Aug 19, 2024

Who Ever Runs Out of Ammunition First Loses

Who Ever Runs Out of Ammunition First Loses

Aug 19, 2024

Who Ever Runs Out of Ammunition First Loses

Articles have appeared covering the “significant” increase in annual artillery ammunition production by Russia.  Moscow is producing artillery shells three times faster than Ukraine’s Western allies, according to these sources.  The manufacture of 152 mm artillery rounds has increased from 400,000 annually to 2 million.  That is a lot of ammunition, but a little perspective is necessary.

Sure, 2 million rounds per year is a lot.  Yet during the First World War, more than 1.7 billion artillery rounds were fired or around 430,000,000 per year.  The Second World War saw 11 million tons of artillery ammunition used.  I guess they didn’t bother counting individual rounds.

The U.S. Third Army’s XX Corps fired 40,000 artillery rounds during two consecutive days in September 1944.  Alone, its 274th Armored Artillery Battalion, equipped with 18 105mm M-7 self-propelled artillery pieces, fired 104,319 rounds between August 19, 1944 and the end of the war.  As a whole, the Third Army fired over 5 million artillery rounds.

Artillery was a deadly threat.  Shrapnel from artillery rounds caused 53 percent of U.S. battlefield deaths and 62 percent of the wounds.   The Korean War figures were 59 percent of deaths and 61 percent of wounds and in Vietnam it was 36 percent of the deaths and 65 percent of the wounds.

The Korean War saw U.N. forces fire more than 2 million rounds during June and July 1953.

Putin can claim Russia is on a “Soviet-style” war footing, but this is not even close to the truth.  The Soviets sacrificed every other aspect of their economy to support the war and still needed massive support from its Allies to survive.

Two million is a large number, but considering the ravenous appetite of the modern battlefield this figure is more of a snack than a full meal.

Articles have appeared covering the “significant” increase in annual artillery ammunition production by Russia.  Moscow is producing artillery shells three times faster than Ukraine’s Western allies, according to these sources.  The manufacture of 152 mm artillery rounds has increased from 400,000 annually to 2 million.  That is a lot of ammunition, but a little perspective is necessary.

Sure, 2 million rounds per year is a lot.  Yet during the First World War, more than 1.7 billion artillery rounds were fired or around 430,000,000 per year.  The Second World War saw 11 million tons of artillery ammunition used.  I guess they didn’t bother counting individual rounds.

The U.S. Third Army’s XX Corps fired 40,000 artillery rounds during two consecutive days in September 1944.  Alone, its 274th Armored Artillery Battalion, equipped with 18 105mm M-7 self-propelled artillery pieces, fired 104,319 rounds between August 19, 1944 and the end of the war.  As a whole, the Third Army fired over 5 million artillery rounds.

Artillery was a deadly threat.  Shrapnel from artillery rounds caused 53 percent of U.S. battlefield deaths and 62 percent of the wounds.   The Korean War figures were 59 percent of deaths and 61 percent of wounds and in Vietnam it was 36 percent of the deaths and 65 percent of the wounds.

The Korean War saw U.N. forces fire more than 2 million rounds during June and July 1953.

Putin can claim Russia is on a “Soviet-style” war footing, but this is not even close to the truth.  The Soviets sacrificed every other aspect of their economy to support the war and still needed massive support from its Allies to survive.

Two million is a large number, but considering the ravenous appetite of the modern battlefield this figure is more of a snack than a full meal.

Articles have appeared covering the “significant” increase in annual artillery ammunition production by Russia.  Moscow is producing artillery shells three times faster than Ukraine’s Western allies, according to these sources.  The manufacture of 152 mm artillery rounds has increased from 400,000 annually to 2 million.  That is a lot of ammunition, but a little perspective is necessary.

Sure, 2 million rounds per year is a lot.  Yet during the First World War, more than 1.7 billion artillery rounds were fired or around 430,000,000 per year.  The Second World War saw 11 million tons of artillery ammunition used.  I guess they didn’t bother counting individual rounds.

The U.S. Third Army’s XX Corps fired 40,000 artillery rounds during two consecutive days in September 1944.  Alone, its 274th Armored Artillery Battalion, equipped with 18 105mm M-7 self-propelled artillery pieces, fired 104,319 rounds between August 19, 1944 and the end of the war.  As a whole, the Third Army fired over 5 million artillery rounds.

Artillery was a deadly threat.  Shrapnel from artillery rounds caused 53 percent of U.S. battlefield deaths and 62 percent of the wounds.   The Korean War figures were 59 percent of deaths and 61 percent of wounds and in Vietnam it was 36 percent of the deaths and 65 percent of the wounds.

The Korean War saw U.N. forces fire more than 2 million rounds during June and July 1953.

Putin can claim Russia is on a “Soviet-style” war footing, but this is not even close to the truth.  The Soviets sacrificed every other aspect of their economy to support the war and still needed massive support from its Allies to survive.

Two million is a large number, but considering the ravenous appetite of the modern battlefield this figure is more of a snack than a full meal.