1 / 55

CURRENT AMPHIBIOUS FORCE LEVELS

CURRENT AMPHIBIOUS FORCE LEVELS. OVERSEAS DEPLOYMENT. TWO TO THREE ARGS FORWARD DEPLOYED ONE IN THE MEDITERRANEAN / ARABIAN GULF-INDIAN OCEAN AREA ONE OR TWO IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC AREA. ONE ARG/MEU IS FORWARD BASED IN SASEBO AND OKINAWA JAPAN.

selima
Télécharger la présentation

CURRENT AMPHIBIOUS FORCE LEVELS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CURRENT AMPHIBIOUS FORCE LEVELS

  2. OVERSEAS DEPLOYMENT • TWO TO THREE ARGS FORWARD DEPLOYED • ONE IN THE MEDITERRANEAN / ARABIAN GULF-INDIAN OCEAN AREA • ONE OR TWO IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC AREA. • ONE ARG/MEU IS FORWARD BASED IN SASEBO AND OKINAWA JAPAN.

  3. Amphibious flexibility is the greatest strategic asset that a sea power possesses. BHLiddell Hart

  4. CRITICALITIES • TRANSITION FROM SEA TO LAND, INVOLVING NAVAL, GROUND AND AIR FORCES MOST DIFFICULT. • COMMANDS AND CONTROL OF MULTI- SERVICE, MULTI ENVIRONMENT ACTIVITIES COMPLEX • CONDUCT OF OPERATIONS IN RESTRICTED WATERS INCREASES VULNERABILITY TO HOSTILE ATTACK, PARTICULARLY DURING EARLY PHASES WHEN SUPPORT OF OWN HEAVY WEAPONS NOT AVAILABLE

  5. RECENT EMPLOYMENT • FRENCH AND THEN US FORCES FOR OVER 25 YEARS IN INDOCHINA • ANGLO-FRENCH ASSAULT IN SUEZ, • FALKLANDS CONFLICT • US LANDINGS IN GRENADA • COALITION LANDINGS DURING GULF WAR IN 1992 • AUSTRALIAN LANDINGS IN EAST TIMOR • US/ALLIES OPERATIONS IN AFGHANISTAN

  6. EARLY DEVELOPMENTS • INTRODUCED SINCE EARLY DAYS OF INCEPTION OF INDIAN NAVY • RECOMMENDATION TO POSSESS A SMALL EXPEDITIONARY FORCE CAPABLE OF PROTECTING INDIA’S REGIONAL INTERESTS SUGGESTED IN 1946 WHEN INDEPEDENCE ON HORIZON. • CURRENT CAPABILITY BRIGADE MINUS

  7. INDIAN NAVAL HISTORY • LST INS MAGAR, OF W W II VINTAGE ACQUIRED IN 1949 • APPROVAL ACCORDED IN 1958 TO ESTABLISH A PRESENCE IN A& N ISLANDS • POST INDO CHINA WAR DEBACLE RESIDENT NAVAL OFFICER WAS APPOINTED IN PORT BLAIR. • INCREASED INDONESIAN INTRUSIONS IN NICOBAR ISLANDS IN 1965

  8. EARLY DEVELOPMENTS • ORDER PLACED FOR TWO LST (M) FROM RUSSIA IN 1965 • INDONESIAN THREAT AND INDONESIAN – PAK BONDING OF 1965 • BOTCHED UP AMPHIBIOUS LANDING AT COX’S BAZAAR IN OPERATION BEAVER AS A PART OF 1971 OPERATIONS . • LESSONS HOISTED IN IMPORTANCE OF AMPHIBIOUS ASSETS ESTABLISHED

  9. AMPHIBIOUS OPS OF INDIAN NAVY • SRI LANKA IN 1988, SOMALIA IN 1995, • CYCLONE RELIEF IN SAURASHTRA IN 1998 /ORISSA IN 2000. • AS A ‘FORCE IN BEING’ ON WEST COAST’ DURING OP PARAKARAM. • PAKISTAN DIVERTED ONE DIVISION FROM LAND BORDERS TO MAKRAN COAST.

  10. SCOPE • CURRENT TRENDS IN US NAVY, ROYAL NAVY, PLA NAVY AND AUSTRALIAN NAVY • FOCUSED ATTENTION ON ‘SHIP TO SHORE MOVEMENT’ • TASKS OF INDIAN NAVY • ASSESSMENT OF CURRENT FORCES • DEFINING CREDIBLE AMPHIBIOUS FORCE FOR INDIAN NAVY

  11. ROLES OF US NAVY • SEA CONTROL • MARITIME SUPREMACY • POWER PROJECTION • STRATEGIC DETERRENCE • FORWARD NAVAL PRESENCE • STRATEGIC SEALIFT

  12. ORGANISATION • AMPHIBIOUS TASK FORCE (ATF) • RANGE FROM A SINGLE AMPHIBIOUS READY GROUP/MARINE EXPEDITIONARY UNIT (SPECIAL OPERATIONS CAPABLE) [ARG/MEU (SOC)], TO A LARGER ORGANIZATION CAPABLE OF EMPLOYING A MARINE EXPEDITIONARY BRIGADE (MEB) OR EVEN A MARINE EXPEDITIONARY FORCE

  13. ROLES/ TASKS • MAINLAND OPERATIONS • MAKRAN COAST • BANGLADESH • ASSAULT LANDINGS TO RETAKE LOST TERRITORY. • AMPHIBIOUS RAIDS • TACTICAL DECEPTION.

  14. ROLES/ TASKS • DEFENCE OF ISLAND TERRITORIES -1197 ISLANDS • POACHING, SMUGGLING, TRAFFICKING OF WOMEN AND GUN RUNNING • PENETRATION BYOF FUNDAMENTALIST IN LAKSWADWEEP ISLANDS WITH THE PREDOMINANTLY MINORITY POPULATION • AIRPORT/PORT/ KEY FACILITY SEIZURE

  15. OUT OF AREA CONTIGENCIES • IN SUPPORT OF UN /COALITION OPERATIONS • EVACUATION OF CIVILIANS • SHOW OF FORCE/ REINFORCEMENT

  16. OTHER TASKS • CONDUCT LANDINGS IN SUPPORT OF WITHDRAWING TROOPS • LIMITED OFFENSIVE ATTACK • HOSTAGE RECOVERY. • GAS AND OIL PLATFORM OPERATIONS. • HUMANITARIAN ASSISTANCE

  17. LIMITATIONS AMPHIBIOUS FORCES • SHIP TO SHORE MOVEMENT • LST(L), LST(M) AND LCUs LACK SPEED • CAPACITY TO CARRY OUT VERTICAL ENVELOPMENT MINIMAL. • HARD BEACHING TO DISCHARGE ARMOUR • VULNERABLE

  18. ARMY COMPONENT/ NEED FOR RAISING MARINES? • MOUNTAIN BRIGADE MINUS OF THE INDIAN ARMY IS DESIGNATED AS THE AMPHIBIOUS BRIGADE. • BASED IN PORT BLAIR UNDER ANC • BATTALIONS CHANGED/ REPLACED EVERY TWO YEARS ON A STAGGERED BASIS • ANOTHER BRIGADE IS KEPT STAND BY ON THE MAINLAND TO AUGMENT THE PORT BLAIR BRIGADE SHOULD THE NEED ARISE.

  19. LIMITATIONS AMPHIBIOUS SHIPS • LIMITED STAND OFF CAPABILTY 1-2 NM • LCAS/GEMINIS VULNERABLE IN SURF ZONE • LIMITED SITES FOR HARD BEACHING BY LST(L) • UNDERLOADING OF ENGINES

  20. LIMITATIONS - AAV • AMPHIBIOUS ASSAULT VEHICLE-BMP AND BDR FROM MECHANIZED INFANTARY • INADEQUATE SEA KEEPING ABILITY • VULNERABLE IN SURF ZONE • LIMITED OTH CAPABILTY • GUN TOO LIGHT • CG HOVERCRAFT – LCAC?

  21. ARMY COMPONENT/ NEED FOR RAISING MARINES? • STRETCHED ARMY - OP PARAKRAM, THE AMPHIBIOUS BRIGADE MOBILIZED TO THE WESTERN COMMAND. • THE TWO YEARLY CHANGES EFFECTS TRAINING. • TIME FOR CHANGE OVER BY THE TIME, INCOMING BATTALION GOES THROUGH THE TRAINING AND BECOMES PROFICIENT

  22. AMPHIBIOUS TRAINING • NEED YEAR-ROUND TRAINING. • TRAINING SEASONAL- WEATHER DEPENDENT • HIGH SKILLS- NEGOTIATION OF ‘SURF ZONE’ BY BMPS OR LCA • MUSTERING VARIED ASSETS OF COMPONENTS DIFFICULT. • NEED FOR DEDICATED AMPHIBIOUS SCHOOL.

  23. INTELLIGENCE • MOST CRITICAL • AIR RECONNAISSANCE BY ARC, IAF, IN, CG RESOURCES INCLUDING UAV • SATELLITE • INTELLIGENCE AGENCIES LIKE RAW, IB , DIA AND SBS/NAVAL LIAISON TEAMS • SUBMARINE RECONNAISSANCE • SIGNIT AND COMINT

  24. COMMAND CONTROL AND COMMUNICATIONS • SUCCESS DEPENDENT ON C3 • ‘LESSONS LEARNT ‘ FILES OF AMPHEXES • INABILITY OF INDIVIDUAL SERVICES TO EXCHANGE INFORMATION LATERALLY

More Related