Check out this unique perspective of the . This one comes from one of the U.S. Marine Corps’ amphibious assault vehicles as it dives out the back of the amphibious assault ship USS Harpers Ferry and wades ashore.
The vehicle you are “riding ashore in” . Both the US and South Korea use the type, making cooperative training operations like the one above a bit easier.
It is not every day that you see a 30-ton armored amphibious assault vehicle launch off an elevated
In actual combat in an amphibious environment, having commonality between the two countries’ inventories could actually be life saving as normal supply chains that standard ground forces use will likely be totally cut off from a very new beach head.
The fact that both the U.S. and South Korea use the AAV-7 is something of a rare situation. Although many of the South Korea’s military aircraft have commonality with American types,
The Republic of Korea Army is on a constant wartime footing. Its inventory of heavy armor is…
Although some argue that beach landings are a thing of the past, and amphibious operations in general are not as strategically imperative as they once were, they may be an essential element of a potential war on the Korean Peninsula. The ability to go around the defenses along the highly fortified demilitarized zone opens up a range of possibilities for allied commanders and an equal amount of vulnerabilities for North Korean war planners. Because North Korea that are evolving in other potential foes’ arsenals, a beach landing may not just be plausible, but essential.
Like everything North Korea-related, any level of sustained conflict will likely be very bloody, but going where the enemy is the least is a strategy as old as warfare and amphibious operations allow this to happen.
Contact the author at [email protected]