Archer Mobile Howitzers operated by British troops fired 155mm rounds during a training exercise in Sweden.

Soldiers from the British Army’s Royal School of Artillery are learning what it takes to operate the Archer Mobile Howitzer, say the British Army.

“On the snowy, frozen military training area of Boden, Swedish Lapland, the British Army gunners have been putting their theory into practice, firing the modern artillery platform for the first time.

Following the granting-in-kind of 32 AS90 self-propelled guns to Ukraine, Archer was procured from the Swedish Government as an interim solution for the gap created in the Army’s 155mm Close Support capability.”

British Army accepts transfer of first Archer

The purchase included logistic support containers, an initial ammunition suite, support, and training package. The Swedish Artillery School provided a 14-week T3 ‘train the trainer’ course, training will start on the next generation of wheeled artillery systems this spring and will be fired in the UK next summer.

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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
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Steve
Steve
1 month ago

The quick purchase of these was great news. For once the media drummed up an interest about the topic and the goverment was forced to react.

The major question is how long will it take to fill the gap between the 12 purchased and the 32 given away, especially considering pre war / pre donation, the number of artillery pieces was being flagged as a major issue.

I fear that we will see what happened in the past, small purchase with promise of more later, and that promise quietly dropped, but here’s hoping.

Sam
Sam
1 month ago
Reply to  Steve

We should avoid the obligatory/customary faffing and just order a hundred now right off the bat.

Rob Young
Rob Young
1 month ago
Reply to  Sam

Agreed.

Jim
Jim
1 month ago
Reply to  Sam

Don’t be crazy, we will need several design studies and a half dozen four letter acronyms programs, you can’t just go out and buy guns 😀

Andrew D
Andrew D
1 month ago
Reply to  Steve

With you on that one

monkey spanker
monkey spanker
1 month ago
Reply to  Steve

The 32 given away was actually only 20 working AS90 and 12 non operational hulls. The 14 replacements probably provided more capability than the old 20 AS90s. Definitely more are needed but they will need somewhere to go and units to operate them.
The 14 archer were all Sweden had spare. More Volvo based archers maybe come available as they are retired from sweden.

Joe16
Joe16
1 month ago
Reply to  monkey spanker

Fair point, especially given the improvement in range over AS90 given the longer barrel.
I think crews may be smaller on Archer too- so theoretically we could long term increase our fires without it impacting our troop numbers.

Graham Moore
Graham Moore
1 month ago
Reply to  Joe16

AS90 would have had greater range if the Braveheart upgrade had been introduced.

David Lee
David Lee
1 month ago
Reply to  monkey spanker

The 20 old As90 use the same charge system as the rest of national the archer uses a modular system that is not in general use with any other natural country the 20 old As90 have a manual back up for operating the archer does not its fully automated so if it breaks its non operational.

George
George
1 month ago
Reply to  Steve

Steve, it is not possible to fully replace tracked self propelled artillery systems with wheeled. The roles for each type overlap, meaning they are complimentary but not interchangeable. It just so happens we have decided to bolster/add a wheeled fighting capability built around Boxer. Therefore Archer will be perfect for keeping up with those vehicles. Twelve will not be enough considering the planned number of Boxers but it’s a good start. However, giving AS90 away to former enemies will leave our main go-anywhere heavy fighting force (MBTs, Scimitar/Ajax, Stormer, MLRS, mechanised infantry in Warrior, 432 and Bulldog) deficient of another… Read more »

Steve
Steve
1 month ago
Reply to  George

Whilst I agree in principle, the fact remains that the decision to replace the as90 has been pending for over a decade since the upgrade program was canned and yet we are still no closer. The as90 is out ranged against modern systems and needs replacing, all wheeled might not be optimal but its better than having yet another capability holiday.

George
George
1 month ago
Reply to  Steve

True(ish) but replacing 32 actual AS90 with 12 Archers and a promise. Is a poor trade. Even a few HIMARS and more MLRS for the tracked boys would be a bad deal. Given the cost of the missiles. The application of sufficient 155 HE solves most problems.

TR
TR
1 month ago
Reply to  George

Giving relatively worm out kit to Ukraine to shoot up Russians before they get to us and replacing it with new kit for us is a win win situation.

George
George
1 month ago
Reply to  TR

You assume the MOD has the money and political will to replace it. If we end up with a reduced number of totally wheeled 155mm SP artillery. We loose big time. I agree watching former communists destroying each other saves us the trouble. But at what cost and what happens next? Ukraine cannot defeat Ivan, if they still exist as half a country after this war, it’s a win for Ukraine. Russia on the other hand will survive this latest border war. They consider it a bigger fight between them and NATO, meaning the end of hostilities with Ukraine is… Read more »

Paul.P
Paul.P
1 month ago
Reply to  George

Apparently BAe and Rheinmetall have formed a team to bid Archer for the Deep Fires requirement. BAe have said their proposal would include a barrel manufacturing in the UK.

George
George
1 month ago
Reply to  Paul.P

That would be worthy of serious consideration. I’d go so far as saying it’s a winner. Unless someone else can beat the deal. Read on. The Koreans for example. Hypothetically, giving us a factory to make there impressive K9 A2 tracked SP 155mm. Complete with the barrel manufacturing facility. AND swinging a deal to build their K2 Black Panther here too. Either the complete MBT or the hull only so we can mount our world beating turret from Challenger 3. I understand the turret being built by Pearson Engineering owes much to the Vickers MK 7 universal turret updated design.… Read more »

Paul.P
Paul.P
1 month ago
Reply to  George

Agree the BAe-Rheinmetall Archer proposal looks a winner.
Regarding K9 I would go for something like a UK built AHS Krab. – BAe/RM turret and barrel on imported Korean chassis.
Keeping with the same UK- German (Boxer) companies, Lynx would be a sensible choice for an IFV; just amend or extend the Boxer contract. I like your idea on the K2 + Vickers turret, but it looks like we are sorted for MBT for a while.

George
George
1 month ago
Reply to  Steve

In a democracy, weaponising public awareness/opinion is always a good strategy. I hope the top brass grow a pair and turn up the heat under Westminster before it is too late. Stuff carbon neutral and woke agendas. The country and our interests need defending more than ever.

Jacko
Jacko
1 month ago

O/T The Danes have decided to transfer their whole artillery stocks to Ukraine as the logic is they are not in danger at the moment! Can’t decide if this is a good move or not🤔obviously for Ukraine it’s good news but?

Sam
Sam
1 month ago
Reply to  Jacko

A big order of Archer now and then all of AS-90 to Ukraine would be a big help to them.

Andrew D
Andrew D
1 month ago
Reply to  Sam

Makes sense 👍 that’s if there have the Ammunition to go with it 🤔

Sam
Sam
1 month ago
Reply to  Andrew D

Yeah. This is the big question.

Paul.P
Paul.P
1 month ago
Reply to  Sam

Anyone know if this is relevant to speeding up MOD procurement?
https://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2014/3337/contents/made

Bringer of Facts
Bringer of Facts
1 month ago
Reply to  Jacko

The Danes had ordered 19 Caesar systems, but they are now being directly transferred to Ukraine.

They will be replaced by 19 ATMOS artillery pieces and 8 PULS MRLS (Elbit Systems)

Jacko
Jacko
1 month ago

They are sending ALL of their ammo stocks as well I read!

Andrew D
Andrew D
1 month ago
Reply to  Jacko

Ukraine are going be in big trouble soon unless the US get more weapons and Ammunition sent over to them.Like to stop now after 2years holding USSR of it’s just been a wasted effort .🙄 We may has told the Ukrainians sorry can’t help 😕

John Stevens
John Stevens
1 month ago
Reply to  Andrew D

Agree.. Worries the hell out of me.. Frustrating to see certain US politicians slowing the $60 billion package of support. Need to get things moving over there in Washington DC.. ASAP.

Bringer of Facts
Bringer of Facts
1 month ago
Reply to  Andrew D

Putin has taken advantage of the divided politics playing out in the US and Europe. We can see the results of that procrastination this week: Adiivka has fallen to Russian troops. Adiivka was taken at great cost to Russia in personnel and equipment, but still, they advance, and this is the attrition game that they are playing, wearing the opposition down by outnumbering and outgunning, and not caring about losses because they have reserves. The attrition game is not just about the number of destroyed personnel and equipment, it is also about how rapidly you can manufacture/ procure/ repair replace… Read more »

Roger
Roger
1 month ago
Reply to  Jacko

Their logic being – why worry, Uncle Sam will always bail us out if the **** hits the fan. It’s a belief that is both self- serving and naive, given the US predisposition to always act in their own self-intetest, and its a belief held by too many countries in Europe.

Jacko
Jacko
1 month ago
Reply to  Roger

Think you are doing them a disservice mate,,they haven’t said they are doing away with the capability! Just at this moment in time they have the time to restock where as Ukraine has not.

monkey spanker
monkey spanker
1 month ago
Reply to  Roger

They are making and receiving new ammo so they are not in need of it right now.
It makes sense. Who’s going to invade Denmark in the next few months.
The U.K. can supply some of what it has in the cupboard as orders have been placed and new shells are incoming.

Steve
Steve
1 month ago
Reply to  Jacko

They are in a different position than us. They are secure in Europe and so are we, but the UK will no doubt get involved in more US proxy wars where the kit may be needed. If it wasn’t for that I would full agree with giving everything to Ukraine and rebuilding after, as the only serious threat to the UK is Russia and they will be no threat after they are done witj Ukraine

monkey spanker
monkey spanker
1 month ago
Reply to  Jacko

It’s a great move. Germany also is giving more guns, 120,000 155 shells, anti air missiles etc.
Ukraine needs stuff now. The U.K. and other nations have time to reorder, restock.

George
George
1 month ago
Reply to  Jacko

It’s rank stupidity. NATO is willingly sending it’s only artillery systems to be fed into the metal crusher that is Ukraine. The sensible thing to do, would be to only part with the weapons when the replacement is procured, tested and in service. On a “one on one basis” and not before. Next summer GB would have 12 SP90 to sell to Ukraine. Note; sell for top used price. .

Andrew D
Andrew D
1 month ago

Will be interesting to see what the government do wether buy more Archer or go for the Korean K9 platform .Half and half maybe ? Or are we better off with just one type for cost reasons..Although Track and wheeled have benefits in different ways on the Battle field ,don’t really think there’s much between them in fire power. Archer has always been a personal favourite of mine 🇬🇧

Daniele Mandelli
Daniele Mandelli
1 month ago
Reply to  Andrew D

I’d prefer the K9 for the ABCTs, but 7 Bde surely needs better artillery support than the LG, and I cannot see K9 trundling around in a Light Mechanized Brigade. 3 Regiments are needed, 4 if they ever sort out 4 Bde and give it the regular CS CSS it requires. I’ve no real idea on their comparative capabilities, I just want the RA given new equipment quickly without the usual years of delay as the procurement stages churn away. The RA has been neglected for decades. No Fire Shadow, no updated AS90, and other things they asked for binned… Read more »

John Clark
John Clark
1 month ago

Morning mate, if we equip 4 regiments, what sort of procument are we talking, assuming Archer is procured in quantity?

Daniele Mandelli
Daniele Mandelli
1 month ago
Reply to  John Clark

I’d read, I think, the original Future Fires requirement was for 116 guns. If each Reg still has 3×8 gun Batteries, so 24 per Regiment. Making 72 for the more realistic 3 Reg purchase or 96 for 4. Leaving 20 for small reserve, SofRA at Larkhill ( 14RA ), RATDU, and so on. I’d also read guns 7 and 8 were manned by the reserves on mobilisation when we had a larger AS90 force, so maybe the regiments are down to 3×6 now, and they’ll take that low as the new benchmark. We see it all the time with the… Read more »

John Clark
John Clark
1 month ago

Cheers Daniele, we might possibly hope for about 90 then, for three regiments and a small reserve….

Ron
Ron
1 month ago

Agreed. For the ABCTs the K9 and M270, for the Boxer equipped BGs Archer and HIMARS.

Daniele Mandelli
Daniele Mandelli
1 month ago
Reply to  Ron

Ideally. Of course, you do know the Boxer’s are in the ABCTs mate, sadly.

Ron
Ron
1 month ago

I know, still don’t understand that logic

Daniele Mandelli
Daniele Mandelli
1 month ago
Reply to  Ron

Thought you did, was just being clear. Yes, all a bit of a mish mash. All back to Carter in my view.

AlexS
AlexS
1 month ago
Reply to  Ron

There are no real ABCT.
You have a soup with wheels and tracks and be thankful…😀

Graham Moore
Graham Moore
1 month ago
Reply to  Ron

Artillery is not routinely assigned to BGs.

John Stevens
John Stevens
1 month ago

Hello Daniele..

What number/figure of k9’s or Archer do you think the UK could go with at a minimum.?

Dern
Dern
1 month ago
Reply to  John Stevens

Kind of depends if you want the Army Reserve to be deployable as individual formations or if you want them to just be individual augmentees.

Daniele Mandelli
Daniele Mandelli
1 month ago
Reply to  Dern

As it stands they’re a bit of both.
Certain specialist nationally recruited units of the RS, and RLC, RAMC, REME as stand alone formations augmenting 101,102,104 and the Infantry, RA as individuals or formed Batteries into existing regular regiments, such as 101 Reg with its MLRS Batteries augmenting DRSB.

Dern
Dern
1 month ago

On the other hand surely 103 Reg RA (AR) needs to be able to form as a full regiment.

Daniele Mandelli
Daniele Mandelli
1 month ago
Reply to  Dern

Yes, now that they’ve put the Divisional Fires into DRSB it would provide greater mass like 101RA does. Unless they still form individual replacements or man guns 7 and 8 in existing Regiments that I mentioned to John further up? I’m unsure on that at the mo.

Dern
Dern
1 month ago

103 is the only artillery unit assigned to 4X.

Daniele Mandelli
Daniele Mandelli
1 month ago
Reply to  Dern

Ahh, thats a LG reg, thanks, wrong Regiment. I meant the one training with AS90.

Daniele Mandelli
Daniele Mandelli
1 month ago

Just checked Wiki, not the most accurate, but it’s changed since I last looked? Where is the AR Reg for AS90 crews?

Dern
Dern
1 month ago

104 Reg RA?

Daniele Mandelli
Daniele Mandelli
1 month ago
Reply to  Dern

I lose track sometimes. Whichever, to your original point, if 4x is in 1 then yes 103RA should be able to form as a full regiment. As should 104 if that’s the one supporting the ABCT/DRSB regs, unless they cannot form 4 6 gun batteries and need the Reserve increment. Unless, as we hope, 4 is either given a full set of regular CS CSS or it’s moved into a lower formation like you suggest and it’s place taken by a more fighty formation so 1UK can have 3 proper brigades, as 3 should. The other Division, did you name… Read more »

Daniele Mandelli
Daniele Mandelli
1 month ago
Reply to  John Stevens

Answered above mate.

John Stevens
John Stevens
1 month ago

Thx mate 👍

liam
liam
1 month ago

I agree that the K9 would be needed for the ABCT as it has different requirements than other brigades but with the shrinking size of the army’s armor fleet they might just turn around and say the don’t need an armourd tracked gun.
Considering we can barely field an armoured brigade at all (and I use the title Brigade loosely considering whats in it) we will just have to see if the politicians see whats happening in Ukraine and relise having an armoured gun is not just a thing of the past

Andrew D
Andrew D
1 month ago

He’s hoping it gets sorted DM 🍺

Joe16
Joe16
1 month ago

I’m torn in terms of the LG- it seems the Ukrainians have been doing quite well with towed M777s, but not hearing much about 105s. It may be that the reduced range on a towed 105 brings it too close to the front to be useful given its lower mobility. I’d be up for switching to Archer on whichever truck chassis we already use for moving our light brigades around- or maybe 120 mm mortars. I know, they don’t have the same range as even a 105, but I’m not aware of a self-propelled 105 mm gun. I’d be up… Read more »

Daniele Mandelli
Daniele Mandelli
1 month ago
Reply to  Joe16

👍Some strong indications that 120mm may be coming.

Joe16
Joe16
1 month ago

That makes me happy! 82 mm mortars are, I’m sure, great. But there seems to be a huge variety of ammunition, plus the additional range in favour of the 120 mm. I understand that the 82 mm is already normally trucked around in/on a vehicle anyway, so the additional weight of the 120 mm tube and ammo doesn’t strike me as a major problem.

Andrew D
Andrew D
1 month ago
Reply to  Joe16

Do like them MMM 777s , think our big towed Artillery went around 1990-3 maybe 🤔 🇬🇧

Joe16
Joe16
1 month ago
Reply to  Andrew D

Yes, interesting situation. remains to be seen if we take advantage of the newly fired up production lines.

Dern
Dern
1 month ago
Reply to  Joe16

The problem is: Archer weighs A LOT. There’s no point replacing 105’s with Archer in 16AA since it won’t be airmobile, which means the Brigade can’t be airmobile, and similar for 29 attached to 3 cmdo, much harder to get ashore.
So realistically the only 105mm regiment that would replace it’s guns for Archers is 4 Regt RA.

Joe16
Joe16
1 month ago
Reply to  Dern

Ah, I hadn’t realised where most of our 105s were to tell the truth- thanks.
If it’s air assault and commandos, then I’m kind of inclined towards the 120 mm mortars than towed 155s or 105s then; get everything on vehicles that can be both air lifted and fired without unhitching; if there’s anything that Ukraine is teaching us, it’s that you can’t leave your indirect fires in place for long- especially if your mission is to be up close and personal like 16AA and 3 Cmdo.

Daniele Mandelli
Daniele Mandelli
1 month ago
Reply to  Joe16

Yes mate, that was my main point in my original post further up. 4 RA is the LG Reg for 7 LMBCT. I’d hope that is uplifted, and it can be IF enough Archer are procured. IF that ended up being the chosen gun. But not K9, that is the province of the armoured brigades. And why I’m torn which is best, as I’d like to see 7 LMBCT get heavier artillery that is wheeled and can self deploy without HETs. But no point with 7RHA and 29RA, those Light Gun regs are fine for 16AA and 3 Cdo for… Read more »

Joe16
Joe16
1 month ago

Thanks for clarifying- you were always the man to check in with regarding force structure! For me, towed guns that have a shorter range than 155 mm (and potentially even them) are in too much danger of getting whacked- or that seems to be a lesson from Ukraine. So, 4 RA gets Archer, with a further (ideal) split of Archer and K9 for the rest of 7 LMBCT. If no funds, then Archer? To me, a vehicle mounted 120 mm mortar is preferable to a towed 105, from the perspective that the mobility makes it more survivable and that is… Read more »

Daniele Mandelli
Daniele Mandelli
1 month ago
Reply to  Joe16

Posters have mentioned that 120mm Mortars might go to those LG units, I’d not heard that specifically, so lets see.

Airborne
Airborne
1 month ago
Reply to  Joe16

Sorry I’m a bit late for the topic but regarding Mortars, I’m a big fan, but not at replacing the 105mm. A few reasons, range, 105mm up to 17K on charge super, a number of better fuse options and a secondary (decent) DF mode. I’m Inf, and love my mortars, and a 120mm is needed in the ORBAT, but owned by Battalion. However the 105mm still gives the Rifle Companies a decent level of essential support, out to a decent range. Cheers.

Daniele Mandelli
Daniele Mandelli
1 month ago
Reply to  Airborne

Rather worrying then concerning these stories that they’re looking at 120mm for some LG units.
To be fair, I first saw the report on X thst MoD were sniffing around but LG wasn’t mentioned.
DSTL have a system of their own as a LG replacement so I do hope the 120mm are additional.

Joe16
Joe16
1 month ago
Reply to  Airborne

Never too late for some end-user feed back!
That’s interesting, and I take your points on the range and the DF option with 105 mm. Anyone making a self-propelled version?!

Graham Moore
Graham Moore
1 month ago
Reply to  Andrew D

We have always had both tracked SPGs and towed or portee artillery. Now an option exists to have truck-mounted artillery.

There are very obvious reasons to have both tracked and wheeled options – you can’t just have one type.

John Clark
John Clark
1 month ago
Reply to  Graham Moore

Morning Graham, what would your split between Archer and K9 be?

I’m sure I’m asking a stupid question here, but surely Archer is designed as a go anywhere system?

As a layman, I can understand that it might struggle with very deep mud, but I would assume tracked self propelled artillery is significantly heavier, that must impinge on mobility too?

Archer has the ‘get out of dodge’ edge over tracked regarding counter artillery I would think.

Dern
Dern
1 month ago
Reply to  John Clark

Not familiar with exactly how mobile Archer is, but either version is a really heavy beast anyway (we’re talking 30-40t here) and is not that fast (top speeds are around 45mph). It probably can get out of dodge faster than a K9 if there is a road there, but if you’re firing point is off road in any way I’d probably give the speed edge to the K9 tbh.

John Clark
John Clark
1 month ago
Reply to  Dern

Interesting, cheers Dern, what’s the cost difference between them and why the Archer purchase over K9 I wonder?

I would suppose it’s because a limited Archer purchase was available immediately.

Dern
Dern
1 month ago
Reply to  John Clark

I’m going to guess cost and logistical burden also helps.

Daniele Mandelli
Daniele Mandelli
1 month ago
Reply to  Dern

This is why I’m torn on K9. Big logistical problem to deploy those in a LMB. Unless they cut the FMF order to just 2 Regiments and leave 7 as is. Which is surely not enough?

monkey spanker
monkey spanker
1 month ago

Whatever happens the with the old guns they need put in underground storage with spares for a rainy day.
What would be a good idea is having tracked vehicles together and wheeled together.
If the truck mounted can use the same gun, systems, ammo as the track mounted it would make things a lot easier.
I would think artillery has more options on where to set up to fire to cover a certain zone?

Daniele Mandelli
Daniele Mandelli
1 month ago
Reply to  monkey spanker

Hi MS. Don’t know the operational aspects re fires, that’s for professionals. Agree on wheels, tracks, wheels should be in one brigade to ease deployment, having said that, the Russians mixed wheels with tracks easily enough in GSFG. On storage, you know they’ll just give them all away we don’t keep out of service stuff to any great extent any more. I did, funnily enough, speak to an ex RA guy who told me back in tge 90s that there was indeed such a reserve kept under ground, at a location I’m not mentioning, as I’m still looking into the… Read more »

John Clark
John Clark
1 month ago

At least with the impending procument of a new rifle in the next few years (5.56mm apparently being retained according to most sources), there is the opportunity to store refurbished L85A3’s. Unlike other countries, the UK won’t supply small arms to Ukraine, as once issued, they are dispersed and will highly likely eventually reappear in criminal hands in Western Europe. Where European law enforcement currently have to contend with drug gangs tooled up with ex Eastern block AK variant’s, Vz58’s, Scorpion SMG’s and the almost universal ‘gang’ Makarov pistol etc, in the future, we can unfortunately expect a wide verity… Read more »

Daniele Mandelli
Daniele Mandelli
1 month ago
Reply to  John Clark

Like SHORAD given to the Mujihedeen.

John Clark
John Clark
1 month ago
Reply to  Dern

Makes sense….

Graham Moore
Graham Moore
1 month ago
Reply to  John Clark

Archer has not been purchased instead of K9 Thunder.
We gifted 30-odd AS90s to Ukraine. They have been partly replaced by a limited Archer purchase, early Archers on a Volvo chassis being sold off by Sweden – this was an opportunity ourchase by MoD. This is an interim measure until the Mobile Fires Platform (MFP) delivers AS90 replacements. There is speculation about a future K9 Thunder purchase within MFP but it is just speculation.

John Clark
John Clark
1 month ago
Reply to  Graham Moore

Understood Graham, interesting info, artillery isn’t my strong point, it’s all very interesting….

Last edited 1 month ago by John Clark
Andrew D
Andrew D
1 month ago
Reply to  John Clark

Absolutely 👍

Graham Moore
Graham Moore
1 month ago
Reply to  John Clark

Afternoon John. It is not a foregone conclusion that the Mobile Fires Platform (MFP) programme will select the Korean K9, no matter that a lot of folk like it. Classically Self Propelled Guns (SPG) were tracked and armoured and were concentrated in the Divisional Artillery Group (DAG) of an armoured division. Change to structures means that the artillery for 3rd (UK) Div, our armoured div, is no longer in a DAG but is to be found together with armoured cavalry (in Ajax) in 1 Deep Recce Strike Brigade. We have three field regiments curently equipped with AS90 (RHA/RA). Archer therefore… Read more »

Daniele Mandelli
Daniele Mandelli
1 month ago
Reply to  Graham Moore

Begging your pardon, Graham, AS90 regs have reduced to 2. 1 RHA and 19 RA. The 3rd, 26 RA, became the GMLRS Regiment after the experiment of putting GMLRS Batteries ( with an Exactor Troop ) within 1 RHA, 19RA, and 26RA in 2010. Real musical chairs stuff and in effect, trying to hide defence cuts, as previously GMLRS sat in it’s own Regiment, 39RA, alongside the 6, then 5 original AS90 Regiments. Putting the artillery in 1 DRSB is seen by many as another attempt to keep brigade numbers up, as it was a perfectly good Armoured Infantry Brigade… Read more »

Graham Moore
Graham Moore
1 month ago

Thanks Daniele for the correction – that’s the last time I get info from the current MoD/army/artillery website! Someone should keep that up to date.

I fully agree that it is an Orbat cheat to put all of a division’s artillery in a brigade (1 DSRBCT) instead of in a DAG and this has prevented the maintenance of a true third manouevre bde in 3 Div. The Div is severely compromised in being able to operate effectively in the Offence and the Defence.

Daniele Mandelli
Daniele Mandelli
1 month ago
Reply to  Graham Moore

The MoD,Army website??! 😳 I admit I look at it too, periodically, just to see what’s changed. I often find the info I have myself is far more detailed and up to date , as you say, than their effort. The sad thing is with that 3 brigade con trick is that, with a major reorg and reshuffling, retaining KRH as is it might be able to be sorted back to the 3. I’d have to study the CSS set up as that’s where we’ve been hammered, but I’m sure I sketched out a rough ORBAT once that seemed to… Read more »

Graham Moore
Graham Moore
1 month ago

What did you make of the ‘rumour’ that the FS Orbat may change yet again, converting 11th SFA Bde into a Lt Mech bde and together with 16AA Bde now included in the Div, declaring 1st Div to now be a deployable div?

[Yes I remember your Orbat discussions with Dern and his wiring diagram]

Daniele Mandelli
Daniele Mandelli
1 month ago
Reply to  Graham Moore

I’ve not heard these rumours mate??? The issue 1 Div has is a lack of regular CS CSS for 4 Brigade, which only has a regular Light Cav Reg. They’ve added 16AA, a good move, giving 16, 7, and 4. By default though, it seems they are now ok with Divisionsof 2 deployable brigades. Even if 11 SFA is converted, a huge undertaking as it’s battalions lost a lot of headcount during the various reshuffles, where are the CS CSS coming from? I’d either put 3 Cdo in and restore into a full brigade or, somehow, give 4 the Regular… Read more »

Graham Moore
Graham Moore
1 month ago

17th or 18th Feb – UK Land Power post (Nicholas Drummond) “Although it has not yet been publis:hed, the British Army’s revised “Future Soldier” strategy plans to adopt a two division model. 1st (UK) Division will be a light division with two light mechanised brigades (7th and 11th) plus 16th Air Assault Brigade, while 3rd (UK) Division will be a heavy division with two armoured brigades (12th and 20th) plus 1st Deep Reconnaissance Strike brigade. This is definitely a step in the right direction, but is not yet an ideal structure. What the revised structure effectively delivers at this stage… Read more »

Daniele Mandelli
Daniele Mandelli
1 month ago
Reply to  Graham Moore

Hi Graham. Thanks. Funnily enough, I had seen that, but skimmed through it, missed the 11 Bde reference, and had dismissed it as not serious and just a what if? I was having a conversation with Dern on another article about Nick Drummonds ORBATs and he too is sceptical. Nick says “yet to be published” though. 🤔 And again, unless they’re conning people again 11 Bde, or 4 as currently, needs regular CS CSS, otherwise it is not deployable in the true sense of the word. What is your opinion on the quality, availability of reserve formations? Assuming they can… Read more »

Daniele Mandelli
Daniele Mandelli
1 month ago

And to add, from the article.
“Expeditionary Division ideal to fight the first battle, DEEP battle”
Really? With Light Guns, little formation recc beyond Jackals and no GMLRS?
😀

Graham Moore
Graham Moore
1 month ago

I am sceptical about Drummond’s rumour. IR Refresh 23 and associated DCP did not conclude that an Orbat change was required after looking at the war in Ukraine (although 16 AA Bde is being re-affiliated). To be pedantic, a ‘formation’ is a term to generically mean brigade, division, Corps, Army or Army Group etc. The term ‘unit’ of course is used to describe an entity of 400-600 ish under command of a Lt Col and a sub-unit an entity of 110-200 or so under command of a Major (in British eyes). We had TA divisions in WW2 and I recall… Read more »

Daniele Mandelli
Daniele Mandelli
1 month ago
Reply to  Graham Moore

Thanks for that detailed response and the correction re formations mate, that has never occurred to me and I’ll take note of that.

Dern
Dern
1 month ago
Reply to  Graham Moore

Remember Nicholas Drummond is not an insider, although he likes to present himself as one. Take whatever he says with a VERY big grain of salt until it’s officially confirmed.

Graham Moore
Graham Moore
1 month ago
Reply to  Dern

Thanks. I read his profile on defenceiq.com: “Nicholas Drummond Managing Director AURA Consulting Ltd. Nicholas Drummond is a defence analyst and strategic consultant who specialises in Land Warfare. He is currently the UK strategic advisor to KMW, part of the ARTEC consortium delivering Boxer MRAV to the British Army. He is a contributor to the House of Commons Defence Committee, an Army Defence Opinion Leader, a defence blogger (UKLandPower.com) and influencer via Twitter. Prior to establishing his own strategic advisory firm, Nicholas worked for McKinsey & Company. Before that he served in the Army as an infantry officer in the… Read more »

Dern
Dern
1 month ago
Reply to  Graham Moore

Agreed 100%. As I said the issues I have with him are A) He basically makes huge wishlists that could only come from large expenditure increases (I mean he given who he works for that’s not a surprise) but never gives priorities. Reading his stuff is an exercise in “We MUST have a Warrior tracked IFV replacement, we MUST have an SA80 replacement, we MUST have a new Tank Program” and never “We need the l85 replacing but we need a new IFV more” and B) it feels like he uses his profile to act like his comments on UKLandpower… Read more »

Graham Moore
Graham Moore
1 month ago

I too agree that it is advantageous to have 16 AA in 1 Div to add to the Div’s potential deployability.

19x is also in the 1xx Orbat but is all-Army Reserve.

If 11 SFA is converted to a Lt Mech bde will they still mentor and train foeign armies (allies?).

Kit for 11 Lt Mech Bde – Foxhounds ( have to build some more) or Boxers (wait for them to come into service)?
Could Boxer be called a Light Mech veh?

Daniele Mandelli
Daniele Mandelli
1 month ago
Reply to  Graham Moore

I have wondered that IF the 1,000 plus Boxers ( which we are told are budgeted and planned) actually arrive where will they go? Beyond the 5 Infantry Bns and assorted CS elements.
May be a new Boxer brigade? One can wish.

Graham Moore
Graham Moore
1 month ago

I recall your concern at the Tr1 order for 523 that there were only 85 Inf section carriers, barely enough for two mech bns. The Tr2 order for a further 100 was once broken down somwhere but I cannot find it now – I seem to recall that with it included it might just equip 5 bns but only if platoon comanders had a C2 veh and not a section carrier vehicle. – not many for Trg Org/RP /Atrrition Reserve, Total ordered now 623. Funding exists for 1,016 or 1,018. I agree it would be interesting to see the breakdown… Read more »

Daniele Mandelli
Daniele Mandelli
1 month ago
Reply to  Graham Moore

Sadly. I’m in agreement. Boxer should be in their own Brigades for rapid movement over distance, General Carters entire rationale having seen the French in Africa. But not at the expense of an IFV! But I keep saying, he brought Boxer forward, it was meant to be MIV from 2027 ONCE Ch3, Ajax, WCSP had happened, and initially for just 3 battalions that were “Heavy Protected Mobility” on Mastiff, 1 per AI Bde along side the 2 Warrior Bns. Bringing Boxer forward, one of the most expensive APCs as you often point out, meant the other programs could not be… Read more »

Graham Moore
Graham Moore
1 month ago

No bad idea to have a medium weight wheeled force – we did not need Carter to go to Africa to conclude that. The army needs heavy, medium and light forces – always has done, always will do.
Back in the day, Saxon represented medium weight infantry carriers (wheeled APCs) and more recently PM vehs (Mastiff etc) did. MIVs. Not to be confused with IFVs for the AI in the heavy metal side of things. But we know that.

I am also saddened by the slowness of the Boxer programme (to deliver them all) thats another story.

Dern
Dern
1 month ago
Reply to  Graham Moore

Lets just quickly acknowledge that the UK was a contributor nation in the Boxer program, withdrew from it, only to decide to buy it after all nearly 10 years later.

Graham Moore
Graham Moore
1 month ago
Reply to  Dern

Yes. The stated reason for withdrawing from the Boxer programme back in the day was so that UK could focus on FRES, a national project. Not a very believable reason.

The scuttlebutt was that the army was wedded to the idea of medium weight equipment being C-130 transportable and realised too late that ARTEC Boxer would never meet that requirement.

Dern
Dern
1 month ago
Reply to  Graham Moore

Just going to add, in addition to what I pointed out about 11 SFA, that 19X is not a deployable formation, and it’s nothing to do with it being AR, it’s literally a golf bag 2 Yeomanry and 8 Infantry Battalions, with no CS or CSS of any kind, it only serves as a holding formation to parcel out sub units to the other brigades really.

Graham Moore
Graham Moore
1 month ago
Reply to  Dern

Yes, for sure.

Dern
Dern
1 month ago

Mate, I think you follow me on twitter, go to my profile and check something out, I tried to link it here but nobody is watching the admin side…

Daniele Mandelli
Daniele Mandelli
1 month ago
Reply to  Dern

👌

Dern
Dern
1 month ago

You can make things work.

Dern
Dern
1 month ago
Reply to  Graham Moore

11 SFA can’t convert into a Lt. Mech brigade unless three things happen: 1 New CS and CSS units get established. 11 SFA consists of just 4 Infantry Battalions, which is okay because they’re only supposed to deploy into relatively benign areas with Logistics support provided by allies, NGO’s and contractors. 2 The Army’s headcount is increased. 11 SFA battalions are the smallest in the army, even smaller than the Ranger Battalions, so unless you suddenly up the armies establishment by a large number of private soldiers you can’t do it. 3 The Army needs to buy a fleet of… Read more »

Last edited 1 month ago by Dern
Graham Moore
Graham Moore
1 month ago
Reply to  Dern

All very true. It seems to be a big step-up in terms of resourcing additional manpower, vehicles, weapons etc. I can’t see it happening.

Dern
Dern
1 month ago
Reply to  Graham Moore

If the Army wants an extra mechanised brigade the easiest way of doing it is adding enablers to 4. So even if there was a push to upgrade a Brigade, 11 is way down the list.

Graham Moore
Graham Moore
1 month ago
Reply to  Dern

Good point. Your advice that we take Drummond’s rumours/revelations with a pinch of salt is sound.

Even if the Army wants to create an extra Lt Mech bde it is rather up to the politicians and Treasury to allow the additional manpower and the budget for the kit.

Dern
Dern
1 month ago
Reply to  Graham Moore

Exactly!

Dern
Dern
1 month ago
Reply to  Graham Moore

Last edited 1 month ago by Dern
Dern
Dern
1 month ago
Reply to  Graham Moore

I think it’s unfair to say that it “prevented” the maintenance of the third manuever brigade. More like the inability to maintain a 3rd brigade resulted in the thinking that created the DSR brigade.

Graham Moore
Graham Moore
1 month ago
Reply to  Dern

Yes, thats a good way of looking at it.

AlexS
AlexS
1 month ago
Reply to  Graham Moore

I don’t see how British Army will have tracked artillery. There is no money available for that.

Graham Moore
Graham Moore
1 month ago
Reply to  AlexS

The Gunners have always had tracked artillery (in addition to towed systems) .
But things can change – who could have imagined that after more than 60 years of infantry in armoured brigades having tracked vehicles (APCs then the much better cannon-equipped IFVs) that they would revert to a wheeled vehicle with no cannon!

Sam
Sam
1 month ago
Reply to  Andrew D

I’m a big fan of them too.

Andrew D
Andrew D
1 month ago
Reply to  Sam

👍

Nigel Collins
Nigel Collins
1 month ago
Reply to  Andrew D

It most certainly will! The K9A1 and K9A2 upgrades “The K9A1 variant is equipped with improvements such as automatic fire control system, driver’s night periscope, and auxiliary power system for enhanced efficiency. The improved K9A1 provides increased range, fast fire rate, and higher mobility during day and night times. Hanhwa proposed the K9A2, an advanced variant of the K9 Howitzer, for the UK’s Mobile Fire Platform programme that is aimed at upgrading artillery capabilities of the British Army. The K9A2 is expected to enhance the firing rate, automatic ammunition loading, and other capabilities of the artillery. The advanced variant is… Read more »

Nigel Collins
Nigel Collins
1 month ago
Reply to  Nigel Collins

K9 and K10 prove compatibility with US munitions during a live-fire demonstration at YPG
https://

youtube.com/watch?v=PidfZJDxYhs

Andrew D
Andrew D
1 month ago
Reply to  Nigel Collins

Thanks mate 👍

Kjell
Kjell
1 month ago

A video https://youtu.be/_q3jjF36Uyw?si=HQ7Z5F8dExuUwzmS from Sweden firing with Archer some Ajax and winter bath.

Nick
Nick
1 month ago

What’s wrong with the AS90 it’s a good bit of kit very mobile fast delivery of 155mm shell’s