Thursday, November 06, 2025

Anti-Ship Do-Over With the Navy Expeditionary Combat Command

The Precision Strike Missile (PrSM) has an anti-ship version. The Department of the Navy should reverse Marine Corps Force Design and have the Navy Expeditionary Combat Command (NECC) step in to use that missile.

Well that's interesting:

Lockheed Martin’s family of tested Precision Strike Missile (PrSM) variants will expand through 2026 as the company begins testing both the PrSM Increment 2 anti-ship ballistic missile variant and the PrSM Increment 4 long-range maneuvering fire variant. The company is also exploring ship-launched PrSM capability from Mark 41 VLS cells on U.S. Navy warships.

I'm sure the Army Multi-Domain Task Force (MDTF) and the Marine Littoral Regiment (MLR) will get this missile. 

I can understand the Army interest in long-range fires when the Air Force is more focused on Victory Through Air Power campaigns that downgrade Army battlefield needs

I don't understand the Marine Corps direction. And even if the new missile improves the anti-ship capability, it still seems like the Marine Littoral Regiments are masters of none.

Perhaps this missile is an opportunity to ease the NECC into the anti-ship role, which this organization should have had.

The Marines, reorganized (with updates) back to their prior focus, would still be tapped for ground security and perhaps air defense depending on what capabilities the NECC can absorb. 

NOTE: TDR Winter War of 2022 coverage continues here.

NOTE: You may also like to read my posts on Substack, at The Dignified Rant: Evolved. Go ahead and subscribe to it. It's the right thing to do! 

NOTE: Illustration from the article. Also, I have a small amount of Lockheed Martin stock.

Wednesday, November 05, 2025

Picking Teams in the Horn of Africa

Kenya and Ethiopia link up in a region already linking up. Interesting.

Ethiopia and Kenya signed a defense cooperation agreement. Ethiopia's defense minister: 

"It reflects our longstanding relationship, rooted in shared borders, history, and common challenges," he stated, adding that the collaboration would foster not just bilateral peace but broader stability across the Horn of Africa.

The Kenyan representative:

“It will not only be a legal agreement but a symbol of solidarity and shared commitment. By working together, we strengthen our collective defence capabilities, deter potential aggression, and foster a culture grounded in peace, cooperation, and mutual respect.” 

Interesting under the circumstances

So too is this from the article:

Delegates dissected scenarios like coordinated patrols to stem arms flows from Yemen via the Red Sea[.] 

Would Kenya provide a port for an Ethiopian navy for use in the Red Sea?  

The agreement when fully ratified will have NATO Article 5-like mutual aid provisions. Poll the grenadiers, eh?

Note too that America has designated Kenya as a major non-NATO ally.

NOTE: TDR Winter War of 2022 coverage continues here.

NOTE: You may also like to read my posts on Substack, at The Dignified Rant: Evolved. Go ahead and subscribe to it. It's the right thing to do! 

NOTE: Map from Mapchart.com and then clipped and edited (crudely) with snipping tool.

Tuesday, November 04, 2025

Deja Pearl Harbor, All Over Again

Our signal can be an enemy's opportunity.

I guess this is intended to frighten China into behaving:

A series of upgrades and modernizations at Pearl Harbor are preparing the Honolulu Naval Base for all three hypersonic-armed Zumwalt-class destroyers and up to three hypersonic-armed Virginia-class nuclear attack submarines. The move is a significant relocation of the U.S. Navy’s hypersonic equipped combatant force for a potential war with China.

Remember when the United States moved its Pacific Fleet from San Diego, California to Pearl Harbor as a warning to Japan? Good times. Good times

Don't establish Hypersonic Row

But I'm assured that being surprised is inconceivable in the modern era.

NOTE: TDR Winter War of 2022 coverage continues here.

NOTE: You may also like to read my posts on Substack, at The Dignified Rant: Evolved. Go ahead and subscribe to it. It's the right thing to do! 

NOTE: Photo from the article.

Monday, November 03, 2025

The Winter War of 2022 Gets Cold and Cloudy With a Chance of Offensive

Russia's consistently claims that they have more territorial ambitions and that their victory is inevitable because Russia can take the battlefield punishment as long as it takes. One of the problems of this framing of the war is that it compels Russia to keep attacking to "prove" their dual claims are correct. What could possibly go wrong?

The war goes on. Pokrovsk and neighboring Myrnohrad look like they could fall to the Russians soon. It is unclear if any Ukrainian troops could be trapped in the narrow salient. Russia has been trying to take Pokrovsk for a long time. A slow advance will eventually take everything, I suppose. As long as the Russians are willing to die in just astounding numbers for Putin. Go figure.

Are Russian leaders living in a fantasy world or is the West?

Russian President Vladimir Putin boasted that Russia is decisively winning in Ukraine, stating that Russia has the strategic initiative along the thousand kilometers long front line. Putin believes his forces are on the verge of victory and that the Ukrainians need to realize what is happening in the combat zone. Other Russian leaders insist that if Ukraine does not accept the Russian view of the situation and make peace on Russian terms, they would suffer much heavier losses. This attitude is based on the Russian belief that NATO nations will eventually tire of pouring all the military and economic aid into Ukraine. That is not happening and many Russian leaders and Russians in general prefer to believe that eventually Russia will have the edge in military power.

Yet despite the war dragging on for 44 months, the prediction born in the pre-war crisis era lingers: Ukraine is doomed to fall under the Russian bulldozer. 

Time has not ended that prediction. Ukraine still resists and has shown it can go on offense; it has regained use of the Black Sea and seemingly secured Odessa; and Ukraine is expanding its aerial strategic warfare on Russia's logistics foundation to wage the war. Sure, the theory goes, Ukraine has shocked the world (it didn't shock me). But Russia's weight of numbers will be decisive at any moment now.

That theory could be right. But it could go the other way

But for now, Russia is compelled to continue their offensives because an army on the verge of winning can't stop attacking. I mean, that's what Putin apparently believes:

In a video released by the Kremlin on Sunday, Putin, wearing military uniform, said that the armed forces had achieved numerous successes in the war against Ukraine and confirmed the successful test of the long-range, nuclear-powered Burevestnik missile. The meeting took place at a command centre at an undisclosed location. 

Oh, and Putin waves around his latest missile to frighten the West. As he does. Or to reassure his people of Russia's power despite the long war. Who knows what is most important to him. 

Who knows what everybody in that meeting believes. But personal safety requires everyone to act like they believe it. 

Can Russia take advantage of cloud cover to nullify Ukrainian FPV drones? Can Russia overcome mud to exploit its carefully accumulated armored vehicles? Or will Ukrainian defense problems be simplified by knowing Russian armor is restricted to paved roads? 

Will Russia's commitment to validating their claims be their undoing?

NOTE: ISW updates continue here. Also, I put war-related links and commentary in the Weekend Data Dump.

NOTE: You may also read my posts on Substack, at The Dignified Rant: Evolved

NOTE: I made the image with Bing.

Sunday, November 02, 2025

Weekend Data Dump

I post at The Dignified Rant: Evolved on Substack. Help me out by subscribing and by liking and sharing posts. I also post here on TDR seven days a week, including Weekend Data Dump and Winter War of 2022. I occasionally post short data dump-type items on my Substack "Notes" section

In case you missed it on Substack: Defending the Sea Lines of Communication to the First Island Chain

In case you missed it on Substack: Still Learning the Lessons of 2022

In case you missed it on Substack: The Return of Carrots to Belarus Policy

In case you missed it on Substack: Hold, Kill, Counter-attack

Economic ambition and military necessity: "Long overlooked by Ottawa, Canada’s remote and resource-rich Arctic is suddenly at the center of a new national project — one whose potential was recognized early on by outside players, including the United States." It's TDR approved!

Given that people can already donate to reduce the national debt or voluntarily pay more taxes, I'm not sure why a private contribution to help pay troops during the shutdown raises ethical questions. What about the ethics of refusing to pay them? 

As long as the Navy is in the neighborhood: "A U.S. warship docked in Trinidad and Tobago‘s capital Sunday as the Trump administration boosts military pressure on neighboring Venezuela and its President Nicolás Maduro."

Okay: "The Marine Corps is working on building out its logistics capabilities abroad, aiming to better resupply and sustain forces in the Pacific in the event of a major conflict." Good luck with that.

Ready for Plan B yet? "Israeli forces carried out a "targeted strike" on an individual in central Gaza who was planning to attack Israeli troops, Israel's military said on Saturday." Plan B. Hamas is just stalling to avoid disarming.

Sh*t got real in Croatia

Is Xi Jinping brilliant or the F**k-up Fairy? 

If Kuznetsov had two aircraft crashes we'd mock the Hell out of the Russian navy. At one level, accidents are the price of preparedness. But two so close together? Are we at coincidence already? LATER: Hmm. Perhaps my tinfoil hat is perfectly adjusted. But coincidences do happen.

This author wonders if this is because of actual plots or just fear of plots: "The most notable development from this week’s Party Plenum is the large-scale purge of the People’s Liberation Army." I wonder if it is getting rid of deadwood prior to going to war. With bonus references to who can order the PLA to war.

South Korea can help in a Taiwan war but South Korea must remain focused on the DMZ. For America, South Korea is mostly a power projection platform that can handle its local defense. 

Israel had the societal confidence in itself to destroy Medieval barbarians despite the despicable caterwauling that Hamas and their ilk must be "understood" for "why they hate us"--and what we could do to stop deserving death.

I don't think that word "unprecedented" means what you think it means. Breathe, people. And work the problems, of course. 

Russia is right to be suspicious of China.

State of the bad guys: Iran edition. Risks and opportunities for the U.S. Of note, beating the Houthis will require a local partner to conduct ground operations. Indeed. And resisting Iran in Iraq. Yes.

If enforcing them is a separate issue, they really didn't snap back, did they? "The United States and its international partners must ... enforce the UN 'snapback' sanctions that the United Kingdom, France, and Germany reactivated against Iran."

The EU needs a stronger identity to defeat nationalism? Good luck to Europeans if the EU gets that. 

Does that scare Trinidad and Tobago or make them committed to Maduro's defeat? "Venezuela revoked energy deals with neighboring Trinidad and Tobago for its support of a US military offensive in the Caribbean[.]"

I wouldn't focus on trendy drones. But yes, American firepower and specialized capabilities are needed to support European ground forces. And in fact, with only a few American Army combat brigades in Europe, practically speaking we are already at the stage of the Europeans providing the ground forces. 

American and Indian P-8s practiced naval patrol missions near Diego Garcia. Cutting China's sea lines of supply across the Indian Ocean would hurt China a lot

Non-stealth B-1 bombers flew "near" Venezuela

Turkey to buy British Typhoon fighter planes. Is this a sign that Turkey has ruled out behaving less like an Islamist state to rejoin the F-35 program?

Huh: "Russian President Vladimir Putin met North Korea’s top diplomat during her visit to Moscow as the two countries continue to deepen their military cooperation." Just what is the plan Putin mentioned? 

Good luck to the Sudanese people. The Sainted International Community® couldn't care less about actual genocide if Israel can't be blamed.

Is bad fuel the cause of those two Nimitz aircraft going down in the South China Sea? Honestly, I'd be shocked if China is responsible. Still, a local commander off the leash might think it a good idea at some point, if not this point. 

Protecting the sea lines of communication: Red Sea edition

Can Russia win with its level of government corruption?  

They can fight: "Japan is donating six Abukuma-class destroyer escorts to the Philippines." If the Philippines can win a short, tiny war against China, China faces escalation speed bumps.

Keep in mind that military justice is designed not so much for justice as it is for maintaining an effective military. Justice problems in an organization that sends troops to kill and die should not be a shock. Perhaps if we renamed it the Uniform Code of Military Punishment. Not saying it can't be improved.

True: "Washington does not merely lack Arctic strategy — it lacks Arctic command. The High North is a glaring blind spot in America’s national security." I've long advocated a POLARCOM.

A sense of urgency, please: "Japan and the United States are expected to sign a memorandum to cooperate in strengthening shipbuilding capabilities in both countries as part of economic security measures, according to media reports." 

A Russian transport aircraft landed in Venezuela. Weapons? Ammo? Electronic warfare equipment? Personnel? Heck, is its primary purpose to evacuate personnel and evidence of Russian activities there?

A big Israeli objective is destroying the tunnel system that Hamas built. That would make it much harder for Hamas to rebuild its control and terror capabilities. 

Yes: "Europe’s populations are readier to fight than they are often credited. The problem isn’t their lack of will, but elite pessimism about it." Europeans are very much from Mars. But elites blame the bloody peasants. In the short term, European nations aren't being led to defend themselves

Not saying we must do something about it, but this occupation doesn't inspire college students to demand free Cyprus "from the green line to the sea."

Settler-colonialism in action, with collaborators running the native's government.

Israel refuses to pretend that the ceasefire with Gaza fully exists.

China has long tried to act as if the South China Sea is simply an internal Chinese issue. Is China persuading foreigners to act is if it is under China's jurisdiction? 

America and Japan strengthened defense ties and American access to rare earth and critical minerals

Ukraine hit a Russian dam and the flooding is screwing up Russian logistics in the Kharkiv section of the front.

The Philippines resists China's subliminal offensive: "Philippine Marines deployed two small boats last week to escort a Chinese fishing boat that Manila claimed was illegally fishing at Second Thomas Shoal." You recall the shoal, right? Manila needs to pour concrete before that outpost is washed away.

About the CV-90s the Ukrainians will help produce

British and French SSBNs

Strong proof that Hamas is stalling the return of hostage bodies to Israel: "The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) on Wednesday condemned what it called an apparent 'staged' exhumation of the remains of an Israeli hostage in the Gaza Strip." 

I've had concern that political violence from dark corners of the left (and celebrated or excused by media and online people) is Bleeding Kansas and could spark something much worse. But I think we've come through worse even as the left panics itself. As long as law enforcement and courts punish violent scum.

I assume the Navy will respond to urgent humanitarian needs in the wake of Hurricane Melissa--and the American base in Cuba was in the path--before resuming scheduled programming. 

Will China practice with small wars before the main even against Taiwan? I've suggested a smaller initial objective. But as practice? How well did Chechnya, Georgia, Crimea, and the Donbas prepare Russia for the Winter War of 2022? And practice may also serve to alarm neighbors who arm up faster in response.

Stop flinging panties at the latest dreamy silver bullet weapon. There will always be newer and shinier weapons to send your heart fluttering and inspire poetry.

The duplicitous a-holes stabbed us in the back (hiding Osama bin Laden in Pakistan!) while we tried to do that. So good freaking luck: "Pakistan's defence minister threatened on Wednesday to "obliterate" the ruling Taliban in neighbouring Afghanistan[.]" Maybe their new Chinese buddies will help. LOL.

Oh no! Anyway ...

The U.S. will reduce its post-Winter War of 2022 Army temporary surge in Europe by a brigade, it seems.

This is one of the Guard's jobs: "The National Guard is developing a “quick reaction force” of troops trained in crowd control and civil disturbance that can be ready to deploy to U.S. cities by January, according to a leaked memo[.]" Um, Minutemen? My unit had riot control training. 

First we had AUKUS. Now we have ROKUS

Is EMAL FUBAR and not fixed? "President Donald Trump told Navy sailors that he intends to sign an executive order directing the service to use steam for its aircraft carrier’s catapults and hydraulics for the ship’s elevators." 

Preparing for AUKUS boats: "A Virginia-class attack submarine is in port in Australia for the second maintenance period of a nuclear-powered boat on foreign soil." And for USN forward maintenance. 

Interesting: "IBM is set to launch a new large language model that’s purpose-built for defense and national security applications and trained on data from open-source intelligence provider, Janes." Trained on--not relying on? 

If flexible "mission command" is adopted by the PLA, is it compatible with CCP doctrine? Won't political officers looking over the shoulder of commanders undermine that concept? I'm not confident the U.S. Army operates under that concept.

LOL: "President Vladimir Putin says that Russia successfully tested one of its Poseidon nuclear-powered, nuclear-tipped, ultra-long-endurance torpedoes yesterday." Release the Kraken! 

It is unclear if American forces shot it down: "A suspicious drone flying near a base used by U.S. forces in Estonia was recently shot down, authorities in the Baltic country bordering Russia said this week." 

The assault on Russia's internet.

I hope we are doing better: "Chinese weapons designers have apparently solved the AGS problem with a novel new electromagnetic railgun cannon that can launch shells at speeds of over 8,000 kilometers an hour." 

As a rule I don't like tariffs. But I also don't like that since right after World War II, the tariff (and non-tariff trade barriers) have been heavily tilted against America. It is time to change that. So far the tariffs don't seem to be having bad effects on America. But I still hope they are a means rather than an end. 

Can Trump pry Russia away from China? I've long hoped for that and figured that was Trump's game. But I doubt the oil sanctions are decisive. On the other hand, you never know what increment makes the total decisive. 

With this situation, Hamas survives: "Gaza’s new normal seems to be a ceasefire that is both fragile and durable. A truce that holds in general but can vanish in an instant, only to be restored within hours or days." Time for Plan B

Regime change in Venezuela won't be done with the forces we have deployed or are likely to send. But could internal resistance do that with limited American help? Nice work if you can get it. And would South American powers contribute security forces if Maduro is overthrown?

Air power on the rocks: "NORAD surged two F-35s, two F-16s, and a trio of KC-135s to Pituffik Space Base in Greenland earlier this month for a 'dynamic operational exercise,' testing its ability to rapidly deploy forces in the Arctic." Learn the limits that extreme cold inflicts on units.

My latest article in Army magazine is online

This is known as "reloading": "Pakistan and Afghanistan have agreed to resume talks in Istanbul at the request of mediator Turkiye after earlier rounds between Islamabad and Kabul failed to resolve spiralling tensions between the neighbours that have exploded into military clashes in recent weeks." 

Even if it works, what is the point of Russian nuclear-powered cruise missile?  Perhaps if Russia builds a large wooden badger ... .

As we contemplate how to deal with Syria's post-Assad Sunni Islamist government, recall my warning long ago

He'd have to say that regardless of the true state, no? "Vice Adm. Richard Correll, the Trump administration’s nominee to head US Strategic Command, today told the Senate Armed Services Committee that he is 'absolutely confident' in the reliability of the nation’s nuclear arsenal[.]" 

Okay: "Speed. Persistence. Capabilities 'designed and built to enable operations inside the weapons engagement zone.' The commander of U.S. Pacific Fleet wants it all. And he wants it now." As long as the fleet has a good reason to operate in the enemy weapons engagement zone.

Be careful given that Hamas exploited Israeli reliance on non-human sentries: "The first to fight on the ground in a Russian attack on NATO territory could be allied robots rather than infantrymen." Let's not get ahead of ourselves. But I've long felt robots have a role in static defense. But humans will never be out.

I guess we know Lebanon won't disarm Hezbollah: "Lebanese President Joseph Aoun has instructed the armed forces to confront any further Israeli incursion in the country’s south after Israeli forces crossed their shared border and killed a municipal worker during an overnight raid." 

It's a Chinese subliminal war: "China’s persistent use of maritime gray zone tactics poses a fundamental challenge to regional stability and the international order."

Gulp: "FBI Director Kash Patel said the department thwarted a 'potential terrorist attack,' arresting multiple suspects in Michigan." 

Oh, FFS Canada. With that kind of soft, post-history military leadership, Canada will stink on ice no matter how much money is spent. Canada once stood tall with NATO in West Germany. And fought at our side in Afghanistan. What happened? Did the Somalia scandal in the end break them? Tip to Instapundit. 

Structural anti-Semitism at the global level.  

Ukrainians still want to resist Russia's invasion. But casualties have an effect: "Ukraine used a series of clever moves to maintain their troop numbers despite growing losses and increased reluctance of Ukrainian men to serve." What's the reality in less-free Russia over much higher losses? 

Will America strike Venezuelan facilities used to smuggle drugs: "If President Trump decides to move forward with airstrikes, they said, the targets would send a clear message to Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro that it is time to step down." When you strike a king, kill him. We only have signal strength.

Keep in mind that Trump did not say he wanted nuclear detonations to test warheads: "US president Donald Trump has directed the War Department, formerly the Department of Defense, to restart the testing of nuclear weapons." But I admit I'm wary of relying on computer simulations to "test" warhead designs. 

Can China decouple trade with America more effectively than America can decouple from China? 

Can the West draw--and enforce--red lines against Chinese and Russian gray zone tactics (which I call "subliminal warfare")? 

I don't think getting the first volunteer for the stabilization force countries to serve in Gaza is the major problem. The major problem is Hamas, which wants to survive above all else. Time for Plan B

From the "Well, Duh" files, Russia is the biggest threat to Danish possession of Greenland

FFS, preventing a wave of migrants should not rely on peace and prosperity in the Third World. Stop them at the border; refuse to provide benefits,; and send them back.

The dark side of Zelensky's rule. No doubt. But a constitution is not a suicide pact. Especially when Doctor Putin is ready to assist.

I mentioned last week that trade disputes would not harm America-India defense ties: "India and the US have signed a framework agreement to expand defence cooperation over the next 10-years."

Will Ukraine get these? "Germany and the United Kingdom have jointly contracted General Dynamics European Land Systems (GDELS) to develop and produce a new generation of floating bridges for rapid frontline deployment[.]" 

To be fair, mostly peaceful: "Over 200,000 deaths are attributed to Islamic terrorist groups operating in sub-Saharan Africa in the past ten years." If the good guys could win the civil war, that would be great.

Collateral damage: "Most of the wounded North Korean soldiers were returned to North Korea where they told others about hearing popular music while in Ukraine and noting that Ukrainians had a much higher standard of living than North Koreans." I didn't think Kim would let anybody return home alive. 

Shame. That's no way to fulfill your enlistment oath.

China is appearing militarily far from Taiwan lately. Hmm

Going to war with Venezuela likely requires Congressional approval--unless Venezuela strikes first. But I agree this kinetic drug war is legal: "The future of Venezuela remains unknown, but the boats going up in flames are legitimate targets of the U.S. military." Unless Congress cuts of funding.

Well that's different: "President Donald Trump announced Friday that he is designating Nigeria a Country of Particular Concern (CPC) due to the relentless persecution of Christians conducted by “radical Islamist” terrorists." Tip to Instapundit. 

Russia's subliminal war on the West. It may be designed to go under our radar, but it is a war

Making aiming easier. The path to weapons that aim themselves is already clear. And the Army will need to adapt to enemies on the same path

Turkey could counter-balance Iran there: "Iraq signed a deal with Turkey on Sunday under which water infrastructure projects to be carried out by Turkish firms will be financed with revenue from oil sales, a Turkish official said." 

Saturday, November 01, 2025

How the Proto-Empire Strips Away the Pesky Prefix

A stronger European Union will cause far more problems than it solves for Europeans and America. The example of classical Athens does not demonstrate the value of top-down integration.

Yellow represents Athens and its allies/empire.

Looking back at the Athens-Sparta model for current national security issues, this author offers Athens' Delian League as an example for Europeans to follow to gain strength:

Alone, European countries are second-rate. Together, Europe can be a superpower.

Not only would this enable Europe to pursue a qualified independent geostrategic approach, it goes hand in hand with economic growth and the deeply integrated continent envisioned by Mario Draghi. That is a powerful plan that Thucydides would approve of. ...

Thucydides notes that fear, honor, and self-interest drive behavior; if appeals to solidarity and democracy fail, leaders should emphasize the material benefits of integration and the dangers of inaction.

The Delian League, forged before the Peloponnesian War, offered allies common coinage, measures, free trade, and secure seas. Europe can make a similar case: deeper integration can deliver far greater tangible gains than the cheap energy Russia can offer.

The author wants an "ever closer union" as the European Union calls its integration. But "ever closer league" turned a league into an Athenian empire. I fear Brussels is already the Athens of that proto-empire. It already gathers the treasury within its domain. Don't let it get an army.

Sparta defeated that Athenian empire, by the way. 

European countries need defense integration, but it must be through NATO which has free countries bolstered by America's post-Cold War role. And here's one suggestion I made in Army magazine on aggregating European military power.

NOTE: TDR Winter War of 2022 coverage continues here.

NOTE: You may also like to read my posts on Substack, at The Dignified Rant: Evolved. Go ahead and subscribe to it. It's the right thing to do! 

NOTE: Map from Wikipedia: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Map_Peloponnesian_War_431_BC-en.svg. Modified with EU flag on Imgflip.com.

Friday, October 31, 2025

Remembering Route Security

Route security is nothing new in history, notwithstanding the bright shiny small drones that threaten units behind the lines today.

Why Army logistics need to think like combat units to survive drones:  

For the first time since World War II, U.S. Army logisticians must contemplate a grim future where supply units no longer have the luxury of assuming that the Air Force can shield them from aerial threats. Nor that being behind the front lines will keep them safe from enemy bombardment.

While it wasn't due to enemy aerial threats, the Army had to do that in Iraq. Recall too the flying IEDs in Iraq that were proto-suicide drones. And really, that problem is nothing new even with aerial supremacy.

Hell, Army combat units need to think more this way. 

NOTE: TDR Winter War of 2022 coverage continues here.

NOTE: You may also like to read my posts on Substack, at The Dignified Rant: Evolved. Go ahead and subscribe to it. It's the right thing to do! 

NOTE: Photo from the article. 

Thursday, October 30, 2025

If Turtle Tanks are the Future

Turtle tanks have appeared on the battlefield. These are tanks with armored and protected superstructures build on top of a tank to protect them from FPV suicide drones, leaving the tank turret able to traverse in a narrow forward arc. This abandons the advantage of a turret that can fire 360 degrees. 

Turtle tanks seem to be able to endure more FPV drone punishment while still carrying out their missions. I don't know how many tanks have been turned into turtle tanks. I assume new means of protecting tanks will be created, with both passive and active kinetic and electronic means so such crude turret and engine compartment caves aren't needed. 

Tanks may need to change how they fight and how they look. I suggested one model based on the M3 Lee tank. That goes part of the way to the assault gun model. If turtle tanks are--even if the massive protective shell looks very different--how tanks will survive, would it make sense to build cheaper and simpler assault guns that incorporate the main gun in the hull to continue to provide mobile, protected firepower on the battlefield? 

NOTE: TDR Winter War of 2022 coverage continues here.

NOTE: You may also like to read my posts on Substack, at The Dignified Rant: Evolved. Go ahead and subscribe to it. It's the right thing to do! 

NOTE: Photo of Russian "turtle tank" from this article