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Edited on Sun Sep-03-06 12:08 PM by The Magistrate
My suggestions for revision would focus on these points....
First, and by far most important, if occupation is going to continue in the Jordan valley, it needs to be conducted by a body of gendarmerie devoted particularly to the task, and not by combat units, and particularly not by first service conscripts. The force should be composed of older men, trained as much in police work as in military techniques. This would go a long way towards checking the moral rot occupation duty inflicts on the Army, and by putting the task in the hands of specialists who would develop a sort of craft knowledge about their task, as police do in their's, might well go some distance to smoothing down the edges of the administration of the place. It would be best, too, were such a force specifically charged with enforcement of occupation law against the settler's still present, and imbued with a certain hostile regard for them as troublemakers, who by their actions cause them a damned lot of work they could well do without.
Second, it is not so much "special operations" forces, in the sense of commando operations that is normally taken to mean, which must be most enhanced, but rather the basic ground force task of assault that must receive a new emphasis in organization and training. Any repetition of engagement with Hezbollah is going to be an exercise in cracking bunker complexes, which is a pretty straightforward business with little mystery about it. It does help to have small units specially trained and exercised to it, though, employing specialist tools, and imbued with a willingness to take casualties and carry on. It is generally from the combat engineer arm that such detachments are drawn, and so that would seem the branch best augmented, and raised in collective esteem to high elite status.
Third, it is not so much any flaw of design needing great correction in the vehicles employed that produced the armor casualties in this episode. The Merkaava is an old design, and doubtless could stand some up-dating and up-armoring, but it is particularly well constructed for crew protection from the front, and as it is on the slow side for a main battle tank, any augmentation of armor must be done with an eye towards the penalties of increased weight on mobility, and the penalties could well outweigh the benefits. The real problem seems to be flawed tactics in the actual situation the armored elements confronted. The cure for shoulder-fired weapons destroying tanks is not redesign of the tank, it is proper co-operation between infantry on foot and tanks operating in proximity to enemy positions. Against infantry operating from interconnected bunkers and tunnelled sally points, tanks are neither a break-through nor an exploitation element, but rather mobile direct fire artillery, that does not properly lead but rather follows the infantry, smothering fire points uncovered by the infantry's operations, and standing off at some distance behind the leading infantry elements. This is not something tankers particularly like to do, feeling it somewhat beneath their calling, just as airmen regard close-support missions, but it is what the situation encountered in south Lebanon requires.
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