01 November 2022

An Upgraded Abrams Tank Is Not The Answer

A General Dynamics cheerleader is arguing that:
The Army is expected to make an initial determination on the Abrams’ successor next year. Rather than building an entirely new tank, like the Decisive Lethality Platform [PDF], the Army should continue along the Abrams’ iterative design route and purchase the Abrams X with the goal of the first production unit being in the hands of Army soldiers this decade. . . . 
the Abrams X will boast a number of improvements over the current M1A2 while being built around the tried and true Abrams chassis. Compared to the M1A2, the Abrams X is simply more mobile. Its lighter frame allows it to weigh in at 10 tons less and its new hybrid diesel electric engine makes the tank 50 percent more fuel efficient. That new engine also allows for “silent watch” functionality, letting soldiers operate weapons and sensors without the tank giving off its usual thermal or acoustic signatures. Along with hardware, the Abrams X will also feature upgraded software, including AI systems that can identify targets and compile them in a ranked list for human operators to eliminate. . . . 
instead of the Abrams X, the Army is currently considering the Decisive Lethality Platform as a follow-on to the Abrams. A notional, possibly unmanned platform contained within the Next Generation Combat Vehicle (NGCV) program, the DLP may cost significantly more than a manned tank because of the sophisticated control and communication systems required due to a lack of crew. Besides the years, and possibly decades, needed to bring the DLP from R&D to production at scale, it would undoubtedly cost billions in R&D funding. Already, the estimated lifecycle costs [PDF] for two other vehicles within the NGCV program, Mobile Protected Firepower (MPF) and the planned replacement for the M-2 Bradley, the Optionally Manned Fighting Vehicle (OMFV), stand at $62 billion in fiscal 2019 dollars or nearly $72 billion today. For just the OMFV’s R&D cost [PDF] in the coming fiscal year, the Army requested over $589 million, with $3.5 billion planned between FY21 and FY27. In contrast, since the Abrams X is essentially an upgrade, it would only cost close to $650 million in R&D costs, the amount spent on the SEPv3.
The main argument for the Abrams X is that going in a new direction will take too long and carry too many technology risks. But, this advocate sees the problem and blindly refuses to acknowledge it:
Despite the calls of those sounding the death knell of the tank due to the war in Ukraine, the platform is far from dead. Tanks will remain relevant into the future as a way to rapidly punch through enemy lines while wielding large amounts of firepower to eliminate a host of obstacles, whether that be vehicles, infantry, or other tanks.
Simply put, this isn't true. Tanks have been mostly irrelevant on the war in Ukraine which has been the best real world example of how conventional warfare between near peers works today. Abrams tanks were too heavy and unwieldy to be of much use in Kosovo, Afghanistan, or Iraq as well. 

They filled a need that other systems met better and were too vulnerable to anti-tank missiles and land mines. Infantry, motorcycle troops, armored personnel carriers, robot tanks, drones, helicopters, guided artillery missiles, fixed wing aircraft, and land mines (including large IEDs) are all very effective at destroying tanks from outside the range of their main guns. Their main 120mm gun's range of about 2.5 km is less than the range of a typical modern anti-tank missile of about 3.5 km to 10 km. Its anti-personnel rounds have a range of 600 meters. Its bunker breaching rounds have a range of 500 meters to 2 km. An Abrams tank has nothing to defend itself against a helicopter gunship, fixed wing close air support attack fighter, or armed aerial drone.

During the Iraq War invasion, at least nine Abrams tanks were put out of action by fire from mere rocket-propelled grenades. In urban areas in Iraq, "some crews were also issued M136 AT4 shoulder-fired anti-tank weapons under the assumption that they might have to engage heavy armor in tight urban areas where the main gun could not be brought to bear." About 80 Abrams tanks used by the U.S. military were lost in the first two years of the conflict to enemy fire despite the fact that all of Iraq's tanks and artillery were obliterated in the early days of the conflict. Afterwards:
Between 2010 and 2012 the U.S. supplied 140 refurbished M1A1 Abrams tanks to Iraq. In mid-2014, they saw action when the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant launched the June 2014 Northern Iraq offensive. During three months, about one-third of the Iraqi Army's M1 tanks had been damaged or destroyed by ISIL and some were captured by opposing forces. By December 2014, the Iraqi Army only had about 40 operational Abrams left. . . .
Tanks had limited utility in Afghanistan due to the mountainous terrain.

At least twenty Abrams tanks deployed by Saudi Arabia in the war in Yemen have been destroyed so far, despite the fact that the Yemeni forces it has engaged are not even "near peer" forces by U.S. military standards. Saudi Arabia has purchased about 440 Abrams tanks although it isn't clear how many have been deployed in Yemen.

They are too heavy (even with a 10 ton weight reduction from its current 74 tons leaving it still the heaviest tank in the world still in service, other than older Abrams tanks) to cross many non-U.S. bridges. They are also so heavy that not many of them can be deployed in the critical first days of a war (only a C-17 or C-5 can transport them, the C-5 requires a decent commercial grade airport and can only take 2 tanks per sortie, a C-17 requires a field grade airstrip and one of them can be transported per cargo plane sortie):
The limited capacity (two combat-ready tanks in a C-5, one combat-ready tank in a C-17) caused serious logistical problems when deploying the tanks for the first Persian Gulf War, though there was enough time for 1,848 tanks to be transported by ship.
They have a long logistics tail due to their fuel hungry engines even with a 50% improvement in fuel efficiency (each one would need about 400 gallons of fuel per 300 miles), that have to be met with completely unarmored fuel trucks.

Since they are twelve feet wide, they aren't good in tight quarters like narrow non-U.S. streets and mountain passes. They are also slow. At 42 miles per hour on road and 25 miles per hour off road nothing about them is "rapid" and they hold back the advance of other military vehicles. Almost any vehicle can outrun it after closing to just within its main gun's range to strike it and then fleeing. The tracks are designed make it possible for a tank to be used for off road deployments, but experience has shown that the tanks are rarely deployed off road in military engagements and that wheeled vehicles, like the Humvee which was designed to be able to go anywhere that a tank could off road, can be just as effective or better off road with greater fuel efficiency and speed when on the road. 
The high speed, high temperature jet blast emitted from the rear of M1 Abrams tanks makes it hazardous for infantry to take cover or follow behind the tank in urban combat.
And, because of their great size even if they are running in all electric mode for a short time removing the rumble of their engines, the crunching of their tracks and large slow moving bulk make them hard to miss.

The Marines did the right thing in dropping the conventional tank entirely from its arsenal in 2020, transferring its 450 Abrams tanks to the Army.

The Army would do well to follow suit and to not directly replace the Abrams tank, which was the epitome of what the mid-Cold War era thought it needed (although it was rarely used in combat) but which no longer makes sense in modern conventional warfare except in niche applications that can be met with upgraded existing heavy tanks.

The Army has already spoken with its feet by replacing many of its heavy tank units with Stryker battalions (a lighter, wheeled armored personnel carrier), and almost every major military force in the world (including Russia) has greatly reduced the number of main battle tanks it has in the last thirty years. 

A conventional Abrams style tank has too short a range for its main gun, and the concept of heavy armor is one that anti-tank missiles has largely made obsolete. A light or medium tank to use against mechanized infantry without heavy weapons may still make sense, but active defenses are the only viable defense against anti-tank weapons, heavy armor just slows down the system and makes it less nimble without ultimately being enough to prevent it from being destroyed by anything bigger than small arms.

The Gulf War in which the Abrams first so hot war action, which began in 1990, was the beginning of the end of the tank as core weapon of war, and the Ukraine War is shaping up as something close to the end of the end of that era, although not quite a decisively as the "charge of the light brigade" which ended the use of horse cavalry as a major instrument of war. In Ukraine, even Russia's heaviest and most modern tanks have fallen easily to Ukrainian anti-tank missiles.

The Abrams has never been really a decisive or pivotal factor in any of the wars it has been used in. 

For example, as a tank killer in the Gulf War, the Bradley M2, A-10 aircraft, attack helicopters, and other fixed wing aircraft were just as effective at destroying Iraqi tanks as the Abrams was.

It is hard to think of an instance where tanks were used "to rapidly punch through enemy lines while wielding large amounts of firepower to eliminate a host of obstacles, whether that be vehicles, infantry, or other tanks" in recent history. Certainly, this has not been a tactic employed by the U.S. military. And, if one imagines future conflicts it is hard to imagine one where it would be. Indeed, the concept of "enemy lines" is increasingly doubtful.

The U.S. is not going to invade mainland China with heavy tanks, nor is there any need for them in a foreseeable military conflict in North America. 

Even the mighty U.S. military doesn't have the ability to deploy a meaningful number of 64+ ton Abrams tanks to a foreign theater of battle where the U.S. does not already have military bases where they are prepositioned in a time frame that would matter in the rapidly developing military conflict, which largely rules out their use in large numbers outside Europe, South Korea, or perhaps Iraq or Syria. 

They might be useful elsewhere (e.g. in African conflicts), but by the time enough tanks to make a difference could be delivered, the phase of the conflict in which tanks would be desirable to "break though enemy lines" or some such would be over.

In most of the conceivable European conflicts where heavy tanks would be deployed, considerable anti-tank weaponry would be available to U.S. military opponents profoundly undermining their usefulness. And, our European and South Korean allies already have ample supplies of their own tanks. They would look to the U.S. mostly for air support, not for additional heavy tanks. Taiwan has purchased 108 Abrams tanks from the U.S. of which 2 have been delivered so far. They have also been sold to Iraq, Kuwait, Egypt, Morocco, Australia, and Poland. Brazil and Greece have contemplated purchasing them. 

9 comments:

neo said...

It is hard to think of an instance where tanks were used "to rapidly punch through enemy lines while wielding large amounts of firepower to eliminate a host of obstacles, whether that be vehicles, infantry, or other tanks" in recent history. Certainly, this has not been a tactic employed by the U.S. military. And, if one imagines future conflicts it is hard to imagine one where it would be.

first and second gulf war

israel use tank for combat

hypothetical future war with north korea

Guy said...

Hum... with all of the improvement that have been made to arty it is capable of shredding light armor with a near miss. However heavy armor still requires a direct hit. I could see the equilibrium going the other direction where heavy and active armor becomes deriguour all battle line adjacent vehicles.

andrew said...

@neo

The Abrams performance in the First and Second Gulf War wasn't impressive or decisive. It wasn't a particularly exceptional killed of enemy tanks and took a lot of casualties in Iraq without providing decisive offensive successes of the kind suggested.

Israel uses its own tanks and those are heavily outfitted with active defenses. They are also fighting insurgent Palestinians with only light weapons.

Existing Abrams tanks in South Korea combined with more modern South Korean tanks, helicopter gunships, drones, guided artillery, and fighter aircraft are more than sufficient to take on outdated North Korean tanks operated by ill-trained operators. Fortifications along the DMZ, moreover, make a tank invasion of North Korea, or from North Korea, not a very viable option.

@Guy

Not getting hit in the first place is the main point. And, the U.S. almost always insists on not deploying ground forces until it has air superiority and has taken out enemy artillery as a matter of strategy and doctrine. Artillery has been vital in Ukraine mostly because neither side has air superiority.

neo said...

@andrew

my sources say something else

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WKZn-vT9CRE

andrew said...

@neo

What do they say? I don't watch videos.

neo said...

The Abrams performance in the First Gulf War was impressive

Guy said...

Reply to Andrew@11/02/2022 8:20 AM

If you assume that we will never fight a battle like what is going on in Ukraine right now then... maybe. I could just as easily say the USAF won't be able to assert air supremacy over a moderate to high intensity battlefield based on the advancements in anti-aircraft weaponry that are being displayed.

The GD proposal looks pretty reasonable to me, and I'm not convinced the very expensive new development programs are better than a retrofit. Especially with the DODs record with new programs. Maybe we wait until the Europeans or Koreans develop a new system and buy that.

andrew said...

@neo

Bradleys, without a main gun destroyed as many opposing tanks as Abrams tanks did, and air power destroyed something on the order of half of the opposing tanks, with some of the opposing tanks also destroyed by infantry. Yes, they destroyed several hundred opposing tanks and heavy military weapons, but they weren't any better than any of the other tools for doing the same things that were lighter, cheaper, had shorter supply lines, etc.

Also, the Gulf War was a rout. It didn't last long. Essentially all of Iraq's heavy military weapons were destroyed. There were minimal casualties. The Iraqi military's will was rapidly crushed. Success in an easy engagement says little about what makes sense in a more challenging one. And, it was also three decades ago, when anti-tank missiles were much more primitive, against an ill trained military force with out of date equipment, no air power, and no guided anti-tank missiles.

andrew said...

@Guy

"If you assume that we will never fight a battle like what is going on in Ukraine right now then... maybe. I could just as easily say the USAF won't be able to assert air supremacy over a moderate to high intensity battlefield based on the advancements in anti-aircraft weaponry that are being displayed."

Even without air supremacy, lighter, faster modes of deploying guided anti-tank missiles (which are comparable in size and weight to a full bag of golf clubs) make more sense than tanks. There is nothing that the tank main gun does the other armaments don't do better with less weight, more mobility, faster deployment, and less of a logistical supply chain. Tanks are playing a clearly secondary or tertiary role in Ukraine in which the dominant kind of warfare is with artillery and guided missiles, targeted by drones and forward observers. Tanks have suffered devastating losses on both sides and have not been decisive offensively in Iraq.

"The GD proposal looks pretty reasonable to me, and I'm not convinced the very expensive new development programs are better than a retrofit. Especially with the DODs record with new programs. Maybe we wait until the Europeans or Koreans develop a new system and buy that."

Replacing the Abrams at all with a successor heavy tank is a bad idea. Heavy tanks need to go the way of horse cavalry and bayonets, battleships relying on 16" naval guns, and warships with cloth sails. Buying more at all is a bad idea.

This isn't to say that there isn't any role for armored vehicles. But tanks with their big main guns are designed predominantly to fight other tanks which makes no sense. The niche where a heavily armored vehicle makes sense is against forces with small arms to which it is impervious, but not any anti-tank weapons. And, in that kind of fight, a 120mm main gun isn't the right kind of armament. It needs a 30mm-40mm cannon for taking on mechanized infantry vehicles, maybe an anti-tank missile or two, machine guns, maybe a short range drone, anti-drone weapons, and maybe anti-air missiles. And, wheels make more sense for it than tracks.

No armor, no matter how strong, can overcome modern anti-tank missiles deployed in various means, and even heavily armored vehicles are vulnerable to being disabled by landmines/IEDs, by attacks on supply chains, and similar tools. One can partially mitigate those vulnerabilities with dismounted infantry (which the Bradley is well suited for), but nothing can eliminate this fundamental reality. If your opponent has access to anti-tank weapons, then deploying tanks is a bad idea. They also slow down entire formations in the theater and in an expeditionary military like that of the U.S., the number of heavy tanks that can be fielded sufficiently promptly is too little, too late.

If the bad guys have tanks there are myriad better ways to attack them which have been used widely in Ukraine. There is no indication that tanks have killed a large share of other tanks killed in Ukraine.