Allies, Global, Land Warfare

Poland Deal Lays Groundwork For Division-Strength Deployment

on June 13, 2019 at 5:33 PM
Army photo

A US Army M1 Abrams heavy tank unloads from a transport ship at the Polish port of Gdansk in 2017.

WASHINGTON: The new defense pact with Poland does more than add 1,000 US troops to the 4,500 already in the frontline NATO ally. It also lays the logistical groundwork for quickly deploying a heavy armored division, some 12,000 to 20,000 troops, for a crisis or a major exercise.

That would include the Defender 2020 wargames scheduled for next year, which the Army says will be “the largest in 25 years.” Army Undersecretary Ryan McCarthy said Defender would serve as a smaller version of the massive Cold War REFORGER exercises — Return of Forces to Germany — that rehearsed rapid deployment to Europe in event of a Soviet invasion.

Ryan McCarthy

While the Trump Administration and its Polish partners, the right-wing government of Andrzej Duda, have been signaling the troop increase for months, the detailed announcement this morning means the two countries will also create an entire logistical and administrative infrastructure. In a conflict, crisis, or major exercise, it’s much easier to pour in reinforcements if there’s this kind of support system in place to receive them.

There are seven major elements that the US promises to establish in Poland on an ongoing basis and that Poland promises to accommodate and support at its own expense:

If you combine the units listed here with another heavy brigade using the tanks and other equipment in storage across Europe as part of the Army Prepositioned Stock (APS), the medium-weight brigade of recently upgunned Stryker 8×8 armored vehicles based in Germany, and the light airborne infantry brigade based in Italy, you have a robust combat division. It would have a headquarters, two or three heavy brigades as its iron fist, a medium brigade for flank security and reconnaissance; a light brigade to hold urban, forested, or mountainous terrain where foot troops have the advantage over vehicles; a helicopter brigade to rapidly provide firepower, reinforcements, or supplies across the battle zone; and plenty of logistical support.

Stryker vehicles from the Army’s 2nd Cavalry Regiment in Romania.

Not all of this infrastructure will be in place next year, but even the beginnings of it will be helpful for the big wargames. “Defender 2020 is a Department of the Army-directed, USAREUR [US Army Europe]-led exercise designed to demonstrate the United States’ ability to rapidly deploy a division [emphasis ours] to the European theater,” an official Army website reads. “This exercise, the largest in 25 years, will test echelons-above-brigade units in operational-level warfighting” — that is, maneuvers by entire divisions and corps, instead of the brigade-sized and smaller operations standard in Iraq — “and its associated sustainment” — i.e. logistics.

Is Defender 2020 a modern incarnation of the Cold War REFORGER exercises, which at their peak moved multiple heavy divisions across the Atlantic? “It’s REFORGER-like,” McCarthy told reporters at a recent roundtable. “REFORGER would be larger in scale… but it’s similar in concept.”

Logistically, “it’s a muscle that we have not trained on, because of 18 years of conflict in the Middle East,” McCarthy continued. As the wars ground on in Afghanistan and Iraq, deployments could be planned so far ahead, so much equipment was in place in-country, and the infrastructure there was so well established, that the Army developed a meticulous scheduled and predictable cycle known as Army Force Generation, which rotated units in and out of the war zone.

“In an ARFORGEN model, you get on an airplane, you show up, and all your equipment’s there,” McCarthy said. Now, he explained, units need to pack up all their equipment and vehicles, “put them on a rail head, get it to the shipyard, move it to Gdansk, Poland and then unload it and ride through the Polish countryside to your position. We hadn’t done that in a very long time.”

Elements of the US 2nd Cavalry Regiment cross into Poland.

The Poles haven’t been on the receiving end of large foreign forces for a long time either, not since the Soviet Union routinely deployed massive forces across its Warsaw Pact satellites. The roads, bridges, and bases built back then are aging. Even when they were at peak condition, they were designed to support Soviet logistics, which were austere compared to US standards of supply, especially Russian tanks, which are much lighter than the massive American M1.

“If you look at Eastern Europe in particular, a lot of the infrastructure was built by the Russians,” said McCarthy, who visited Poland early in his time in office. “We started buying different HETTS [tank transporters] to load tanks because they were too heavy for a lot of the road infrastructure.”

There’s a great deal of work to do, on both the American and the Polish sides, before Poland is as well-prepared for US reinforcements to rush in as West Germany was in the Cold War.

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