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I'm not sure if this has been mentioned before, but maybe Canada should buy a $75 million AN-124 cargo plane or a C-5 galaxy instead of asking the Russians for a ride whenever there's a distaster.
old medic said:There is no doubt Canada needs to repair it's air and sealift capability,
but would a Hybrid Military-Civilian DART make more sense? Should the DART stay 100% military, but be fully staffed instead of drawing personnel from other operational units?
What's lacking and what is the DART's true weakness is political will to deploy it, and its ability to get there.
It is always more cost effective to own then to rent, particularly when it is something that will get used, like large cargo aircraft.
I liked the idea of getting back to basics, doing what we do best, and doing it right:
In the context of the DART, maintain a specialised recce team and launch it immediately (kinda like "disaster pathfinders" ...).
Then send follow-on forces such as "ordinary" Engineer and Medical units, augmented with CIMIC trained in civil emergencies.
Just musing out loud but would not a dedicated hospital ship deployed to the area ease the burden on hospitals in the effected areas?
Yup, and the USN have sent USNS Mercy - plus the Indian Navy has deployed 29 warships ...
Anyone know if there are electricians on the DART team??
armymedic
What surprises me is that the DART team isn't run by an Engineering (Army) or Airfield Engineering (Air,duh) Officer, similar in structure to an ACT or AEF.
Ignorance is bliss
Have you ever been on a mission of any substantial size; it requires many support staff? To keep it to 100 pers is almost out of the question..........you cannot have the req'd pers to sustain the mission. This is not for a mere press release, it is to actually do good for mankind....
If ignorance is bliss you must be pretty happy. I don't need to justify my experience to you but for an initial setup you would require far less than 100 pers. Yes, support staff is required, but how much support staff do you need for a beddown? Not much. Once you get set up, sure, send more pers in, but a SMALL unit can deploy faster with less kit than a large one, and can have things up and running before the main body arrives, if there even needs to be a main body.
Armymatters said:Shrinking DART to something more manageable and easily transported is perhaps a better solution.
Armymedic said:Shrinking is an easy word to say..
What capability would you suggest losing?
George Wallace said:In most cases, it is not the size of the equipment, but the amount that is required. Massive amounts of kit and supplies must be transported.
Refer back to Combatcamera's posting in this thread. He gives a good overview of the latest deployment including what it took to get DART overseas.Armymatters said:So what I am understanding it is often not the size, just the fact we can't send out the number of Hercs we need to where it needs to be... to give me an idea, on say a typical deployment, how much equipment and supplies is acutally sent out?
George Wallace said:And you haven't even thought of the Ambulances, and other Admin B Vehicles.
You may be right. However, there was also Antonov's (or Ilyushin's) in the mix. I don't recall any SupaCats or vehicles going missing either. A lot of tentage and rations were left behind (or burnt).OnTrack said:...... Honduras (Op Central) deployment it was 60 Herc flights and a number of pax Airbus and combi Airbus flights.
Armymatters said:So, for a typical full DART deployment, I am reading that there is a round a dozen of the 20 ft ISO containers, and the standard CF ISO container carrier is the HLVW... so around 12 of the HLVW's are taken along, if you do not take the trailers. You are going to have to lift the ISO containers containing the equipment so bring along LiftKing LK container loader or two, and you need to get the 200 troops and staff to the area, a couple of MLVW's carrying troops and other supplies are taken along... for engineering to build the base, and to start rebuilding, a excavator is needed, and if there isn't one already there, take your own, plus a transporter to carry it, and you need a crane... and your also taking a good sized helicopter (we used a KA-32A Helix leased from a Canadian company)...
Breaking down the ISO containers, I am seeing we are taking along the following:
4 ROWPU water purifiers (1 ISO container each)
3 Diesel Generators (1 ISO container each)
A field hospital (roughly 3 20 ft ISO containers)
Various tents, shelters for the staff, other supplies (roughly 2-3 ISO containers)
A Herc can take 2 20ft ISO containers (so 6 Hercs are needed just for the ISO containers), the Liftking and the crane will require another Herc, for taking the MLWV's, you need a pair of Hercs as well, a HLVW can fit in one Herc, so 14 Hercs are need for the HLVW equipment... don't forget flying the troops and staff there, so a CC-150 Polaris (Airbus A310) is flown out, and that can take some cargo as well... so all in all, roughly 30 Herc flights are needed. When we deployed to Sri Lanka, we chartered 2 AN-124's for a total of 5 flights, so assumming that the Antonov's were fully loaded, 9000 cubic metres of cargo was sent to Sri Lanka, or roughly 1200 tons of cargo (using the max carrying capacity of the large Antonov's), but that is a unrealistic weight for all that cargo, so I expect half that at least...
I can see this is already a headache (I am getting one already from just trying to figure this out)...
Armymatters said:Breaking down the ISO containers, I am seeing we are taking along the following:
4 ROWPU water purifiers (1 ISO container each)
3 Diesel Generators (1 ISO container each)
A field hospital (roughly 3 20 ft ISO containers)
Various tents, shelters for the staff, other supplies (roughly 2-3 ISO containers)