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Non Vi Sed Arte -- Not by Strength, by Guile
LRDG Artillery/Armour
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The LRDG Royal Artillery Section
The LRDG toyed with the idea of artillery support in early 1941. This
was the part of a grand scheme developed by Ralph Bagnold based on Wingate's
Papers. He had envisioned a three phases in the development of the LRDG.
The first is phase was the recon/intelligence outfit that was created
and prospered in the Desert. The next phase was a beefed up force capable
of large scale raids. The third phase was a combined arms force capable
of launching full scale attacks on the enemy's rear. This would have included
tank battalions and artillery batteries as well as motorized infantry.
It would have been similar to what the Chindits in Burma. The amount of
resources required for such a force were much too high and Wavell could
not afford to chance such an unorthodox plan so what Bagnold ended up
with was one tank and one artillery piece.
Now it may seem that what Bagnold had asked for was unworkable and indeed
it may have been in 1941. But by June, 1944, both the British and American
were dropping entire airborne divisions behind enemy lines in order to
accomplish similar missions.
In any event, the LRDG Royal Artillery Section became a reality on 21
March 1941. The idea was to have some kind of artillery and/or tank support
should the need arise. Due to shortages of available equipment the LRDG
was allowed to experiment with only a single field gun and one light tank.
Initially the field gun was to be a 4.5 inch howitzer but as this was
being phased out, The Group instead received a 25 Pounder. There is confusion
over what tank was used. According to many eyewitnesses, the tank was
an M3 Stuart (Honey), However, this tank was not in theater until July,
1941. The light tank available in March 1941 was the Vickers Mk VIb or
Mk VIc. The SAS, however, did use a Stuart Tank on at least one mission
in the desert.
The RA unit was moved about in "portee" fashion. This involved winching
the artillery piece and the tank onto the flat bed of a 10 ton truck.
Some guns were fired from the portee position but it was not sound or
realistic with a gun as large as the 25. Pounder. Weapons were rigged
in "portee" in order make it easier to transport them in the soft sand.
It was very difficult to tow artillery pieces over the desert areas traveled
by the LRDG.
Even when moved portee, it quickly became apparent that the weapons
were too heavy when crossing the shifting sands of the desert. It also
became evident that the equipment did not really assist the patrols with
their main mission, reconnaissance. Combine these factors with the enormous
manpower used for transporting and operating the equipment and you can
see why the section was short-lived.
The 25 Pounder was only used once while on a mission. This was during
Operation Crusader. According to then Captain, Lloyd Owen, Patrol Commander
Capt. John Olivey of the Rhodesian S1 Patrol used the 25 Pounder when
attacking a small fort about 25 miles south west of Agedabia. Most of
the Italian desert garrison fled into the desert and four of the enemy
were captured along with the fort, once the patrol open fire with gun.
There is no mention of the LRDG using a tank of any kind while on a mission.
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Vickers Mk VI Light Tank
A likely candidate for the LRDG tank. Armed with a Vickers 303
MG and a Besa 15mm Cannon and lightly armored, the Mk VI offered
little protection for its crew and barely more firepower than
a standard patrol vehicle.
Basic Statistics (VIB/VIC):
Weight: 5.25 tonnes
Speed: 56 km/h
Crew: 3 (driver, gunner, commander)
Armament:
- VIB: Vickers .5" & .303" MG
- VIC: BESA 15mm and 7.92mm MG
Armour: 11-14mm
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The tank NOT used by the LRDG.
Basic Statistics (Stuart I (Honey)):
Weight: 13 tons
Speed: 56 km/h
Crew: 34/5(driver, gunner, commander)
Armament:
- M5 37 mm Cannon
- 3 .30 caliber Browning machine guns
Speed: 58 kph
(image color enhanced) |
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25 Pounder
While the concept of artillery support (indirect fire support)
was sound in theory, it was probably not sound in practice. The
25 pounder had a firing rate of five rounds per minute which was
too slow if the patrol needed immediate suppressive fire to cover
a withdrawal.
Of course one of the wonderful attributes of the 25 pounder is
that like the German 88, it was often employed as a direct fire
weapon! This would have aided in hitting hard targets or heavy
German armour.
In the end the Artillery section was scrubbed.
Basic Statistics:
Weight of Shell: 25 pounds
Diameter:89mm
Range 13,400 Yards
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