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Author Held, Bruce J.

Title Understanding why a ground combat vehicle that carries nine dismounts is important to the Army / Bruce J. Held, Mark A. Lorell, James T. Quinlivan, Chad C. Serena.

Publication Info. Santa Monica, CA : RAND Corporation, 2013.
©2013

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 All Libraries - Shared Downloadable Materials  JSTOR Open Access Ebook    Downloadable
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 University of Saint Joseph: Pope Pius XII Library - Internet  WORLD WIDE WEB E-BOOK JSTOR    Downloadable
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Description 1 online resource (xii, 40 pages) : illustrations.
text file PDF rda
Series RAND Corporation research report series ; RR184
RAND Corporation research report series ; RR184.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 39-40).
Contents Preface -- Summary -- Acknowledgments -- Abbreviations -- Introduction -- Infantry squad size from World War II to the present -- Integrating dismounted infantry capabilities with combat vehicles -- Conclusion -- Appendix -- Bibliography.
Summary The Army has examined the lessons of half a dozen significant conflicts, starting with World War II, has conducted numerous studies over the last 65 years, and has found time and again that an ability to conduct dismounted fire and maneuver is the fundamental squad-level tactic. It has also consistently determined that squads should be organized around two fire teams and should contain no fewer than nine soldiers, though a larger number has usually been preferred, to accomplish fire and maneuver doctrine, but also for reasons of squad resilience, lethality, and leader span of control. To support fully enabled mechanized infantry squads, the Army has, for the last fifty years, tried to develop and field survivable, lethal infantry fighting vehicles that are also capable of carrying a full nine to eleven man squad that can dismount to fight on foot. The Army has not been able to do this for a variety of reasons, and its current infantry fighting vehicle, the M2 Bradley, cannot carry enough soldiers to enable squad-level fire and maneuver from a single vehicle. As a result, today's mechanized infantry are more at risk when transitioning from mounted to dismounted operations, and squad-level dismounted fire and maneuver is compromised in some situations. The Ground Combat Vehicle (GCV), if developed as planned, will finally provide the infantry with an IFV that can accommodate a full squad. For this reason, the Army considers the program to be one of its most important.
Note Online resource; title from PDF title page (RAND, viewed July 24, 2013).
Funding The research described in this report was sponsored by the United States Army under Contract No. W74V8H-06-C-0001.
Subject United States. Army -- Equipment and supplies.
United States. Army. (OCoLC)fst00533532
Armored vehicles, Military.
Combat sustainability (Military science)
TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING -- Military Science.
Armored vehicles, Military. (OCoLC)fst00814878
Combat sustainability (Military science) (OCoLC)fst00868949
Armed Forces -- Equipment and supplies. (OCoLC)fst01351770
Added Author Lorell, Mark A., 1947-
Quinlivan, J. T.
Serena, Chad C.
Rand Corporation.
Arroyo Center.
ISBN 9780833082855 (electronic bk.)
083308285X (electronic bk.)
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