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Mark's avatar

On the doctrine side, there will always be a use for light, highly transportable, highly mobile tactical vehicles. Far better than walking for Light Infantry... Or anyone else that either needs to be sneaky or dismounted most of the time.

In the Canadian Army, we've got this weird penchant to think that if an AFV is not as heavy as a tank (& tracked)... It is not protected enough & combat capable enough for the battlefield (sometimes even wilfully ignoring the existence of our own Light Infantry). We tend to also think of tactical mobility as just mudbashing with tracks... both of which arejust... Wrong. We need a multitude of different platforms of all weight classes to do different things.

Heck, even the US full tracked Armoured Brigades are playing with GM ISVs in certain critical roles at the sharp end... because as it turns out, a quiet little mountain goat sometimes is more useful than a giant armoured rhino (Bradley/Abrams).

https://www.stripes.com/branches/army/2026-06-26/army-infantry-squad-vehicle-armor-brigade-22088234.html

Elizaisacat's avatar

<slow clap>

They re-invented the Willys Jeep.

There is tremendous value and utility for an inexpensive, lightweight, fast, maneuverable, offroad, and dirt simple to operate and maintain vehicle for liaison, rear area security, and critical resupply to the line of contact when nothing more survivable or, now, unmanned is available.

[edit] Upon some further reflection and a re-read, I appreciated Noah remarking on some specific elements of the RFI that seem to me to be more sophisticated and contemplative of a worst case scenario (IP to enable crash production in a mass mobilization scenario) than past procurement projects. I defaulted to humour in my initial response, but I think this is a crawl-walk-run situation of the DIA using procurement of a relatively straightforward platform to establish a new set of baseline criteria (e.g. IP for crash production) that will be reviewed and refined for incorporation into more sophisticated procurement programs in the future.

Finally, Noah, "To close off on a lighter note, there is also the air transportability requirement". That's outstanding. Bravo.

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