Thanks Mr. T for the article!
I consider this to be an unusual phenomenon...we're seeing the return of trench warfare. Check out the pics below....
I really can't explain it.
This isn't even a difficult field problem and you would expect a good Marine just out of boot camp to be able to lead a crossing of such an obstacle.
So why is it suddenly popular again?
I can only imagine that it has to do with moderately mechanized units. In Western or advanced military forces engineers, bridging and obstacle clearing equipment is a given. In many of the world's forces they're an extravagance that can't be afforded.
So as primitive as it might seem, it does appear that this extremely old skool type of warfare is making a comeback.
NOTE: I made a couple of assumptions when I posted this. The first assumption was that people would understand that the term "trench warfare" was tongue in cheek and did not refer to WW1 battle type tactics but to what we're seeing in these pics. The second assumption was that even if people didn't get the "tongue in cheek" aspect of this then they would have enough sense to realize that I do know what actual trench warfare is. Seems I was wrong on both counts.
I consider this to be an unusual phenomenon...we're seeing the return of trench warfare. Check out the pics below....
Uzbek authorities have started digging trenches in the disputed areas along the Kyrgyz-Uzbek border, RFE/RL's Kyrgyz and Uzbek services report. |
Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region is digging a trench along its border with Syria to prevent the infiltration of militants and smuggling from the war-racked country, officials say. |
Odessa region vidhorodytsya 450-kilometer "Transnistrian ditch." To block the movement of heavy military equipment and moving contraband goods on the Transnistrian segment of the Ukrainian-Moldovan border began work on engineering enhancement - to 450-km boundary proryyut trench width 3.5 meters and a depth of 2-3 meters.
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This isn't even a difficult field problem and you would expect a good Marine just out of boot camp to be able to lead a crossing of such an obstacle.
So why is it suddenly popular again?
I can only imagine that it has to do with moderately mechanized units. In Western or advanced military forces engineers, bridging and obstacle clearing equipment is a given. In many of the world's forces they're an extravagance that can't be afforded.
So as primitive as it might seem, it does appear that this extremely old skool type of warfare is making a comeback.
NOTE: I made a couple of assumptions when I posted this. The first assumption was that people would understand that the term "trench warfare" was tongue in cheek and did not refer to WW1 battle type tactics but to what we're seeing in these pics. The second assumption was that even if people didn't get the "tongue in cheek" aspect of this then they would have enough sense to realize that I do know what actual trench warfare is. Seems I was wrong on both counts.