What Ukraine Is Teaching U.S. Army Generals About Future Combat
Dan Parsons - Yesterday 5:25 PM
Russia’s war in Ukraine is teaching U.S. Army generals that modern ground-launched missile technology, loitering munitions, and low-cost unmanned aircraft will force the service to unlearn most of what it remembers from its largely static counter-insurgency wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. In future combat, Army units will have to be constantly on the move and prepared for all manner of top-down attacks while assuming they are under persistent enemy surveillance, as troops have been since Russia's all-out invasion of Ukraine began in February.
At this year's Association of the U.S. Army's annual convention in Washington, D.C., U.S. Army leaders laid out those lessons as examples of what they are learning while observing Ukraine's remarkable battlefield successes, and Russia's comparative failures.
For the past two decades, the Army has been fighting largely static wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, defined by massive, nearly permanent bases surrounded by a network of smaller tactical operations centers (TOCs) and forward operating bases (FOBs). Patrols would operate from those bases and return when their missions were complete.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/what-ukraine-is-teaching-u-s-army-generals-about-future-combat/ar-AA12YCIK?ocid=msedgntp&cvid=aaa901ad81da4c019eb57bb9fcc78e4e