janes.com
New upgunned Stryker arrives in Europe
By: Kyle Rempfer
The upgraded Stryker Infantry Carrier Vehicle - Dragoon
has arrived at the 2nd Cavalry Regiment to fulfill an urgent-need request from
the unit, which is permanently stationed in Germany.
The Stykers are expected to be delivered to the regiment
over the next few weeks.
The vehicle has been “upgunned” with a 30mm cannon to
replace the vehicles’ previous M2 .50 caliber machine guns.
The newly fielded Stryker has a remote-operated, unmanned
turret; a new, fully integrated commander’s station; and upgraded driveline
component and hull modifications, according to information from Program
Executive Office-Ground Combat Systems.
The Army was provided more than $300 million in emergency
Congressional funding in late 2015 to rapidly develop and field the upgunned
Stryker as a counter to Russian aggression on the European continent.
“This capability
that is coming to 2CR [the 2nd Cavalry Regiment] is directly attributable to
Russian aggression,” Lt. Col. Troy Meissel, the regiment’s deputy commander,
told reporters in August at a live-fire test range at Aberdeen Proving Ground,
Maryland.
“Back in the Cold War there were 300,000 Soldiers in
Europe, and today there are 30,000. So how do we, as an Army, make 30,000
Soldiers feel like 300,000? This new [capability] is one of the ways that can
help us do that,” Meissel added.
The regiment is already actively working with foreign
partners in Europe to increase its capabilities and to outgun Russian weapons
systems.
In October, the regiment arrived at a Polish military
outpost located roughly 100 miles from the fortified Russian enclave of
Kaliningrad. The deployment was part of NATO’s enhanced Forward Presence initiative, which is a deterrence
posture meant to reassure eastern NATO member-states of the alliance’s ongoing
commitment to their security.
The previous iteration of the Stryker vehicle was found
to be outmatched by Russia’s BMP-3 tracked infantry fighting vehicles, which
were seen during the Russian intervention in Ukraine.
“The Russians, it turns out, had upgraded and fielded
significant capabilities while we were engaged in Iraq and Afghanistan,” Army
Vice Chief of Staff Gen. Daniel Allyn said last year.
Photos of Russian armored personnel carriers made public
during the annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea region catalyzed the fast-tracked
acquisition program that delivered the new Stryker, Maj. Gen. David Bassett,
the program executive officer for Ground Combat Systems, said in a statement.
“This is a great example of where we tailored the
acquisition process to meet a timeline being driven by an immediate operational
need,”Bassett said.
“We are delivering significant capabilities to Soldiers
at an accelerated pace, because of our ability to seek out mature technologies
and accept and manage concurrency of detailed design, manufacturing, and
testing in order to increase delivery speed,” he added.
Original post: armytimes.com
Stryker 8×8 with Kongsberg’s MCT30 Turret: Details
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