” while Canada does not. As a result, it’s not entirely unrealistic that Canada would slack off; the fact that it has stepped up as much as it has on Ukraine in pure dollar amounts of aid and in early training assistance if not in number of weapon systems (though recent commitments of air defense etc may be helpful…) is reasonable impressive, although driven in part by domestic concerns due to the number of Ukrainians living here.

          • Honestly I don’t know where to start. There are not 4 types of NATO membership there is only one.
            Every member is obligated to Article 5 an attack on 1 is an attack on all.
            Which means if you get attacked every other comes to help you and as Canada has arguably the longest coastline in NATO which borders directly with Russia is a bit silly to slack off.
            We can only send 4 Tanks but that is quite a lot considering how few we have compared to others.
            Talk about thin ice, yes you are right it is probably about 5% of your total Tank fleet which is probably about 80 of which half are operational so say 40 (10%).
            And that is to defend the 2nd largest Nation on Earth by land mass, which contains a huge % of the worlds resources.
            Just under 10 million square km.
            Or put another way if you have 40 operational tanks that is 2 to defend Manitoba and poor old Nova Scotia gets 2 wheels and a track.
            The largest coastline of any country on Earth and an economy largely dependant on exports. Defended by 11 frigates and 4 submarines. Well at least you have made a good choice to opt in with Australia and build 15 CCS. Now stop being a bunch of lovely, friendly, relatives and pay your Bar Bill.
            Raise Defence to over 2% GDP, increase the size of your Army, Navy, Airforce, stop freeloading of your southern neighbours and think about joining AUKUS.
            Describing Canadian defence expenditure as Weak is an understatement.
            On the other hand there is some hope. As a proud British Scot and a fellow subject of HM the King I can admire you for at least still knowing how to try to valiantly defend an undefendable military position. So there is hope !
            Yes I know the U.K took its foot off the Gas post Cold War, but we do seem to have turned the corner and no one can say we haven’t stepped up to the mark with Ukraine.

          • Ahh! All good issues you bring up. You are referring the the Canadian public who don’t care about the armed forces. When the public do talk about it they criticize it without having any knowledges. So funding rises and falls.

            Canada‘a contribution to the war in Ukraine has been quite robust. 200 Senator APC, 39 brand new APC, 4 leopards for training and combat, anti missile and aircraft defence systems being purchased ukraine for $500 million. The list goes on.

            We also have 10,000 vacancies in the forces so retention is a big issue.

            The fed gov has funded many upgrade and procurement Projects( too many to mention here) which is good news. Some were pre invasion and some they pulled the trigger on post invasion. F-35 is one of them.

            Joining AUKUS would be a bonus and I am sure there is something a foot there.

            Surveillance in North America is handled by NORAD. Our American cousins praise the air surveillance we have in play but it needs additional resources.

            We have 12 Frigates, 4 subs, 12 minesweepers and 3 OPVs . 3 more are being built.

            .

          • All of which is …………
            Very noble, politically very PC but not enough nor appropriate.
            Canada is part of a very long term bunch of countries which are bound together by common principles. And OMG have our forefathers sacrificed for those.
            Quite simply you have a Navy which is completely inadequate to defend you, never mind project force or support allies.
            An Army which is equipped to protect, well nothing really !
            And an Airforce which doesn’t see the need for 5th generation Aircraft when everyone else is marching towards 6th generation.
            The 15 new Frigates are a sticking plaster on 30 years of under investment, fudge, buck passing and relying on others to do the work. They will be very good but given previous experience will not be adequately updated and not followed up to ensure continuity of production.
            The worst insult I’m can think of is Canada makes U.K. defense spending and commitment actually look good.

            And I am a fan.

          • Fortunately all the things you laid out are being worked on with some alacrity. The chief of defence staff has been doing his job effectively. I agree that most Canadians do not take defence seriously although Ukraine has changed that

            The Canadian Armed Forces is still an affective combat force that can deliver in support of its Allies in a combined role or alone. It does need more staff and more equipment.

            Canadian planes are in the UK now providing supply runs to the Baltics-Ukraine. Also surveillance flights as part of NATO missions.

          • And I completely forgot. Canada has a Mechanized batalion as a lead NATO nation in Latvia. Has been since 2018.

          • No. You are fundamentally wrong.

            Article 5 is not an all for 1 and 1 for all.

            Article 5
            Edit
            The key section of the treaty is Article 5. Its commitment clause defines the casus foederis. It commits each member state to CONSIDER An armed attack against one member state, in the areas defined by Article 6, to be an armed attack against them all. Upon such attack, each member state is to assist by taking “such action as [the member state] DEEMS necessary, including the use of armed force, to restore and maintain the security of the North Atlantic area.” The article has only been invoked once, but considered in a number of other cases.

            You have to love verbs, right?
            To consider.
            To deem… necessary

            My love for grammar!

            Adjectives!
            Necessary

            To consider, what the MS deems necessary..

            You’re 100% sure all the Musketeers are turning up, right?

          • Of course they won’t all turn up. But as always we will which means we need to be well armed and able to work with the others that do
            Just remember always go to war over scraps of paper, one of which is why we and the US are supporting UA. We both signed a bit of paper.

            Oh and in most cases Article 5 has been assessed by a matter of degrees. Salisbury incident was one, 9 – 11 was another but an attack on a NATO country is way above those.

          • Er. An NBC attack TWICE on the UK is OK, let it ride? Black Swan, right?

            However, a physical attack on America, which, Tom Clancey had predicted 15 years earlier and for which the USMIL was unprepared, was an Article 5?

            This Country needs a clean out of Russian linked money and that includes all the lawyers that support them, and more than 1 or 2 Con MPs that party at the Oligarchs Italian retreats.

            Let’s just hang Bluffer tomorrow and save TAXPAYERS money on his defence.

          • Is this a joke!? Who is contributing more than anyone else combined. As usual Canada is a complete joke as are most of the other countries you mentioned 8 million and a half artillery rounds someone has contributed more than everyone else combined so let’s just stop puffing ourselves up about who is doing what. NATO and the EU have completely fallen on their ass as far as contributions. You were warned. There’s a reason Russia is in Ukraine and that’s because the Europeans were weak.

          • Been reading your books again nobber or just looking at the pictures and coming up with bollocks as usual?

          • Ahem do you mind ?
            Not all of NATO has fallen down on their bums. Poland hasn’t, Norway hasn’t and my dear old creaking country hasn’t 🇬🇧 (not in the EU). Training 1000’s of UA soldiers since 2014, 1000’s of NLAW, Starsteak and Javelin missiles. MLRS, APC, M109, SP90 etc, etc. And who embarrassed the US, and Germany to get their fingers out and give the UA modern MBT’s ?
            It may only be 14 CR2’s but that is 10% of our fleet and I can honestly say it is a force multiplier.
            Oh and in terms of NATO Defence budgets as % of GDP Greece is top of the pile, US 2nd, we are 4th and the Poles just signed new contracts which may well put them on Top PDQ (they will have by far the largest armoured force in Western Europe).
            And in terms of total £$€’s Defence expenditure the U.K is 2nd to US, it is about 8% of US but we are a far smaller economy. In terms of GDP ours is comfortably over the 2% NATO requirement and we seem to increasing it gradually.
            In addition to the stated Defence Budget the Kit given tomUA has come from U.K stocks, purchases from abroad to donate and has been paid for from U.K. Treasury reserves as have the replacement backfill to stocks.

          • The US decision to supply Abrams had absolutely nothing to do with the UK’s offer of Challengers. It was done to force Germany to provide Leopards since Scholz was using lack of Abrams as an excuse not to provide the Leopards.

          • Bluff and bluster. We don’t spend 2.3% on pure Defence – the Cons rolled the security services into that figure.

            Not sure stock given has been replaced.

            The Septics are circa 300 000m
            We are circa 70 000 – perhaps a quarter, maybe a fifth smaller.

            Heavens, with your grasp of Maths, I’d hazard Rupert Guards or something like pretentious public schoolboy. Go to sleep.

          • I think you need more SIB training.

            The pants found in his dirty laundry basket, given the inverted puckering of his sh!t smothered spincter were of the lesser known type of ‘skiddies’

            Here the training ends.

      • The 4 tanks are ready to go and will be used for training for the Ukrainians. More Leopards will follow. Canada has a strategic airlift but not like the US or UK so that is what can be managed right now.

        Canada has donated 200 Senator APCs recently and 39 of the latest off the assembly line APC/IFV that was earmarked for the Canadian army.

        Also Canada is buying air intercept platforms for the Ukrainian army. Delivery will be ASAP.

    • When the Defence Support Group was privatised capability was reduced , they outsourced overhaul of fuel pumps and many electrical items to Carwoods , scrapped the heavy machine shop and rid got of many skilled staff and managers on voluntary exit schemes. Strangely they have only made a profit one year since, this is hid in the land accounts and merely gets performed as expected lol

        • Yep – a GOGO agency comprising the non-profit making static REME workshops. The British Army was of course their main customer but they did small amounts of work on Forestry Commission and Fire Brigade equipment as I recall.
          A phenomenol resource at the time.

          MoD website: “ABRO was an executive agency of the MOD. It provided engineering, repair and re-manufacturing services to the Armed Forces and also to the police and some local councils”.

        • In ABRO days it was really buzzing ,productivity was much higher. The changes made “modernising ” for sale reduced output. To make it look more attractive for sale the amount the Army was charged was increased and extra work above planned given to boost profits!

    • Yep I had read this and I stand by what I have said. If you look at what we in the U.K are contributing and if we added the extra C3’s to the mix it is a pretty effective alarms unit. We need to try and separate the various supply chains to ensure some sense of continuity just like NATO does.
      Lump together the German kit together, the US Kit together and the U.K. supplied kit together. We each supply, train and support our unit. But deploy them alongside each other.
      So yes I would have a U.K., US, German supply hub based in NATO territory each support their own kit and working in a cohesive structure.
      This is no different to what NATO has done for decades.

    • I thought out of the 386 delivered, that apart from a few (say 5)we still had all of them although they may be in long terms storage (and most likely striped for spare parts)

        • Thanks for the info Graham. wonder why that was? Maybe could have been useful as CRARRV replacements, although supposedly we had 80 of those at one point

          • Not sure I follow your point Simon about ‘CRARRV replacements’.

            According to a fellow contributor to these pages, 80 CR2s were scrapped sometime before 2018 (to save money on storing/maintaining them presumably and they will almost certainly have been very heavily stripped for parts ie canibalised) ..I think it was criminal to scrap world-beating tanks that had not even done 20 years service….

            ….but we still have 227 on the active list and should have 79 left on the inactive list. It is said that the 14 tanks for UA will come from the active list – makes sense to me, as they will be in fair to good condition.

            CRARRV – We bought 81 (delivered 1988-93). One internet site (by a ‘tank fan’) say we have 75 left in service.

            You can’t turn a heavily cannibalised CR2 into a CRARRV – why would you want to, when we have 75 or more CRARRVs in service? (less 2 going to UA, of course).

          • I was thinking along the lines that CRARRV was based on CH1and may need an update (I did just read the power pack of CH2 was fitted to CRARRV, so maybe not) Also seems positive we still have ~75 CRARRV in service (was expecting it to be far lower) it did seem a very odd decision to scrap those 80 CH2 what ever way you look at it. Mind you how many HET do we have ?

          • In technology terms CRARRV is a 1.5 – it has some CR2 features – but not the Chobham armour. It replaced CHARRV which first supported CR1 gun tanks.

            A replacement has been talked about for years but CSS guys are always kept waiting for new equipment. Still does an excellent job. I bet CRARRV gets refurbished to support CR3 rather than replaced.

            As I said the decision to scrap 80 CR2s was clearly on economic grounds – they were already off the ORBAT (a very important point -HMG decided to cut active fleet from 386 to 227 tanks) and probably largely stripped for spares. It costs money to store AFVs and the storage space is much reduced since MoD closed AVSD Ludgershall. People think we keep lots of kit that is not on the active list or that has been declared Obsolete (like CR1s and Chieftains) – we don’t!

            HET is a different story – not sure how many we have. That is a PFI project and they are owned, maintained and largely operated by a civvy company (Fasttraxx?), that is allowed to use them for lift of heavy civvy vehicles too. I hear that several have been sold off so it is probably not a good story. Would of course have been much better to have kept HETs as army owned, army operated assets.

          • Found this. contract may be due for renewal soon
            “British Army heavy equipment transporter contractThe British Army heavy transporter contract was awarded as a 20-year private finance initiative (PFI) to the FASTRAX consortium (Kellogg Brown and Root, Deutsche Bank and the Oshkosh Truck).
            FASTTRAX was awarded the £290m whole-life-cost contract for 92 tractor trucks, 89 King GTS 110/7 semi-trailers along with three Tru-Hitch recovery systems and also staff to operate them as Sponsored Reserves in January 2001. The vehicles were delivered by Oshkosh between 2003 and 2004.”

          • Thanks Simon. Rumours abound that they no longer have as many equipments now and have sold some. It was always puzzling to me that an operational resource was contracted-out. Many disadvantages to this, which I can elaborate on if you are interested.
            You are right that it looks due for renewal – we can’t really do a U-turn and bring the HWET capability back in-house as the soldiers, both RLC and REME, were laid off 20 years ago!

          • I would expect it was to save money on buying a new fleet of transporters, much like the air tanker contract. Withham have four HET for sales but they have a service date of 1993 and are left hand drive and claimed direct from Nato. http://www.govsales.co.uk has another 11 for sale, again LHD, ( I am sure they had about twenty for sale last year)a couple of Broshuis Trailers as well, dated 2004. as well as 70 ton trailers. loads of Foden and Bedford TM trucks for sales on there (35 years old!!)

          • I had not realised that some/all of the original 2003/4 FASTTRAX HETS had been replaced by newer vehicles – but it makes sense.

      • Indeed… Knowing and advising… Then them listening and understanding…

        Just hope the Ukrainians can cope with the Logistical burden heading their way…
        Slava Ukraini.

        • OK, I will rephrase
          What will stop them attacking a target in Poland? Covertly or otherwise?
          After all, it is not unlike Pootin to attacked when ever and where ever he want…

    • Agree but we need to ramp up warship construction to be match fit for the 2030s. I’d like to see the type 26 programme accelerated and 2-3 more hulls added, then immediately follow up with batch 2 type 31s. We’ve got to get the RN escort flotilla back upto 30+ warships asap. Especially if an enduring commitment of a QE carrier strike group, RAF formations in Australia and patrol frigates are needed. I’d like to see the last T class boat retained and possibly transferred to Australia and possibly the 6th T class boat now in reserve reactivated and transferred to Australia.
      Work on SSNr needs to be accelerated with sequential construction of SSNr alongside Dreadnought class SSBNs.
      Then get a truck load of Cetus unmanned drone subs ideally armed with micro torpedoes for littoral patrol and offensive operations Vs enemy subs, ports, small surface units.
      It’s all possible just going to take funding and political will and a sense of urgency.

      • Anyone would think we were still a world power from your comments.

        We are not, we are up to our necks in debt with our health and social systems failing.

        • It is a commonplace to describe world power in terms of military strength. However, that has never been a problem for the United Kingdom that has never had much. The astonishing aspect of ‘British power’ is how it depended on such as mutuality, governance and influence much more than brute force; even a critic like George Orwell, himself ‘a child of Empire’, pointed out it was the least militarised of all the great Empires. Most of the world’s people aware there is a choice, wish to live under a system first promoted by people from these islands. Neither Russia nor China can offer as much, or would.

    • Slightly puzzling that we are to supply 14 tanks (one British sqn and no attrition reserve), when UA does not have 14-tank sqns, unless we have supplied 10 for a UA tank company and the other 4 are Attrition Reserve.

      Anyway – yes we do have more than 227 CR2s – and those ‘extra’ ones they will be in rag order as they are not in the active fleet, so won’t have been maintained and many will have been cannibalised, evern though cannibalisation was always a method of last resort to secure spares.

      The conversion process has started at RBSL with tanks from the active fleet (ie ones in pretty fair order) which will undergo a Base Overhaul before being converted. (I disagree with this methodology but thats another story).

      If you now stop the process that has been agreed, contracted for and strted, you will create some mayhem.The 75 non operational tanks would need far more work doing to them. The Contract would have to be amended and re-priced.

      I am not sure how many are in a batch at RBSL for conversion but it may not affect our operational strength much at all, to have them ‘lost’ from the 227. If early batches come from the Repair Pool and Attrition Reserve, then this does not impact on numbers with the 3 field force armoured regiments or the RAC and REME Trg Orgs.

      If UA operates a 31-tank battalion then we should send them a total of 35 (rather than 14) ie a full battalion set plus 4 attrition reserve tanks.

      • Best use for any spare CR2’s is what they were built for, shooting at Russians. And we get up to date info on the viability of the CR3 upgrades.

        • I fully agree we must send more than 14 CR2 tanks (at least another 21, so that UA has enough for a Type 31 battalion and 4 for an Attrition Reserve). Those in the active (227) fleet will be in better condition and will need much less prep work than those in the inactive fleet.

  4. One thin g that is not being talked about are the recovery vehicles. These are much heavier tanks than those that Ukraine have so i hope West are also supplying recovery tanks.

    • Yes read today the US would be including the support vehicles required for Abrams, I assume it will be the same with any supplied tanks as a package.

      • Also read today that none of the Abrams the US will be sending has DU armour. Apparently there is an export ban on such Abrams much like the F-22 Raptor which also can’t be sold abroad.

        Which brings me to our C2s. I realise there has been virtually no investment made in the vehicle effectively since it entered service but the Dorchester armour is still highly regarded and is apparently still secret. Should we be concerned if one or more fell into Russian hands (re: reverse engineering it) or has modern Western tank armour progressed beyond Dorchester such that it makes no difference if the Russians get their hands on C2?

        Anyone know what is intended for the C3 armour package?

        Thank you all; I just find the topic of tank armour fascinating!

    • The US shipped 20 or so of their big Oskosh tank transporters towards the end of last year. These 60+ ton tanks won’t be thanked if they collapse bridges.

      • Mmm bridges falling down due to tanks moving up to fight the Orcs or waiting for said Orcs to knock them down! Take your pick.

      • On the contrary, Ukraine seems delighted with the addition of these tanks. Perhaps it’s the Kerch bridge that you refer to ?

    • I hear we are supply 2 x CRARRVs. Also need to think about tank transporters that can handle weighty western tanks.

    • Following 9/11 there was a New Chapter written to update the previous Defence Review.
      Many, including me, would consider the Russian invasion of Ukraine (ie in Europe) also justifies an update.

  5. Some more positive news and hopefully a chance to consider some additional options too!

    2023.01.17

    “Business leaders and engineers from five defence companies in the U.K. visited the manufacturing facility of the world’s most proven K9 Self-Propelled Howitzer (SPH) in South Korea to progress plans to compete for the U.K. Mobile Fires Platform (MFP) programme.

    The companies include Lockheed Martin U.K.; Leonardo U.K.; Pearson Engineering; Horstman Defence; and Soucy Defense. Hanwha is leading the team to bid for the MFP programme aimed at procuring up to 116 self-propelled guns for the British Army.”

    • Ben Wallace has announced that we are looking at gaining an interim solution for the MFP programme. Most commentators have taken this to mean we are negotiating to get older K9 models, then will build new updated ones in the UK to replace them. Good if true, particularly on the back of the M270 announcement. It is the one area the British army seems to be getting on top of.

      • And even better if we signed up for these too!

        Hanwha Defense to supply 288 K239 Chunmoo MLRS with rockets to Polish army
        The K239 Chunmoo multiple rocket launcher was developed in 2013 by both Hanwha Corporation and Doosan DST to replace the aging K136 Kooryong: the rocket was developed by Hanwha and the launcher by Doosan.
        The Chunmoo carries two launch pods able to fire different calibers of rockets: it can fire 130mm non-guided rockets (20 rockets in each pod), 227mm non-guided rockets (6 rockets in each pod), and 239mm guided rockets (6 rockets in each pod).

        The 130mm rockets have a range of 36 Km while the larger 230mm-class rockets have a range of about 80 Km for the non-guided one, and 160 Km for the guided variant. In the South Korean army, a Chunmoo battery consists of 18 vehicles and uses the K200A1 as a command vehicle.

        Extended-range rockets

        In June 2022, South Korea’s Agency for Defense Development revealed efforts to increase the range of the Chunmoo’s 239 mm rockets to 200 km (120 mi). This would give them range similar to the North Korean 300 mm KN-09. Research and development efforts are evaluating ducted rocket propulsion technology, which adds an air inlet that absorbs external air and combines it with a gas generator for combustion to produce greater thrust, as well as a valve that controls the flow of gas for maneuvering. There is also research into a larger 400 mm rocket, which the Chunmoo could carry four of.

        KTSSM-2

        On 27 April 2022, South Korea’s Defense Acquisition Program Administration (DAPA) announced a plan to develop a vehicle-mounted tactical surface-to-surface guided weapon (KTSSM-2). The purpose of this development project is to improve the existing KTSSM-1 to increase the range from 180 km (110 mi) to 290 km (180 mi) and integrate tactical ballistic missile systems into various types of Transporter Erector Launcher (TEL) such as the K239 Chunmoo.

        The development project is scheduled to begin in 2023 and plans to complete the development with a total budget of 1.56 trillion won (US$1.232 billion) by 2034.

        As written here above, on 27 August 2022, Poland’s Defense minister, Mariusz Błaszczak, said he was in negotiations to introduce South Korea’s rocket artillery system. On 13 October 2022, he announced that he had completed negotiations with South Korea to introduce 288 K239 Chunmoo, and the framework agreement would be signed on October 17.

        • And they can get orders completed quickly!

          “Under the framework agreement, the first batch of 18 Chunmoo artillery systems and ammunition will be delivered to the Polish Armed Forces in 2023, complimenting the large buy of K9 Self Propelled Howitzers announced in July this year.

          The first batch of 24 K9 howitzers were rolled out on October 19 at Hanwha Defense’s factory in Changwon, about 300 kilometres southeast of Seoul.”

      • Excellent. Wallace delivering the goods….again. He probably should be our PM. Much better then Sunak/ Hunt. Although I’d hate to see him leave MOD.

  6. Although positive news, it’s unlikely the proposed number are sufficient to support a sustained Ukrainian counter offensive , scale is required. I trust larger numbers will follow shortly (particularly from the USA).

    I’m of the view the West should supply combat jets as well. Just putting this out there ad a thought – imagine a sqn or two of F35As deployed against the Russians.

    • No way but if Germany would like to put some Tornados in the mix, the Dutch add some F16 and we stick in some Apaches then…….. life gets a bit tasty.

    • That would be a large escalation, wouldn’t it? Even more than tanks.

      What would you do about the S300 batteries in Belarus? If you attack Belarus first, SEAD/DEAD, might it get involved in the war more actively, or do you wait and hope they won’t want to use the missiles against planes? I think you’d have to attack first to try and create air dominance over at least Western Ukraine, and hope Belarus don’t start sending in troops. You’d also have to attack more into Russia itself, which plays into Putin’s narrative. I think saying, I don’t care about Putin’s narrative anymore, is where this is leading and Ukraine will consider military attacks into Russian territory using Western arms fair game.

      • Why would Ukraine focus on attacking Belarus? Do they want war with another neighbour?
        I doubt Ukraine would attack targets inside Mother Russia -Putin’s response would be disproportionate.

  7. Are we even able to manufacture more challies? It’s been so long since we made them that I would imagine the machine tools have been scattered to the winds.

    • The blueprints/CAD files were definitely kept. The next question is what happened to the assembly jigs. If these were scrapped then new ones will need to be manufactured. Even if the jigs are in storage somewhere. Restarting an assembly line will not be quick. As not only do you need to get in place all the supply sub contractors. But perhaps just as importantly, are the people who built the last batch of Challengers still around? Getting a workforce to build from scratch with no experience of the product again is going to take time.

      A second option is a refurbishment of Challenger1s (Ex-Jordanian perhaps) that includes an upgrade package. To at least bring them more up to date in fire control, thermal optics and comms. Additional appliqué armour can also be added, especially for the lower glacis and side skirts. This would be a much quicker option for Ukraine.

      • Have a bit of faith, there are bound to be workers out there who can help or advise. But we still do have some companies who would step up to challenge. And one that springs to mind is 100% U.K owned and still builds big land based heavy machinery. They are also rather patriotic.
        JCB !

        • True, plus they do have a “track” record for heavy machinery. Sorry couldn’t resist! Though they have built a tank in the past. Sadly, it was a WW1 Mkiv/v replica for Guy Martin.

          Think Defence have an interesting post on UK manufacturers who are still in the game of supplying components for armoured vehicles. The main one missing from the list is a main gun manufacturer.

          Surprisingly, there is still a department within DSTL that investigates armour. So I do expect them to have researched a MBT suitable armour that is post Dorchester. Plus Tata steel in Wales still produce armour suitable for MBTs. They’ve even produced a new steel armour that is better than cemented armour called Pavis. Though it can’t really be welded, so would only be suitable in an array, rather than used for the hull.

          To restart the line I think we would need outside help. But it would only be worth it if there are sufficient orders plus a steady demand drumbeat. Where I believe the Army would require something equivalent to the National Shipbuilding Strategy. Which would also mean that to remain solvent, the Army would need at least 300 tanks that get replaced every 15 to 20 years.

          There’s a number of interesting possibilities on the horizon. For instance Poland will be manufacturing the K2 Black Panther under license. Though I’m not sure if that includes licensed production of the main gun as well?

          Israel have started looking at a Merkava 4 replacement. One of their requirements is for a smaller and lighter vehicle. Which is better suited for urban combat. So it could be along similar lines to the new US Mobile Protected Firepower (MPF) vehicle (don’t say light/medium tank). Which is a modified ASCOD hull mounting a modified Abrams turret and a 105mm main gun. Whose role is to support infantry and not engage other tanks. Besides the 105 is a bit weedy against a modern tank’s glacis and turret.

          But the MPF does set a precedent for a lighter support vehicle. Especially as we are also running a modified ASCOD hull with Ajax. However, the CV90-120 is probably the better direction. As it can not only provide the infantry support. But can also engage modern tanks, as it sports the Rh120L44 gun. Clearly if it takes a hit from a tank’s Fin round it will not have the same armour protection levels of a MBT.

          If the UK is looking at a more mobile, reactive and expeditionary force. Then a medium weight tank might be the way to go. Especially if it’s based on the Ajax chassis, so there’s commonality in logistics. It will definitely need a hard kill active protection system (APS), as it won’t have the weight of armour necessary to protect it from ATGMs.

          It will still be faced with the threat from MBTs. Whose Fin rounds currently cannot be stopped by APS. Plus the shorter 120 gun will face a problem in the near future, as armour get better. As it’s nearly reached the plateau of how much performance you can squeeze out of it. Which is why I still believe we require a heavy MBT that can not only mount the longer barrel 120 gun. But could also be upgraded with the larger 130 when required!

          • Great points and I wonder if we should just carry on with present CR3 upgrade programme (add some number). And have a long hard look at what sort of future military we actually want / need.
            With Poland just deciding to acquire by far the largest conventional armoured force in Europe do we need Heavy Armour of our own ? Or just enough to push through and hold if necessary ?
            What are we really good at ?
            What is essential to our needs ?
            How can we best support alliances with impact ?

            IMHO the answers would be :-

            1. Independent nuclear deterrent (adds uncertainty to an enemy).
            2. We need an enlarged Navy because we have huge maritime EEZs, overseas commitments and we rely on the free movement of goods by Sea.
            3. Far better Air Defence (aircraft, early warning and Missiles), plus some long range interdiction capacity. Because we are a small very densely populated island with lots of tempting targets.
            4. Leaner but more agile industrial base that can provide most of our key requirements stand alone if necessary but preferably in partnership with others.
            5. An Army that can move quickly and protect the Flanks of NATO. So light on Heavy Tanks but heavy on Amphibious, Airborne and weapons such as HIMAWS, M777A, Archer, CV90, Boxer, and heavy mobile SAM and ATGW Systems. I love what the U.K./Polish Brimstone armoured missile launcher looks like.
            6. Backed up by Apache, more Helicopters and GA aircraft and drones.
            7. An independent lightweight launch and forget satellite ability for surveillance, comms etc.
          • We have used tanks in kinetic operations far more than many other platforms you could care to name. We have used our tanks a lot in the last 20/30/40 years. We would not give them up just because Poland is buying a lot.

            All significant NATO countries should contribute strong mechanised/armoured forces to the defence of eastern Europe and not just rely on the Poles – that is what collective defence requires.

            We will have just a single heavy/medium division – with a grand total of just 2 tank regiments (112 tanks in all) in it. We are not over-investing in tanks.

          • If re read my post I said we should increase the number of CR3’s which will give us 20 years service.
            But we have to see what lessons we learn from the present conflict and assess for the next generation. The entire History of Warfare one of supremacy followed by rapid obsolescence.
            I just look at History and every weapon that has been heavy and armoured has eventually been made obsolete by something smaller, cheaper and easier to deploy.
            Armoured Knight – Long Bow
            Wooden Walled ships of the line – rifled guns
            Battleships and Cruisers – Aircraft, Bombs, Destroyers, Torpedoes and the very 1st Guided missiles.
            Besides which if the Ukrainians get enough tanks, modern Aircraft and maybe some Apaches the Russians may be a lot less of a threat.😉

          • Interesting. There is a different take on this:
            Armoured Knight (cavalry) ultimately replaced by the much heavier armoured recce vehicles and tanks.
            Wooden ships replaced by armoured steel ships.

            But I take your point – since WW1/WW2 ships have gone from being armoured steel and with armoured decks to paper-thin steel. Is that progress? Granted that sensors, weapons, and tactics have changed over time, which may have made armoured ships less important. But is this example translatable to the land arena?

            What would make a soldier equipped with an exceptionally well armoured vehicle relish losing that armour protection?
            For all 4 of my BAOR postings my allocated vehicle was a soft-skinned Land Rover. If the ‘balloon had gone up’ I would not have felt very comfortable with zero vehicular protection from direct fire, indirect fire or NBC ‘nasties’ but would have been far safer in a well armoured vehicle.

            Perhaps those who have been bleating, recently or over many decades, that the tank is dead or obsolete may have adifferent view now that Zelensky has stated that he needs capable tanks to save his nation.

            I am glad that you want more than 148 CR3s, which is just enough for 2 tank regiments. We bought 386 CR2s which were delivered many years after the USSR and Warsaw Pact collapsed, this being a number deemed suitable for the post Cold War world. The only thing that made us cut from 386 to 227 then to 148 is a desire to save money rather than to match the threat.

            The more western kit that goes to Ukraine, the better.

          • I am not saying get rid of tanks yet, in fact I said I’d replace what we have with New ones that reflect lessons from the present conflict and some more of them.
            And then reflect long and hard on what next.

            I really appreciate your point of view based on being in a Land Rover in BAOR.

            But there are 2 Historical lessons we always forget.

            1 No weapon system or defensive structure has ever been constructed that didn’t end up being defeated by a better offensive weapon.

            Heavily armoured warships taken out by relatively cheap torpedoes, mines, bombs and missiles.
            The last RN Battleship design was over 70,000 tons, armoured against any shell or bomb and had an underwater defense scheme that should have withstood a dozen WW2 torpedos. But was so heavy it only had 6 main guns.
            And the A bomb would have killed the crew and irradiated it.

            The heavy fixed fortification, defeated by siege (Castles) and mobile all arms warfare (Maginot line).

            It is a never ending cycle, better defense is always countered by a better offence.
            And repeat !

            2 The latest war is usually hampered by folks trying to fight the last one.
            Crimea and Boer war. Go to war dressed in Napoleonic uniforms.
            WW1 Right until the last day the generals kept Cavalry in reserve for the big breakthrough.
            WW2 The U.K. went to war with the only fully mechanised Army in the World and an automated trench digger. Problem was our Allies prepared go for a defensive WW1 and mentally caved in when someone didn’t play by those rules.

            You are an ex BAOR Soldier so I’d like to ask a question ? Did you honestly ever think back then you would see a person with a laptop, looking at a screen showing his enemy from above. They’re completely oblivious to the drone, they wait till they all go into their bunker and drops a precision SMART bomb on them all ?

            So you may have the best most formidable MBT ever designed but refuelling, eating, ablutions etc all become a easy target.
            And possibly all controlled by a spotty little kid wearing a hoody in their bedroom a 1000 miles away.

            Or even an excellent well trained team of infantry armed with Javelins or NLAW, led by an old but experienced NCO. They are mounted on Quad bikes, a Jackal or even an old Land Rover. They use mobility, concealment and surprise.
            Same result.

            So somethings never change.

          • I agree that tanks are still needed on todays battlefields against armies that have tanks themselves. CR3 should fully be in service in 2030 and may have a 20-30 year service life. So we need at some stage (perhaps in 2040) to see what should be the follow-on. Whatever it is, it should be able to fill the roles of the tank – deliver shock action; support assaulting infantry with large calibre direct fire in order to seize and hold ground; to destroy enemy medium and heavy armour and strong-points. Drones are not a replacement for the tank – they can’t do half of the above.

            What really did for the battleship (and I think 6 or 8 large guns are still quite impressive) is that with aircraft from carriers you could now engage an enemy fleet that was beyond the range of your ship’s guns – not that the ships were heavy and had a lot of armour plate.

            When I was a soldier in BAOR (my last posting was in 1991/2) we were quite used to drones which did ISTAR for the Royal Artillery – CL89 came into service in 1969 – but attack drones are newer. Are you suggesting attack drones will replace the tank? They won’t – anymore than both armed and attack helicopters replaced the tank. If attack drones were the panacea, then all the Russian tanks would have been knocked out by Uktrainian drones and all the Ukrainian tanks will have been knocked out by Russian/Iranian ones. That hasn’t happened – and Zelensky is asking for quality tanks not more attack drones.

            The first counter to the tank, an anti-tank rifle, was fielded in 1916 – anti-tank weapons have improved ever since – and so have tanks.

            You will know when the tank is obsolete – and that is when the tank-owning nations of the world no longer design, develop, manufacture or field them.

          • In 1930’s to 40’s , many tanks had 20 – 37 mm guns , the “its not a tank ” brigade would be outraged lol!

          • Too true. Crazy to think that at the start of the war the 2 pounder was the epitome for anti-tank work. Whereas by the war’s end, a period of nearly 6 years, tanks were mounting 90, 123 and 128mm guns.

          • Yes, the Falcon turret, a low profile turret incorporating an autoloader which reduced the crew to 3, with commander and gunner somehow being accomodated in the hull.
            But not implemented due to budget shortfall – Jordan is not a wealthy country.
            KADDB is a slick operation – they could easily refurb the CR1s if given some money.

          • Cheers Graham. The Falcon turret is an interesting concept. I guess the commander and gunner sit on the turret basket floor. Looking at the picture I would imagine that situational awareness is much like the T14. Where it has to rely on cameras for an all round view. Still not convinced this is the next evolutionary step.

          • Israeli tank commanders years ago often refused to command ‘closed down’ ie with hatch shut and looking out through periscopes… so they could have that head-out situational awareness – they had a very high casualty rate.

            Even today, not many tank commanders would like to get SA by looking at multiple TV screens whilst sitting low down in the hull.

      • The Government would have been offered to pay for the storage of jigs, with warrior they declined and so they were scrapped. I expect it was the same case with CR2 jigs !

    • Why would we want to manufacture more Challys (I presume you mean CR2s?). To beef up the BA or to supply more to Ukraine?

      The CR2 production line closed in 2002, over 20 years ago. Manufacturers do not keep jigs and specialised tools for over 2 decades after last use.

  8. Hope all these tanks have some good air cover provided especially against against kamikaze loitering type drones. Less publicity about numbers and where they come from and when and where they’re going. Next stop, the Asov sea! Strength to Ukraine 🇺🇦, it’s people, it’s forces and President!

    • Unless the suicide drone has the equivalent HE content as a 155 shell. It will do little damage to the crew except knock them about a bit. If however, the drones have a HEAT warhead, then the tank and crew will definitely be in trouble. Which why it will be necessary to have either the Gepard SPAAG or Stormer HVM in close support.

      • Did they ever consider a RWS on top of the CR2/3s? I believe the latest Abrams has a 30mm on the turret which seems a bit clunky but extra fire power none the less.

        • Yes, trials were done at Bovington on “Megatron” using a RWS mounting a GPMG. It fitted near to the loaders hatch. There’s some images if it on the web. Not seen one fitted as standard TES though!

  9. one of the most interesting questions to me is – how will these tanks be operationally deployed. the Chally’s in particular use distinct ammunition types.

    One could therefore postulate that they could be used as a distinct heavy tank company (analogous to ww2 tiger1 tanks in German service) to reinforce standard Ukrainian armoured/mechanized units. Alternatively, they could form the core of a small but powerful battlegroup – say with a permanent complement of supporting arms (say a company of T-series Ukrainian tanks plus supporting arms – mech inf, AA and engineers etc).

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    • Very good question. First they have to decide where. For a start it is 5-700 or so miles to a front. They could choose to use them as part of defensive lines in the west, say Kiev. Wherever they put them, given the unique ammo, it makes sense to use them, as you suggest, in a group.

    • I suspect it will depend on how many Leopards actually get delivered. For Ukraine the Leopard is probably more important. As there are more in Countries closer to them. So there’s more of a possibility of them arriving in numbers sooner.

      As good as the Abrams is, Ukraine will not be getting the full fat version with the depleted uranium armour. As the US has stated this is secret. Unless the US relent, they will be getting the export model as used by Egypt and Saudi. Which uses the Chobham style composite armour.

      My thoughts are that both Challenger and Abrams will remain fairly close to Kyiv. Protecting mostly the North and North East. Whereas, if they get Leopards in sufficient numbers, these will form the bulk of the maneuver groups for offensive action in the South.

      • Understand your points. Tho the Chally would be particularly useful tactically to provide targetting and long range overwatch to a force of T-series tanks in an independent role. And it has fantastic bunker buster capabilities using HESH of course.

        • Hi Oldy, totally agree about HESH. My thoughts were that both the Abrams and Chally have their relative disadvantages in regards to fuel consumption and 2 piece (3 really) ammo respectively. Which means their logistical tails need to quite close to make sure they can maintain being in the fight.

          Both tanks are excellent defensively, being able to outsee and out range Russian tanks. By putting them near Kyiv, they can protect against a possible 2nd invasion by Russian from Belarus.

          Plus agree they would be ideal providing overwatch for Ukrainian T series tanks.

          There is a general consensus that Russia will try to open a 2nd front in the North/Northeast in Spring following the mud season. They would try to take the initiative and cause Ukraine to split its forces. This is what both the Abrams and Challenger were particularly designed for, ie countering a “Warsaw Pact” armoured thrust. By soaking up and blunting the drive, then going on the counter offensive.

          The big question is do Russia have sufficient tanks to swamp the area? Though unlike Russian tanks, both the Abrams and Challenger are excellent at a fighting retreat. Can the UK send an additional 14 tanks, complete with the logistics to maintain them?

    • Leo 2 and Abrams use distinct ammunition types too – Ukraine currently has no tanks with 120mm smoothbore cannon.
      I think the numbers supplied will dictate the structure. The 31 US Abrams are best being in a single tank battalion – for example.

  10. I still think the M60A3 is a better fit for Ukraine. It is closer to the T62/T72, the Ukrainians are used to. Many countries still have large numbers of M60A3 in service/storage. They could be bought or swapped for more modern tanks. Egypt alone is reported to have over 800 M60A3 in storage. We need to get 300+ M60A3 to Ukraine ASAP.

    • It was first fielded in 1959. Its a bit of an old dog.The M60A3 tank achieves a maximum cross-country speed of 10mph to 12mph and up to 30mph roadspeed – thats really slow.
      It has only a 105mm gun – we Brits stopped using the 105mm cannon in 1966 – could that penetrate frontal armour of Russian tanks operating in Ukraine?
      Older models are better than newer models but it would be the older ones that would be offered up, probably.
      Could possibly be used in a defensive role, hull-down, and might get lucky with shooting into the flanks of enemy armour.

      • The USMC & Saudis used their M60A3 with success against Iraqi T72 in the 1991 Gulf War. Ukraine needs 300+ tanks ASAP to stop Putin’s Spring Offensive. M1 may take a year to sort out training & logistics. Ukraine needs something simpler in the mean time.

        • Russians are using upgraded, uparmoured T72s from those seen 32 years ago in GW1 – and the 105mm on M60A3 may not punch through the frontal armour.
          But I take your point that it helps UA meet the expected Russian spring offensive.

          • That uparmour has not done the T72 any favors considering the many photos of destroyed T72 in Ukraine.

          • Good point. Tanks with ERA can be defeated by tandem warheads. Uparmouring is often restricted to the frontal arc and much of the sides – tanks remain vulnerable to Overfly Top Attack (OTA) munitions and muitions dropped from drones.

    • Yeah they have been sitting in front of every American legion Post for about the last 30 years. . You’re a little late

  11. Hopefully the Ukrainians will secure the numbers to form an heavy armoured brigade and only employ these assets in mass and not penny package across multiple zones. The location of these vehicles will be a key ISR task for Russian intel and my concern re their employment is their unique signature will be a combat indicator of future intent hence unless a very sound deception plan is developed they could be defeated before critical use.

  12. Good Day!

    What about 500 Challenger 3 or Leopards for the British Army!

    Comments appreciated Ladies and Gentlemen!

    Mit freundlichen Grüßen Nick ex Middlesbrough

    • We didn’t even buy 500 tanks in the 1980s – we bought 420 CR1s (repaced by 386 CR2s from 1998).

      We have ordered CR3s – don’t want to pull the plug – stick with that but just increase the order to about 200-225.

  13. Methinks all this open talk about supplying Ukraine with ranks is likely to encourage Russia to launch its up coming offensive sooner than later. They’re not going to wait for the new tanks arrive!
    The West should have done it more on the quiet and sooner. Hope this all works out in Ukraine’s favour and they can well and truly push the Russian forces back and out of their territory for good!

    • Putin could launch 2 Spring offensives – the first one in line with the awful anniversary of the invasion (& before western tanks arrive) and the second one when he has got his 300,000 conscripts trained and equipped.

      • I hope Ukrainecan take more first steps and re-gain grounds before the Russian’s come again. No need to broadcast what we’re supplying and then what they’re doing in advance. There’s a bloody war on, let their bullets, missiles and shells do the talking. Hope one day soon Ukraine can bust through to the Asov sea east of Mariupol, hold that, and then reclaim westwards all the way to the Crimea. Strength to Ukraine 🇺🇦, its people, armed forces and their President!
        Whatever the true causes of this conflict are and maybe they’re no real saints in either camp, but Russia’s aggression especially towards civilians and Ukrainian infrastructure is appalling and hopefully they’ll pay for it soon. No point discussing with these bastards. They’ll need to lose and lose badly to learn anything. 🇦🇺 🇬🇧

      • has there been any indication he has the resources to launch any offensive? Surely with all the NATO assets flying about any build up would be spotted well in advance and more than a few of these longer range rockets will really spoil their day.
        Any signs of a coordinated all arms attack with multiple breakthroughs has not exactly been the Orcs speciality has it?

        • Putin would still launch a grand offensive even if such troops were spotted – you don’t stop military operations because the enemy has recce assets. Back in Jan/Feb last year the buildup of Russian forces was spotted but opinion was divided as to whether he was mad enough to launch an attack. We spotted the troops; he still attacked. Things are different now of course.

          Has he the resources? – he called up 300,000 men a few months ago and they are under training. It is rumoured that he is about to call up very many more, perhaps another 200,000 but they would not arrive in time for the Spring offensive. Are those 300,000 equipped with personal kit, vehicles and weapons? Have they been trained in all-arms moanouevre warfare or just done basic low-level skills? I don’t know. We need some of these defence correspondents and analysts to earn their money and tell us.

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