Modern Military vs WWII military

Modern army vs WW2 army

Can a modern army take a WW2 army? This is the question we've never bothered to ask with all the narcissism surrounding our war fighting capabilitys, and how they have supposedly made quantum leaps over the decades. Recent literature indicates that in spite of the surge in some of our technical abilitys (including air power, logistics, smart bombs, networked C3I), there has actually been a net decline in our war fighting capabilitys at large. There are many tactical idiosyncrasys which could illuminate why this is, but they are highly specific to each army, and would not have much importance with a broad overview like this. Rather than naming a specific army from each time ficton and putting them up against each other (which would be too vulnerable to nitpicking), we will avoid such an approach in favour of identifying the tactical and technical trends in each force: That means no nuclear ordnance, and no biological or chemical weapons! Such a setup allows us an opportunity to see how rusty our armys have become as measured against their WW2 peak.

In terms of infantry quality, they are nearly equal. Assault rifles, body armour, night vision goggles, and lightweight equipment give us the edge, but its far from a decisive one. WW2 armys benefit from using full power rifle, carbine, and machine gun ammunition (with a commensurately higher stopping power and barrier penetration), as well as man and vehicle mounted flame throwers for breaking sieges, and immediate support from infantry guns. These are rather short ranged cannons which perform both direct and indirect fire missions, something that neither mortars or shoulder launched rockets together can do. Also, it bears keeping in mind that the seeming advantages of the moderns may be illusory. For instance, merely wearing body armor does not ensure your complete safety from small arms fire, even if the vest is technically up to the job. After all, many gunshot injurys afflict the limbs and the head (especially if the soldier was behind cover before he was shot), and even if hit directly in the torso, the blunt force of the impact is usually brutal enough to take the soldier out of the fight and render him non mission capable. That is just one example of many. Remember, there are no guarantees in a fight!

In terms of infantry quantity, however, the moderns lag far behind. The WW2 battlefront was simply gargantuan. At its peak in late 1941, the german army was employing 154 divisions, 115 of whom were infantry! (This was just what they sent aganst the russians, BTW) At its peak in early 1945, the US army was employing 90 divisions, 70 of whom were infantry... For comparison, the modern day german army has just 6 brigades, while even the US army -the 4th largest in the world- only has around 45 brigades. Modern brigades essentially serve the same role that a small division used to, so it would not be unfair to measure them in a one on one fashion. This being the case, we can see that germanys military is about 1/40th its previous size, while the US military has easily been cut in half. That is a very discouraging force ratio which could have all kinds of negative consequences for us, beyond simple attrition. Josef stalin put it best: 'Quantity is a quality all of its own.' Without very favourable terrain, or constant shock action, a 10 fold disparity in numbers makes it virtually impossible to wage a pitched battle. This would be bad enough on its own, without the additional complication of most of our infantry being located in mechanised or motorised (rather than foot mobile) units.

Such restrictions mean that modern armys would not be able to maintain a continuous front line. Strategically and operationally speaking, they would instead be left to roam about in large battle groups, while the OPFOR flooded around them in a situation akin to moses and the red sea. That is not good. Strategic mobility would be servely impeded, supply lines would be smothered, encirclement would never be more than a breath away, and COs would be shitting bricks... But these concerns can be waved aside for now, since this posts intention is only to examine the tactical finesse of these two separate militarys. Even so, this still leaves us with the daunting prospect of 1 modern brigade facing off against half a dozen or more divisions! At this point, some would undoubtedly try to bring up the issue of the US militarys high kill ratio in combat, which might be an adequate compensation for their numerical disadvantage. We must caution that in war, however, victory depends largely on whether or not you are able to achieve stated objectives, not on whether you kill a large number of enemy soldiers. Putting that more simply, attrition can only be a means to an end, not an end in itself. Accepting that caveat, however, it might still be possible for the moderns to level the playing field by copying the strategy of the german army at verdun, and utilise their artillery in an effort to bleed the opposition white and degrading their readiness for future engagements.

Now, lets move onto armor. WW2 tanks, of course, have no hope of defeating MBTs in anything remotely resembling a straight up fight. Their progeny are not only faster, but more heavily armed and armored. They can fire accurately while moving at speed, and their long rod penetrator shells would bore a hole clear through a vehicles armor and ignite everything inside. A sherman or t-34 would only have a chance at destroying MBTs by creeping up on them at close range, and taking a shot at their rear armor, a tall order for most tank crews. Infantry forces would be even worse off, since their most popular anti-tank weapons (the high caliber rifle or shaped charge warhead) wouldn't be able to penetrate even the thinnest plates of armor. Even so, the advantage of having tanks which can roam about the battlefield nearly unopposed is diminished if our infantry, engineers, reconnaissance and support troops cannot do the same. In a way, combined arms practise is detrimental to any MBTs attempting to rampage behind enemy lines: If or when they shatter the enemy through shock effect, the armored column would not be able to pursue them and exploit their success to the fullest. Instead, they would be forced to stay behind and create a working environment for the reserve forces, mopping up enemy troops along the way. Moreover, these vehicles can still be disabled and/or destroyed by anti-tank mines, as well as fire from 6 inch howitzers. Clumsy pieces to manager into position, to be sure, but a direct hit could potentially blow the tanks turret off, due to the shells combination of explosive filling and sheer momentum.

That is the rundown on how a modern armored brigade might fare against a WW2 formation. But obviously, theres no need to do the reverse, since WW2 armored divisions are composed of such flimsy vehicles. Theres no way they could even remotely threaten us... Right? Well actually, since our armys have NO dedicated anti-tank formations, its fairly likely they could. Some would undoubtedly object to this statement, pointing out any number of ATGMs and PGMs in use, but that would be missing the point: We have various weapons systems that are capable of destroying tanks, but which do not have the benefit of being structured into a relevant command structure. As jim storr said: 'Anti-tank weapons destroy tanks, while anti-tank troops protect units and formations.' Thus, the moderns will have have no shield to protect their body from an attack that comes via a column of shermans, or panzer 4s, or t-34s, or churchills. In fact, most mechanised/armored brigades as a whole suffer from deficient security in their flanks and rear, due to their increased reliance on a small number of major weapons systems (which are spread thin in a vain attempt to provide both offense and defense). This is important to keep in mind, because the main purpose of a tank is to penetrate enemy rear areas, and bring cannon + machine gun fire to bear on soft targets. And a 75mm tank gun, puny as it is compared to the 120-125mm long barrels of the modern MBTs, is still capable of destroying most anything that pops up on the battlefield.

Artillery. WW2 divisions have a much more diverse array of artillery than us. Although heavier and less capable than our guns, commanders aren't restricted by the one caliber fits all syndrome that has afflicted modern forces, with our clear predilection for 155mm weapons. They generally have four to choose from: 75mm, 105mm, 155mm, and 203mm. Decent weapons that work well within their respective niches, rather than being bent out of shape to function as an unrealistic all purpose piece, which is more than we can say. Precision guided munitions are useful, but they are also expensive, and not available in great quantitys. For regular battlefield use, PGMs probably aren't even needed -other than for fleeting or high value targets- seeing as the precision of modern guns is already so far beyond that of their WW2 peers. Given sufficient forward observation, they can be expected to be extremely accurate, dropping shells right on top of the enemy. With the first barrage. The super long range of todays howitzers will also prove helpful in the defense, since artillery has always been the primary backbone of a thin defensive line (and our forces WILL be spread very thinly). Unfortunately, these advantages might not impress an enemy which has so many pieces of artillery as to group them into independent divisions (!). Our shell stocks will also not be up for a protracted conflict, unlike the WW2 nations whose ammunition reserves had been brought up to peak levels, by virtue of having the time to dial their industry up to the task.

Airpower. This has two components, fixed and rotary winged aircraft. Modern helicopters will be put at high risk from the WW2 armys unusually heavy concentrations of AAA, quantitys which just aren't seen on todays batlefield. They may not have the advantage of radar guidance, but like all artillery of this period, they are available in a wide range of different calibers and effective ranges, which would make a helicopter squadrons navigation across active battlefields a nightmare. Modern fighters would presumably have a field day against their WW2 adversarys, although they will be heavily outnumbered, and had thus better not get shot down or waste ammunition. In the long run, jet fighter squadrons may not be able to maintain the necessary sortie rate and operational tempo to keep the enemy on the defensive, by virtue of their typically low mechanical reliability and small numbers. On other fronts, close air support and interdiction craft would be right at home in this environment: They are superbly well designed and capable in their niche roles (although only the americans field a really substantial number of them), and operating in target rich theaters like this are exactly what they were built for. Of course, this also holds true for their enemy, some of whom fielded a ground attack force with many thousands of aircraft!
 

sharlin

Banned
More like source the whole article.

I think this article forgets the massive disparancy between technology. For example a group of 2..err..Tornadoes attack a WW2 armoured formation on the advance so come in fast and low. So fast that the AA guns would not be able to train fast enough to track them and then the two Tornadoes release their cluster bombs.

Those two aircraft just covered a huge area full of men and equipment in explosions, probably gutting the armoured formation.

Most modern infantry are mechanised or have mechanised support. An IFV like a Warrior or Bradley's armour is proof against an old 75 - 76mm gun on a sherman at the ranges a Sherman could be expected to hit at (maybe 800 meters max from a stationary position against a stationary target, really it was about 4 - 500 meters and a modern 25, 30 or 40mm gun on an IFV firing APDS ammo could punch through a Sherman or T-34 well outside their engagement range with far greater accuracy and thats before factoring in ATGMs.

Whilst modern infantry regiments are far far smaller than their WW2 equivalents the weight of firepower available is not that dissimilar. When I was attached to 2 PWRR the Regiment was made up of 5 Companies about 100 ish strong each, these had their own mortar platoon per company (81mm mortar) as well as a HMG platoon. Each squad would have its own either LSW or MINIMI machine gun in addition to having the SA-80A2 with their grenade launchers.

This weight of firepower in such a small unit would probably give Patton a raging hardon. Oh and each Company was fully mechanised with Warrior IFV support.

So what you have is a smaller but still heavy firepower unit with far higher moblity than most WW2 formations could dream of.

You've also got to factor in doctrinal changes over the years. If facing a massive army like a WW2 type one (Warsaw Pact says hello) you don't stand there trying to trade punches with it, you hit, move, hit again, move and repeat and rinse, you don't get bogged down. NATO trained how to fight an army that was WW2 sized but with more modern tactics and far more modern tech, a WW2 army in the field really would not stand a chance.

Re that bit about 6-inch howitzers blowing turrets off. Please... Lets say that an SU-152 somehow manages to go undetected by a..err...Abrams M1A3. The chobbam armour would take that with little difficulty. Howitzer rounds are fairly low velocity as far as shells go and the SU-152's gun relied on raw explosive force. But even in WW2 they were not making turrets go flying unless they hit something as lightly armoured as a Panzer IV. Against a Tiger they cracked the armour but thats just hardened steel, not the modern compounds of today. Sure the external fittings would be battered, you'd probably loose a machine gun and have the crew shaken up a bit but thats all. Sure an IFV would probably not want to get hit by a 6-inch round but there's few things that lightly built that do.
 
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Modern vs WW2 is basically going to be either Gulf War taken up to eleven. All the WW2 side will have going for it is numbers, which depending on the respective industrial bases could be quickly whittled down. Remember, in air combat your average WW2 fighter pilot has only his eyes (only fighters on escort duty would have radar since it's too big, heavy and unweildy for a single-seat fighter of the time), reducing his effective scanning radius to something like a mile, by which point he'd have been shot out of the sky by the modern pilot. That's right, not blown up by missiles, but shot down, by an aircraft he probably hadn't even seen. Then there's tanks a modern tank, with computer assisted targeting can hit a target from maybe a mile away while moving, or 2.5 miles while stationary (double that for the Challenger 2 thanks to its rifled barrel), while a WW2 tank would struggle to achieve those feats at 1/3 that range, plus most WW2 weapons might just about scratch the paint of modern tanks, and only then if they could catch up to them, which unless there were some very specific circumstances, they couldn't. It's even worse at sea, modern submarine would be invisible to most WW2 warships regardless of their sonar, can move in excess of 30 knots, and can get a lock from more than 10 miles away (the Mark 48 has an estimated range of 23 miles at 55 knots, or 31 miles at 40 knots).

There are also a few bits of absolute rubbish, like this:
This is important to keep in mind, because the main purpose of a tank is to penetrate enemy rear areas, and bring cannon + machine gun fire to bear on soft targets. And a 75mm tank gun, puny as it is compared to the 120-125mm long barrels of the modern MBTs, is still capable of destroying most anything that pops up on the battlefield.
Patently false, and proven during the Second Gulf War when Abrams tanks proved to be resistant to their own guns at close range on the front of the hull and front and sides of the turret. A 75mm gun might disable a modern tank if it hit it in the tracks, although with the skirt, such accuracy is doubtable by any gun that's not very close to.

And this:
In terms of infantry quality, they are nearly equal. Assault rifles, body armour, night vision goggles, and lightweight equipment give us the edge, but its far from a decisive one. WW2 armys benefit from using full power rifle, carbine, and machine gun ammunition (with a commensurately higher stopping power and barrier penetration), as well as man and vehicle mounted flame throwers for breaking sieges, and immediate support from infantry guns.
Idiot doesn't know what he's talking about, the ability to operate at night is a huge advantage, it allows the modern army to engage at a time of its choosing. Also, if the WW2 side gets MGs, so do the modern guys, and ours are, lighter, have a higher muzzle velocity, a longer effective range, etc. and are just all around better.

And this isn't forgetting things like communications, drones, etc.

You basically need 20-1 odds or better to even stand a shade of a chance at drawing even, and maybe 100-1 to have any real chance of winning.
 
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sharlin

Banned
Modern vs WW2 is basically going to be either Gulf War taken up to eleven.

Yeah...a modern tank can hit a target at around 2 miles with accuracy and the longest range kill on record is 5100 meters (more than 3 miles). At that range a WW2 tank would not even see who or what killed it. It would just explode.
 
I think this article forgets the massive disparancy between technology. For example a group of 2..err..Tornadoes attack a WW2 armoured formation on the advance so come in fast and low. So fast that the AA guns would not be able to train fast enough to track them and then the two Tornadoes release their cluster bombs.

Those two aircraft just covered a huge area full of men and equipment in explosions, probably gutting the armoured formation.

Most modern infantry are mechanised or have mechanised support. An IFV like a Warrior or Bradley's armour is proof against an old 75 - 76mm gun on a sherman at the ranges a Sherman could be expected to hit at (maybe 800 meters max from a stationary position against a stationary target, really it was about 4 - 500 meters and a modern 25, 30 or 40mm gun on an IFV firing APDS ammo could punch through a Sherman or T-34 well outside their engagement range with far greater accuracy and thats before factoring in ATGMs.

Whilst modern infantry regiments are far far smaller than their WW2 equivalents the weight of firepower available is not that dissimilar. When I was attached to 2 PWRR the Regiment was made up of 5 Companies about 100 ish strong each, these had their own mortar platoon per company (81mm mortar) as well as a HMG platoon. Each squad would have its own either LSW or MINIMI machine gun in addition to having the SA-80A2 with their grenade launchers.

This weight of firepower in such a small unit would probably give Patton a raging hardon. Oh and each Company was fully mechanised with Warrior IFV support.

So what you have is a smaller but still heavy firepower unit with far higher moblity than most WW2 formations could dream of.

You've also got to factor in doctrinal changes over the years. If facing a massive army like a WW2 type one (Warsaw Pact says hello) you don't stand there trying to trade punches with it, you hit, move, hit again, move and repeat and rinse, you don't get bogged down. NATO trained how to fight an army that was WW2 sized but with more modern tactics and far more modern tech, a WW2 army in the field really would not stand a chance.

The ground forces have enough firepower to retain or defeat the army of WWII with any modern vehicle (M1A2, T-80, T-90, Leopard 2A6, Challenger, AH-64D, Mi-28N, A-10, Su-25T....), however there are a large number of WWII AA gun, see the Taliban, Al-Qaeda has used the AA gun against helicopters NATO, the WWII tanks and artillery have overwhelming number, tanks and artillery modern is high-tech but they have little ammunition. During the Vietnam War the Flak 88 was used against the F-4, F-105, F-111 even, the airplane has more speed A-10, Su-25 or equivalent Tornado

You lack mentioned of warships, aircraft WW2 with the overwhelming number , the majority of BVR missiles such as R-77, AIM-120 is not guaranteed precision strike capability beyond look, the F-22, F-35 is only 2 to 4 AIM-9X missile, although supported by AWACS, without SAM air defense systems and AA gun support, I think modern air easily overwhelmed by the number of aircraft WWII (Fw190, Ki-84, P51D, Spitfire, Ta-152, Yak-9T, La-7, Me 262, BF109G10...), the air war at sea, the F / A-18C / D / E / F or MiG-29K, Su-33, Rafale can easily crush the number of aircraft WWII (Zero, F4U, F6F), by the quality of WWII aircraft in Navy is really not as good as the aircraft on the ground. On the mainland, modern air force to operate in an area land very larger, as I said without SAM, SPAAG they will be overwhelmed, the sea with redundant SAM (SA-N-9, Osa-M, S-300F, SM-2, ESSM, RIM-116, CIWS) destroyers to enough shoot down the plane on carrier WWII

On the other, the air war at sea, the F / A-18C / D / E / F or MiG-29K, Su-33, Rafale can easily crush the number of aircraft WWII (Zero, F4U, F6F)

The anti-ship missiles Moskit, Harpoon, Exocet can destroy the fleet WW2 in wink, the modern submarine can destroy the fleet carrier WWII that does not take much time. However mentioned in WW2 battle took place where no GPS, will be a difficult position for the modern military. But they still radar, Kirov, Ticonderoga, Type 45 not take time to destroy the IJN (Yamato), USN (Iowa) in 1942

The submarine German (U-boat) & Allies WWII vice versa, they have a larger number of submarines, they can cause damage to frigates or corvette modern with torpedoes

But as SSN modern submarines, Seawolf ,Akula or destroyers class as Slava, Arleigh Burke will easily destroy the WWII submarine with sonar, asw modern technology
 

sharlin

Banned
Artillery ammo is always limited on the vehicle carrying it. Thats why any SP Arty gun always had with it a dedicated ammo vehicle that would sit back and be used once the onboard ammo was shot out.

WW2 flak was largely immobile, there was actually very few SPAAG's that entered service and most AA for a WW2 unit on the move was machine gun fire from a tank commanders roof mounted MG. The flak tanks the Germans produced were made in tiny quantities and in the case of the 37mm gun it was a TERRIBLE weapon for the flak role and again none of the SPAAGs of the time would be able to traverse fast enough to track a modern jet.

Against a helo yes sure they could and would be effective, if they were obliging enough to go "HURR HURR DURRRRRRRR ME AM FLY INTO RAENG." Which they won't. They'd sit off at 5 miles and plink tanks with missiles. And if they run across an infantry unit. That cheering you just heard what the Helo crews rubbing their hands together and rejoicing at the physical embodyment of a target rich area.

Wanna see what a helicopter can do to infantry without protection other than small arms?

*WARNING THIS IS GRAPHIC DESPITE IT BEING VIEWED THROUGH A THERMAL SIGHT*

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hWuP6dmYOE0
 
Modern, uninterceptable (by WW2 aircraft/flak) aircraft wipe out the WW2 army's logistics in the first couple of days. They run out of fuel the day after, maybe two days after if they're lucky. The modern armour, attack helicopters, strike aircraft, tube artillery and MLR systems slaughter them where they stand roughly a week after the interdiction raids began.
 

Redbeard

Banned
If you take a given unit, say a company, and compare the WWII one with the modern, the modern one of course will be extremely superior.

The problem just is that most modern militaries in the west have become ridiculously small as the official task has shifted from national defence to raising a few light infantry units for (international) law enforcement in tiny fragments of the unruly parts of this world.

As an example my own country’s army (Denmark) now is centered on having a light infantry battalion posted somewhere on the planet – that’s it (and need 9 generals – that’s 2+ pr. Company in the field!). They are extremely well trained and equipped, probably the best we have ever fielded (a lot of them are my hunting pals), but as an institution the Royal Danish Army probably never has been further away from fulfilling its basic raison d’etre: Defending Denmark! A hostile power with obsolete but numerous military forces would be a threat we could not defend ourselves against!

AFAIK the same basic problem is present in most if not all western countries, and a few years back, when Putin still was a nice guy, that wasn’t a big problem, but he obviously isn’t any more and has found out that the west are just paper tigers. Of course the sanctions hurt, but obviously not enough to keep him out of Ukraine. And what will we do, if/when he annexes the Baltic countries – boycott Russian porn?! And if we do, the Chinese will be happy to buy.

The Russian military of course is way beyond WWII, but compared to western armies with its focus shifted from quality to quantity (to a degree by necessity). But IMHO that anyway serves the taxpayers behind much more than the ditto western taxpayers are by our absurd focus on unpayable quality and practically no quantity.
 
Yeah...a modern tank can hit a target at around 2 miles with accuracy and the longest range kill on record is 5100 meters (more than 3 miles). At that range a WW2 tank would not even see who or what killed it. It would just explode.

Pretty much. The WWII army will be completely and utterly destroyed by an enemy it won't even see.
 
Why are you assuming that modern militaries couldn't enact mass conscription? Comparing the size of armies fully mobilized to those during peace is quite misleading.
 
I think it must come down to training and personnel before we even get to the equipment gap.

The quality of both is much higher man for men today than it was in WW2 and in the mass majority of cases those personnel are all volunteers.

The soldier of today has learned all of the lessons that his WW2 counterpart has yet to learn and more besides.

A given British infantry Battalions recce troop today would be as just as capable of complex missions as the SAS or Otto Skorzeny's commandos where in WW2 - probably more so given their improved weapons and equipment.

And todays Special forces troops....well they would seem like some sort of Alien Ninja to their ancestors eyes

Today's JNCO for instance is carrying far more responsibility and allowed (and expected) to use his own initiative far more than his WW2 counterpart.

Its not just big dollar items like MBTs, Missile Cruisers, Attack submarines strike planes cluster bombs and Brimstone II missiles but communications and the ability to fight effectively at night in a coordinated fashion.

Camouflage, Communication, Detection, weapons etc have all improved

Even in WW2 a slight advantage in both training, leadership and certain equipment often allowed smaller forces to dominate larger ones.

The only problem I can think of is a modern army might have is the running out of certain munitions - for example only several thousand Brimstone missiles have been produced - before they run out of targets - but that is a different consideration.
 
Why are you assuming that modern militaries couldn't enact mass conscription? Comparing the size of armies fully mobilized to those during peace is quite misleading.

They could probably try, but there would be political shit storm to deal with on the homefront, which means they probably won't. There's a reason why the US Army discontinued the draft after Vietnam,
 

Redbeard

Banned
Why are you assuming that modern militaries couldn't enact mass conscription? Comparing the size of armies fully mobilized to those during peace is quite misleading.

Small standing armies and large drafted armies are very different business to run and transforming from the first to the second takes a lot of especially time and infrastructure.

Since the end of the cold war western armies has for instance been big scale selling out of barracks and training areas. Re-investing in that would take time, huge resources and a lot of political will.

Next you will need time to rebuild cadres. One thing is training a recruit, he can be reasonably fit for frontline duty in a few months, but training those to train him and to command him will take years.

Classical drafted armies had a huge number of "chair-borne" officers, but most of them with a designation in the mobilised army and regularly training in their wartime role. Today the "peace-time" functions increasingly have been taken over by civilian academics, who are much easier to control and utilise in an archetypical new public management framework, but who are absolutely useless (at best) in a military context.

For the few frontline officer positions you instead hire young fellows from the universities who then have some exciting years and usually do well ahead of their platoons and companies, but who are expected to get a "proper" education and leave the army before getting to powerful.

We need to start almost from scratch if we want to rebuild our armies into something actually useful in real (big) war.

NB: I hope it is clear that my critique is in no way directed towards the men and women who have served in the resent conflicts, they have done extremely well and deserve 100% respect, but I accuse our politicians for bad leadership.
 
Small standing armies and large drafted armies are very different business to run and transforming from the first to the second takes a lot of especially time and infrastructure.

Since the end of the cold war western armies has for instance been big scale selling out of barracks and training areas. Re-investing in that would take time, huge resources and a lot of political will.

Next you will need time to rebuild cadres. One thing is training a recruit, he can be reasonably fit for frontline duty in a few months, but training those to train him and to command him will take years.

Classical drafted armies had a huge number of "chair-borne" officers, but most of them with a designation in the mobilised army and regularly training in their wartime role. Today the "peace-time" functions increasingly have been taken over by civilian academics, who are much easier to control and utilise in an archetypical new public management framework, but who are absolutely useless (at best) in a military context.

For the few frontline officer positions you instead hire young fellows from the universities who then have some exciting years and usually do well ahead of their platoons and companies, but who are expected to get a "proper" education and leave the army before getting to powerful.

We need to start almost from scratch if we want to rebuild our armies into something actually useful in real (big) war.

NB: I hope it is clear that my critique is in no way directed towards the men and women who have served in the resent conflicts, they have done extremely well and deserve 100% respect, but I accuse our politicians for bad leadership.

The scaling back of modern army's is largely due to not having anyone to fight (outside of 'policing' actions in some far away place) - even the mighty "Red Army" which in the 80s once had 50000 Tanks ready to roll into Europe now has less than a 10th that in the entire Fed. Russian Army (its successor) !

So I have to ask you why would we need such huge armies any more?

In 1966 Britain was spending over 7% of its budget on the MOD - today I think its something like 2% - the other 5+% largely being spent on things the Tax payers actually need!

Small well equipped, well trained, highly mobile formations are what is needed today - not continental armies.

Which is what we have got - so I guess the damned politicians got right!!

'If' larger armies were required then I suspect that it would not be an over night thing - the world would be different and the likes of us here on this forum would have been far more likely to have donned uniform at some point in your lives than is currently the case.

The size of our armed forces reflect the world we live in.
 

Redbeard

Banned
The scaling back of modern army's is largely due to not having anyone to fight (outside of 'policing' actions in some far away place) - even the mighty "Red Army" which in the 80s once had 50000 Tanks ready to roll into Europe now has less than a 10th that in the entire Fed. Russian Army (its successor) !

So I have to ask you why would we need such huge armies any more?

In 1966 Britain was spending over 7% of its budget on the MOD - today I think its something like 2% - the other 5+% largely being spent on things the Tax payers actually need!

Small well equipped, well trained, highly mobile formations are what is needed today - not continental armies.

Which is what we have got - so I guess the damned politicians got right!!

'If' larger armies were required then I suspect that it would not be an over night thing - the world would be different and the likes of us here on this forum would have been far more likely to have donned uniform at some point in your lives than is currently the case.

The size of our armed forces reflect the world we live in.

The present armies reflect what was needed in the previous decades. I think many things point to the coming decades having different needs.
 
The ground forces have enough firepower to retain or defeat the army of WWII with any modern vehicle (M1A2, T-80, T-90, Leopard 2A6, Challenger, AH-64D, Mi-28N, A-10, Su-25T....), however there are a large number of WWII AA gun, see the Taliban, Al-Qaeda has used the AA gun against helicopters NATO, the WWII tanks and artillery have overwhelming number, tanks and artillery modern is high-tech but they have little ammunition. During the Vietnam War the Flak 88 was used against the F-4, F-105, F-111 even, the airplane has more speed A-10, Su-25 or equivalent Tornado

You lack mentioned of warships, aircraft WW2 with the overwhelming number , the majority of BVR missiles such as R-77, AIM-120 is not guaranteed precision strike capability beyond look, the F-22, F-35 is only 2 to 4 AIM-9X missile, although supported by AWACS, without SAM air defense systems and AA gun support, I think modern air easily overwhelmed by the number of aircraft WWII (Fw190, Ki-84, P51D, Spitfire, Ta-152, Yak-9T, La-7, Me 262, BF109G10...), the air war at sea, the F / A-18C / D / E / F or MiG-29K, Su-33, Rafale can easily crush the number of aircraft WWII (Zero, F4U, F6F), by the quality of WWII aircraft in Navy is really not as good as the aircraft on the ground. On the mainland, modern air force to operate in an area land very larger, as I said without SAM, SPAAG they will be overwhelmed, the sea with redundant SAM (SA-N-9, Osa-M, S-300F, SM-2, ESSM, RIM-116, CIWS) destroyers to enough shoot down the plane on carrier WWII

On the other, the air war at sea, the F / A-18C / D / E / F or MiG-29K, Su-33, Rafale can easily crush the number of aircraft WWII (Zero, F4U, F6F)

The anti-ship missiles Moskit, Harpoon, Exocet can destroy the fleet WW2 in wink, the modern submarine can destroy the fleet carrier WWII that does not take much time. However mentioned in WW2 battle took place where no GPS, will be a difficult position for the modern military. But they still radar, Kirov, Ticonderoga, Type 45 not take time to destroy the IJN (Yamato), USN (Iowa) in 1942

The submarine German (U-boat) & Allies WWII vice versa, they have a larger number of submarines, they can cause damage to frigates or corvette modern with torpedoes

But as SSN modern submarines, Seawolf ,Akula or destroyers class as Slava, Arleigh Burke will easily destroy the WWII submarine with sonar, asw modern technology


Blackadam you misunderstand and under estimate the power and efficacy of modern weaponry and more so of modern command and control systems and their impact on the battlefield let alone the theatre of operations.

Modern missile load outs may seem small compare to the 15-20 seconds worth of ammunition carried by World War II fighters planes. However in a defensive role modern fighters would be able to loiter above the enemy's airfield and start shooting them down as they took off if they wished. Additional scramble squadrons could be summoned to hit the enemy bomber squadrons as they formed up...all without exposing any modern aircraft to return fire.

Even if say you had RAF Bomber Command and USAAF 8th Air Force flying against targets in Germany (or on behalf of the other side flying from France to England) the defending fighters could then return, likely rearm and refuel and be back in action to attack the bombers over their targets. Not only that but even that load of just four to ten missiles should account for at least two bombers apiece on each sortie...even low numbers would fast stack up.

Because World War 2 bombers struggled to find let alone hit their targets. Any radio navigation beam transmitting stations used to guide the bombers will in short order simply become targets for modern counter force strike aircraft. Modern offensive forces can simply find their targets using radar maps of the terrain, they don't even need GPS should you try and take it away.

So while the WW2 bomber force has to mount repeat sorties into carnage the modern air force can range the skies at above 600 km/h at above 12 km altitude. Beyond even hope of interception by anything on the ground.
Say good bye to power stations, rail and road junctions, key bridges and so on in a progressive rain of economic emasculation.

You mention using 85mm world war two era guns against modern jets but you forget they were backed by modern SAMs (and even those SAMs would be dismissed as junk today). Without anything to force the modern air force low there is little the WW2 nation(s) can do.

As for any battleships if they are not sunk by modern submarines (which can expect to dodge, yes not hide from actually dodge in the middle of an attack) even British WW2 anti-submarine tech, well then high altitude bombers will get them. One of the problems of AP bombs in WW2 was pilots could not rely on hitting moving targets at the altitudes required to make them effective...modern pilots will be able to release even iron bombs from far higher with confidence that most of them will hit.


The list goes on but I am sure others will add to it.
 
Want to find yourself on wrong end of PGM centered air air offensive? The bridge you are suppsoed to move across? Gone. CP that was supposed to give you orders? Gone. Airfield where planes supporting you were based? Their runway looks like ementaler cheese. POL depot you were supposed to draw supplies from? It's still burning so you can't miss it. You thought window was bad, see what happens when radars that (so far) weren't on the wrong side of ARM get jammed by modern tech. Want to see how arc light raid looks like from ground? Stick around and first bombs hitting will be the heads-up you'll need

Secure comunications? Smarty phone carried by each lowly grunt probably has an ap to break Enigma, Red or Purple codes.

I suspect the only place where WW2 side would have advantage would be short distance infantry fight. Not that WW2 era weapons would be better, it's just that sheer numbers of WW2 troops would make in impact. Of course it wouldn't be straight up fight between two infantry forces but modern one will have all types of neat support from other ars. Ever saw MLR strike coming in?
 
I think there is another thing that is missed by that article, how long before the morale of the WW2 armies are broken after being pounded by modern weapon systems?
 
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