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"The Four Logistics Dilemmas Awaiting the Army on...." Topic


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Tango0130 Nov 2018 3:16 p.m. PST

…. the Modern Battlefield.

"Before taking command of an airborne infantry battalion's forward support company, the company's second-in-command revealed its soldiers had not qualified on their weapons systems in over a year. In a matter of days, our brigade would become the nation's Global Response Force and my supported battalion would be the brigade's first unit to respond to unknown crises across the globe. I was aware of the battalion's maintenance backlogs, the newly fielded (but untouched) capabilities sets and mission command systems, and the company's previous struggles to perform the simplest sustainment tasks; but over-simplified criticisms of previous leaders and management did not suffice to explain the full scope of the problems. These problems stemmed from four common dilemmas that young logisticians supporting tactical formations must confront daily.

In a message to cadets preparing to commission as officers across all of the Army's career fields, Lt. Col. Charles Faint challenged cadets to "own" their respective branches. In the coming months over 660 United States Military Academy and Reserve Officer Training Corps cadets accessed into the quartermaster, ordnance, and transportation corps will report to their respective units. For these future logisticians, their ability to do four things might determine the Army's success on future battlefields: find balance between training and support, advise their maneuver counterparts on logistical matters, think creatively about the existing capabilities in their formations, and effectively integrate complex technology…."
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Amicalement
Armand

Rudysnelson30 Nov 2018 10:37 p.m. PST

Daily support of tactical formations.
Throughout the 1970s, we worked on the logistical problem of defensive and offensive warfare. There were different aspects to both operations. Of course these would be modified even more by the specialty field manuals for terrain, such as desert, arctic, mountain, jungle and urban areas. And the operational specialty of such as airmobile, river crossings and other special missions. Nothing was as simple as noted in any lecture.

Accountability under went the greatest change with the shift from punch card to computer programs. Getting supplies into an area was never a real issue. Getting them to the correct unit locale was difficult. However the greatest challenge was security of the supplies in the operational zone.

Pre-positioned supply dumps with crews doing their own loading suffered from not having adequate fire power with no protection from intense artillery bombardments.
For the offensive challenge of keeping up with the forward thrusts, the protection of an ever longer msr, main supply route had unique challenges as well.
I could write more detailed logistical concepts since that was what I did for a tear in Quartermaster slots.

Tango0101 Dec 2018 12:10 p.m. PST

Thanks!.


Amicalement
Armand

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