A blog on Singapore defence and the SAF that goes Above & Beyond The Obvious -The views expressed on this blog are my personal views and/or opinions. Copyright © 2009-2024. David Boey. All rights reserved. Follow us on Facebook @senangdiriHQ; Instagram @davidboeypix; Twitter @SenangDiri
Saturday, April 25, 2015
A look at Singapore Army sniper rifles
In the Singapore Armed Forces (SAF), the lower end of the precision strike spectrum encompasses scoped infantry small arms acquired by the domain experts in 9th Singapore Division/Headquarters Infantry.
Seen here are a range of sniper rifles fielded by the Singapore Army. These are (from left) the Knight's Armament M110 7.62mm semi-automatic rifle (United States), Sako TRG22 7.62mm bolt action rifle (Finland) and the Accuracy International AX50 12.7mm bolt action anti-material rifle (United Kingdom).
The weapons were displayed yesterday at the "A Day in the Army" event at Headquarters Armour, which is the host for the Singapore Army's annual Family Day.
The Singapore Army's sniper rifles allow the infantry to reach out and touch someone with a precisely-aimed projectile out to distances of 800m or more. Powerful optics allow even bespectacled soldiers to place their rounds where they should land, so long as they have a steady pair of hands and follow the fundamentals of good marksmanship (controlled breathing, eye relief, trigger pull, awareness of the wider tactical situation, effective camouflage, assistance from a spotter, egress plan etc).
Singapore Army snipers typically provide overwatch to manoeuvre forces as they move towards their objective. The range ring of weapons available to snipers means that sharpshooters can take down hostile targets such as key appointment holders, crew-served weapons like MGs and anti-tank weapons, vehicle commanders, special forces - the list goes on - outside the effective range of return fire from infantry small arms.
In Singapore Army infantry battalions, Company Marksmen armed with sniper rifles are tasked to provide covering fire in focused, single-shot engagements guided by the sniper's mantra of one shot, one kill. Such precisely calibrated, single-shot outgoing fire complements the concentrated firepower that support weapons such as the fully automatic belt-fed 7.62mm general purpose machine guns and 120mm mortars can deliver from the battalion's fire bases.
The larger sniper rifles in the Singapore Army's arsenal, such as the ones that fire 12.7mm rounds, allow marksmen to hunt and kill enemy snipers who may be trying to do the same.
Such weapons are also useful when investigating suspicious objects, thought to be IEDs, along the line of advance during combat situations when non-destructive testing isn't a key priority for SAF commanders.
When all else fails, call in an air strike.
The Republic of Singapore Air Force will know how to deal with the situation.
Singapore Armed Forces (SAF) Army Medical Services unveils new Combat Ambulance
Friday, April 24, 2015
End of the road for Singapore Army 3-tonners and 7-tonners
5 December 2022 update:
Pukul Habis: Available from Amazon sites that serve your location. "Look Inside" function on some sites shows sample pages.
Singapore: https://bit.ly/3XJzInH
Australia: https://amzn.to/3ViaX0i
Canada: https://amzn.to/3VkjqQP Look Inside
France: https://amzn.to/3uenBS5 Look Inside
Germany: https://amzn.to/3XLcJc0 Look Inside
Japan: https://amzn.to/3gS2Loz Look Inside
Spain: https://amzn.to/3OSfi7S
Sweden: https://bit.ly/3GWq7UI
United Kingdom: https://amzn.to/3EZ6clA Look Inside
USA: https://amzn.to/3Ui3Eo1 Look Inside
Taking the place of the once ubiquitous army transports is a fleet of brand new 500 German-made MAN Light Transporters, the first of which made its public debut today at Headquarters Armour at Sungei Gedong Camp during the "A Day in the Army" event.
Project ETHAN
Purchased under Project Ethan, the MAN Light Transporters are poised to replace not one but two types of wheeled transports in the Singapore Army. These are the 3-tonners and the 7-tonners. Senang Diri believes Project Ethan is the largest truck contract signed by the Ministry of Defence (MINDEF) since 5-tonners were acquired, also from the MAN stable.
The new workhorses for the Singapore Army's Combat Service Support Command (CSSCOM) are military derivatives of the civilian MAN TGM 18.280 twin-axle, 4x4 cargo truck. In Singapore Armed Forces (SAF) service, the MAN Light Transporter is not exactly "light" as it has an unladen weight of 9,160 kgs and tips the scale at 16,000 kgs fully laden. The MAN Light Transporter measures 3,557mm tall, 8,476mm long and is 2,935mm wide.
A key difference from the MAN 5-tonners purchased earlier is the noticeably longer wheelbase. This allows the MAN Light Transporters - known as Ethans by army personnel - to carry a 20 foot container with ISO twist-locks on its cargo bed. This gives CSSCOM more flexibility in configuring Ethans for specialised roles by the simple expedient of bolting a mission-oriented 20 foot container and warload onto the truck.
"Improved safety features of the Light Transporters include a Rear Reverse Camera, Reverse Proximity Sensor and spring-assisted tailboard," said CSSCOM literature.
When outfield, Ethans can be driven in water up to 750mm deep.
CSSCOM added that a powerful engine and a reliable brake system allow the vehicle to "easily take on the 60% slope" and provided a photo to prove the Ethan's ability at climbing steep gradients.
Senang Diri welcomes Ethan to our logbook of MID number plates. Wasalaam. :-)
You may also like:
Guide to SAF MID vehicle number plates. Click here
Monday, April 20, 2015
Army Careers: A Day With the Singapore Army
Sungei Gedong Camp, 23 to 25 April 2015.
P.S. Fix the typo in the online ad ASAP.
Cavalry is soldiers on horseback.
Calvary is the hill on which Jesus Christ was crucified. Fix the typo ASAP.
Tuesday, April 14, 2015
US or UN as the world's policeman? Don't count on it.
In an interview with Senang Diri, Mr Gray recounts what it was like in Phnom Penh as the dying city, besieged and under artillery fire from the Khmer Rouge forces, awaited its uncertain fate.
To mark the 40th year since US forces pulled out from Phnom Penh, Mr Gray relooked that fateful day in a story titled "US handed Cambodia over to 'butcher' 40 years ago". Please click here for his story.
"Since Cambodia, I have covered a dozen conflicts, including Gulf War I, Iraq, Kosovo, Afghanistan, etc. so I have seen places like Baghdad after the fall of Saddam Hussein, Kosovo vacated by the Serbs, etc. but nothing quite like the experience of Phnom Penh."
War correspondent Denis Gray on assignment with United States forces in Afghanistan.
Acknowledgements:
Thank you Mr Denis Gray for sharing your insights into the Fall of Phnom Penh and your experience covering wars around the globe. Look forward to meeting you in the Lion City when you can make time to see us. :-)
You may also like:
The SAF versus cynics and critics in the halcyon days of peace. Please click here.
The best customers. Click here.
Saturday, April 11, 2015
Strong or weak TNI? How some people in Singapore view Indonesia's war machine
Thursday, April 9, 2015
Image and identity for new SAF units
And then we have the Volkssturm from the Second World War. This name evokes the image of a people's militia cobbled together from extreme ends of the male age spectrum, hastily trained and thrown into combat - the dying Nazi regime's last burst of defiance after being bled white of military-age defence manpower.
The Singapore Armed Force (SAF) has its fair share of units that have built up an image and identity that few rationale folks would want to challenge in a fair fight. The Special Operations Task Force (SOTF) is one example. Ditto the assorted Republic of Singapore Air Force numbered squadrons whom you would never see at the SAF Best Unit competition.
And unless image and identity are carefully cultivated, the SAF risks raising its own version of militia units that nobody takes seriously.
The People's Defence Force (PDF) once had the veneer of a dad's army - old, out of shape reservists in faded Number 4 uniforms and awkward fire movements who were our last line of defence.
But today's PDF projects a vastly improved corporate reputation. Post 9/11, PDF units have spearheaded island defence and counter attack force roles with a professionalism, dedication and aplomb that has recast the formation as an operationally-ready fighting force to be reckoned with.
Good public relations had nothing to do with it. Instead, it was the boots on the ground - full-time National Servicemen (NSFs), Operationally-Ready National Servicemen (NSmen) and regulars from specialised PDF security battalions whose actions and conduct while executing Ops Bascinet said all there was to be said. It is a heart-warming turnaround that underlines how commitment to defence contributes tangibly to the SAF's deterrence value.
As new units stand up, it is vital that image and identity are nurtured with care. This goes above and beyond the smoke and mirrors which a sceptical Singaporean public - comprised predominantly of citizen soldiers and their loved ones - can see through immediately.
It will involve building a unit's identity and ethos. It will demand that the unit decide what are the core values that will drive this segment of our citizen's army in achieving its mission and vision.
And while being "new" brings attendant challenges in establishing one's corporate identity, new units whose enterprise stems from a proud record of citizens who stepped forward, steadfast and vigilant, to fight for the Lion City have a firm foundation to build upon.
The tricky bit comes with integrating a new unit just out of mothballs with a Third Generation SAF. In so doing, the new entity must convince their fellow warfighters that its CONOPS is credible and the fighting men and women in its ranks are highly-motivated individuals who are determined not to be the weak links in our citizen's army.
Such awareness building isn't happenstance. It must be stamped through a sustained and proactive effort at building hearts and minds within the SAF and throughout our defence ecosystem.
Do it well and a posting to such new units becomes desired among career SAF officers, not a dreaded one that spells a dead-end to one's SAF career.
Do it creditably and new intakes become self-sustaining. Citizens will step forward willingly and regularly. Those who do will come from a cross section of Singaporean society whose diverse backgrounds and experience will serve the SAF eminently well. This is because whereas a professional army of career soldiers must make do with what it has, a citizen's army can draw upon the human capital from an entire nation. And if the new SAF unit can cherry pick the best and deploy such men and women as needed, this sustained talent infusion will put the SAF one up against a regular army whose defence manpower ages by the day.
In this regard, knowledge capture for a new unit is vital. Pictures, key dates and names should be diligently recorded in a "war diary", so to speak, to strengthen the institutional memory as the unit builds itself up. A properly curated record will retain contributions from the pioneer batch and subsequent batches of volunteers, as well as those from regulars before the inevitable posting order brings them to another part of the SAF.
Awareness building with stakeholders is crucial too. This encompasses convincing colleagues in the SAF of the new unit's relevance and value to the defence ecosystem, as well as informing and educating a wider population of the unit's raison d'etre. Establishing a credible image and identity on homeground will telegraph to friends and frenemies why the new unit was set up and how it contributes to the SAF's deterrence value.
It is a tall order with no finish line.