Scout car
A scout car is a light wheeled armored military vehicle, purpose-built and used for passive reconnaissance.[1] Scout cars are either unarmed or lightly armed for self-defense, and do not carry large caliber weapons systems.[1] This differentiates them from other reconnaissance vehicles and wheeled armoured fighting vehicles that may fulfill a similar mission but also possess much heavier armament.[note 1] Scout cars are designed for carrying out observation and remaining undetected, while avoiding contact with the enemy.[3] Armies which adopted the concept were likelier to place an emphasis on reconnaissance by stealth, unlike others which preferred more heavily armoured reconnaissance vehicles, designed to fight to obtain information if necessary.[3]
History
The term "scout car" first entered widespread use in the 1930s as an official United States Army designation for any wheeled armored vehicle developed specifically for reconnaissance.[1] Following the US entry into World War II, US Army staff clarified that the term would not extend to heavier wheeled reconnaissance vehicles fitted with turreted weapons, such as the M8 Greyhound.[1] In this context, "scout car" meant a four-wheeled, often open-topped, armored car which was unarmed or only fitted with a light or general-purpose machine gun for self-defense.[1] Under US doctrine, scout cars were only to be used for short-range reconnaissance.[4]
The US Army abandoned the scout car concept after the war because the vehicles' armor tempted crews to emulate tank tactics. American scout car crews often directly engaged hostile positions rather than relying on their vehicles' low profile and stealth to reconnoiter them effectively.
In 1940, the British Army defined a "scout car" as an armored car for observation, intelligence-gathering and other elements of passive reconnaissance.[6] The scout car's envisaged role in British doctrine was to probe forward and report on enemy dispositions before conducting a hasty withdrawal.[6] The first British vehicle of this type to enter service was the Daimler Dingo.[6] After the war, this role was filled by the Daimler Ferret.[7] Scout cars were gradually superseded by more heavily armed vehicles for light reconnaissance, such as the FV721 Fox armored car.[8]
Some nations followed the US lead in abandoning the scout car concept in favor of unarmored vehicles; for example, the
During the early 1940s, Red Army doctrine did not recognize a unique niche for the scout car, and the Soviets were likelier to favor heavier, six-wheeled vehicles such as the BA-20 for reconnaissance.[11] However, the weight, high profile and poor mobility of these early Soviet armored cars limited their usefulness in the reconnaissance role.[11] This led to the replacement of the BA-20 and other designs by the Soviet Union's first dedicated scout car design, the BA-64. In the postwar era, Soviet scout cars such as the BRDM-1 and BRDM-2 were attached on the divisional level and deployed for screening and long-range probing actions.[12] The scout cars were complemented in Soviet reconnaissance battalions by specialized variants of the BMP-1 or BMP-2 infantry fighting vehicles, which were able to reconnoiter much more aggressively and engage hostile armor as needed.[12]
By the late
Examples
See also
- Reconnaissance vehicle
- G-numbers
Notes and references
Annotations
- AMX-10RC and the EE-9 Cascavel.[2] In the traditional definition of the word, these vehicles would not be considered scout cars.[1]
References
- ^ ISBN 978-1473872370.
- ISBN 978-1448892440.
- ^ Armor magazine. Fort Knox, Kentucky: US Army Armor Center: 34.
- ^ Mechanized Cavalry 1936
- ^ a b c To fight or not to fight? Organizational and Doctrinal Trends in Mounted Maneuver Reconnaissance from the Interwar Years to Operation IRAQI FREEDOM
- ^ ISBN 978-0046230128.
- ^ ISBN 978-0681400450.
- ^ Armor magazine. Fort Knox, Kentucky: US Army Armor Center: 7–9.
- ^ Armor magazine. Fort Knox, Kentucky: US Army Armor Center: 36–40.
- ^ Bastos, Carlos Stephani (2012). "EE-3 Jararaca 4x4 Um Conceito Esquecido" (PDF). Juiz de Fora: Federal University of Juiz de Fora. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 August 2012. Retrieved 15 January 2018.
- ^ ISBN 978-0-582-89328-3.
- ^ a b The Fundamentals of Soviet 'Razvedka' (Intelligence/Reconnaissance)
- OCLC 14965544.
External links
- M3A1 Scout Car USA
- BRDM-1 USSR
- BRDM-1 USSR