All Content from Business Insider 07月22日 20:58
The UK is training Ukrainian soldiers to make 'every shot count'. They don't have ammo to waste.
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西方国家正通过“联合干预行动”(Operation Interflex)等项目,为乌克兰士兵提供军事训练,核心目标是提升其“每一次射击的有效性”。面对弹药短缺的挑战,乌克兰军队在训练中被要求尽可能高效地使用每一发子弹,以弥补与俄罗斯在弹药储备上的巨大差距。此次训练由英国牵头,联合13个盟国,已培训超过5.6万名乌克兰士兵。训练内容不仅包括基础武器操作,还针对乌克兰战场实际情况,如地雷、无人机和电子战等进行了特别强调。同时,西方国家也从乌克兰士兵的实战经验中学习,实现了宝贵的相互学习与经验交流。

🎯 **弹药效率至上:** 乌克兰军队在与俄军的对抗中,面临着弹药数量上的明显劣势,因此西方训练将重心放在如何最大化弹药的使用效率上。训练内容强调“让每一发子弹都发挥最大作用”,以确保在有限的弹药供应下,士兵们能够有效打击目标。

💪 **提升士兵杀伤力:** 除了节约弹药,训练还致力于提升士兵的整体战斗能力和“杀伤力”。通过精细的射击技巧指导和战场生存能力的培养,旨在让乌克兰士兵在战场上变得更加致命和有效,能够更好地应对复杂多变的战场环境。

🤝 **实战经验与标准训练结合:** 训练项目将北约的最佳作战实践与乌克兰士兵的真实战场经验相结合。许多接受训练的士兵已有前线作战经历,他们能够提供关于战术有效性的宝贵反馈,甚至对训练内容提出建议,形成了“1+1>2”的互利局面。

📈 **训练时长与深度增加:** 乌克兰方面主动要求将“联合干预行动”的训练时长从35天延长至近50天,体现了其对提升士兵素质的坚定决心。尽管可以为了快速补充兵员而缩短训练周期,但乌克兰选择了更深入、更全面的培训方式。

🌍 **西方军事的“经验反哺”:** 乌克兰战场为西方军事力量提供了一个前所未有的现代大规模战争实证。西方国家通过观察和训练乌克兰士兵,深刻认识到在与强大对手的对抗中,弹药生产能力和现代战争的战略储备的重要性,并开始反思和调整自身的军事准备。

Ukrainian soldiers training as part of Operation Interflex in Norway.

Western training for Ukrainian soldiers includes trying to make them as "lethal as possible" while also preserving ammunition, as they lack the deep ammo stores of their Russian foes.

Col. Boardman, the commanding officer of the UK-led training program Operation Interflex, told Business Insider that the training is designed to ensure that Ukraine's soldiers use every shot that they have as effectively as possible.

"The Ukrainians don't have the luxury of a huge amount of ammunition in the way the Russians do," he said. It means Ukraine needs to "make best use of the ammunition they've got."

Russia's invasion of Ukraine is a grinding fight that has consumed mountains of ammunition. With a much smaller arsenal, Ukraine has often found itself at a disadvantage and grappling with critical shortages.

A Ukrainian soldier in the back of a vehicle.

Fighting effectively while at that disadvantage has been baked into the training, which has been provided by the UK and 13 other allied nations to more than 56,000 Ukrainians.

"We are focusing on making sure the soldiers that we train are as lethal as possible," Boardman said of the efforts to train them on small arms like rifles

"Making every shot count in a literal sense is really important for the Ukrainians," he said. "So we spend quite a lot of time on the range coaching the marksmanship of the guys we're training to make sure that they do make every shot count when they get to the front."

He explained that they're "trying to make the soldiers not only able to survive in the environment but also be as lethal, be as effective as they can be."

Ukraine has a booming defense industry, but it still gets much of its weaponry and ammunition from Western partners. It's faced shortages as partner stockpiles are strained and as the US, previously a major supplier of war aid, sometimes pauses support amid political drama.

Ukrainian soldiers take part in Operation Interflex in England.

Those shortages have, at times, meant that Ukraine's soldiers have to ration ammunition, leaving them unable to prosecute targets in their sights, Western soldiers who have fought for Ukraine in this war have told Business Insider.

Big wars eat up a lot of ammunition

Ukraine's ammunition struggles have been a serious wake-up call for Western militaries, which are closely watching the war to see what sort of weapons and tactics are needed for modern war against a great power adversary.

Western countries are sounding the alarm over not having enough ammunition.

The West is behind in solving that problem. Last month, the head of the NATO alliance warned that Russia produces as much ammunition in three months as NATO does in a year and called for a "quantum leap" in how Europe defends itself.

Both large defense companies and startups are trying to solve this issue, but there's a huge gap to bridge.

The shortage is just one indication of how this war is different from those the West has experienced in the last few decades. Those have been fights like counter-terrorism and counter-insurgency operations against adversaries that Western militaries had outgunned.

Russia, by contrast, has one of the world's largest militaries, and the war is one marked by the resurgence of old methods, like trench warfare, along with advanced technology like drones. It is a long and grinding fight with hundreds of thousands of war dead.

Drones have played a huge role in Russia's invasion of Ukraine and Ukraine's fightback.

Ukraine is experiencing a fight unlike any the West has seen recently and passing lessons to Western partners that are not directly involved. That unusual dynamic is reflected in the Western trainings of Ukrainian soldiers, Boardman said.

Some of the soldiers trained already have front-line experience. So, for example, when they are being taught trench clearance, they "know very well how to clear a trench because they were doing it a few weeks ago." They sometimes push back on what the instructors tell them to do, saying it won't work in this conflict.

Boardman said that feedback is welcome.

What happens, he said, is that NATO best practices and the Ukrainians' direct combat experience get combined. There is a "really rich mutual understanding going on," and the training ultimately "ends up with the sum being much greater than the parts, which is really valuable for us."

Boardman said that even though the UK has "spent 20 or so years in the counterinsurgency focus," the training for Ukrainians is largely similar to what is given to the UK's own basic recruits, just with some specific focuses tailored to their war, like mines, drone warfare, and electronic warfare.

"We probably teach them more than we would teach our British Army recruits because our British Army recruits don't go straight to war off the back of their basic training," he said.

Boardman said the UK and its allies benefit from training Ukrainians too, getting direct feedback about how to fight Russia for their soldiers. He said trainers are "learning a lot from the Ukrainians," and "we are also feeding all that knowledge into the British Army."

The UK hosts trainings for Ukrainian troops under its Operation Interflex program.

Boardman praised Ukraine's soldiers, saying its new recruits pick up on "how to operate a weapon incredibly quickly."

He said that Ukraine's military focuses on the quality of its soldiers, choosing that as its strategy because it "hasn't got the size, the sheer mass of the Russian military."

He said Ukraine decided to increase the length of Interflex training from 35 days to almost 50.

"I'm really impressed, frankly, that they've done that because they could easily have said, 'We need recruits quickly. We just need numbers. Can we shorten the course a bit? Can you get through to us faster?' But they've done the opposite," Boardman said.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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乌克兰军事训练 弹药短缺 Operation Interflex 西方援助 实战经验
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