THE KING OF BATTLE

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THE KING OF BATTLE

M109A6 Paladin

It has been a truism since at least the days of the Prussian
king Frederick the Great that artillery is the `King of Battle’. Countless
commanders from Napoleon to McArthur have credited the field artillery with
both their victories and their survival. The importance of artillery is
unquestioned still on the modern battlefield and no weapons system exemplifies
that better than the US Army’s 155mm M109 Self-Propelled Howitzer.

Development and Early History

Self-propelled artillery had played an important role in the
Allied victory in World War II and vehicles such as the 105mm M7 Priest and
155m M12 and M40, all based on the Sherman chassis, had featured among the US
forces that fought in north- western Europe during the last year of the War.
The M40 served in the Korean War alongside the M37 and M41 (mounting the 105mm
and 155mm howitzers respectively and based on the M24 Chaffee light tank
chassis), but two replacement vehicles, based on the chassis of the M41 light
tank, were in development by 1950. These vehicles, the M52 (105mm) and M44
(155mm) entered service in 1952, but both proved unsatisfactory. Work was soon
underway to develop a new generation of fully enclosed self-propelled howitzers
that could meet the challenges of the envisaged nuclear battlefield of the Cold
War. Moreover, the development of effective artillery-location radar during the
1950s made counter-battery fire a very real threat and necessitated a much
enhanced level of crew protection than that offered by the open-topped M44 and
M52.

In 1959 the first prototypes of the T195 110mm and T196
155mm HSP (Howitzer Self-Propelled) enter testing. Problems with the engine and
drive train delayed production, but eventually, in June 1963, they were
accepted into service as the M108 and M109. Production of the former was
short-lived – only 355 were built in 1963 – as the Army required a larger gun.
The M109 mounted the 23 calibre 155mm M126 howitzer and carried 28 rounds with
a maximum range of 14,600 metres. Between 1963 and 1969 2,111 M109s were built
for the US Army and Marine Corps, with a further 1,675 units built for export.

The M109 had its baptism of fire in the Vietnam War.
Initially no armoured or mechanised units were deployed in theatre and
commanders relied either on heavy, long-range artillery (such as the 203mm
M110) or lighter towed pieces. By 1966, however, the utility of the M109 (and
M108) was clear. Deployed in forward firebases, defended with earth works and
sandbags, the M109 proved itself well-suited to supporting the infantry. Its
traversable turret and M2HB .50cal machine gun also made it capable of
defending itself against infantry attacks. By 1969, however, the M109s were
being withdrawn and two years later the last battery left Vietnam. The Vietnam
War had confirmed the basic soundness of the M109 design, but it had also
revealed shortcomings in the M126 howitzer and its ammunition when compared to
state-of-the-art Soviet designs such as the M46 130mm gun.

Production Variants

The next four decades would witness a constant programme of
measures to update and improve the performance of the M109, its gun and
ammunition, alongside, ultimately futile, attempts to design and produce a
successor vehicle. The need for greater range had long been apparent and in
1971 the M109A1 entered service. This was armed with the 39 calibre M185 gun
which increased the maximum range to 18,100 metres. Other changes necessitated
by the increase in firepower included a strengthening of the torsion bar
suspension and a new travel lock fitted to the front of the vehicle.

The conversion of M109s to A1 standard continued until 1981,
but in the meantime a `Mid-Life Improvement’ program was instituted resulting
in the M109A2 being adopted as for production in 1975. A new cannon mount,
counterbalanced travel lock, and an improved engine accompanied a new turret
bustle stowage arrangement which increased capacity from 28 to 26 rounds. Those
M109A1s rebuilt to A2 standard were known as M109A3. The M109A2 eventually
entered service in 1980 and 823 new vehicles were built between 1976 and 1985.

Throughout the 1970s and 80s much time, money and effort was
spent in developing new forms of artillery round for the M109 series. These
included rocket-assisted rounds, various types of sub-munitions and mines, and
`special’ rounds. This latter category included chemical weapons (which
remained in the US arsenal until 1997) and the W48 nuclear warhead, a simple
plutonium- based weapon which delivered a yield equivalent to 72 tons of TNT.
Some 3,000 of these tactical nuclear weapons were deployed before they were
withdrawn from frontline service with the end of the Cold War.

The 1980s saw further refinements to the M109 design. The
M109A4 introduced enhanced NBC (Nuclear, Biological and Chemical) protection,
but its deployment was limited to reserve and National Guard units. More
significantly the Army launched the `Howitzer Improvement Plan’ (HIP) to
develop a new M109, alongside the abortive attempts to design and develop a
completely new self-propelled howitzer.

The Paladin

The HIP resulted in the definitive model of the M109, the
M109A6 Paladin. Beginning in 1985 various new guns were trialled and tested
with the M109, eventually resulting in the adoption of the 39 calibre M284
cannon in a new mount. The M284 has a maximum range of 22,000 metres with
normal munitions and 30,000 metres with rocket-assisted projectiles. Those
M109A2/ A3s fitted with the new gun and mount were designated M109A5, but the
Paladin proper had much more extensive modifications. The Paladin has a
redesigned, larger turret incorporating new navigation systems, sensors and a
digital communications system. The improvement in rates of fire and accuracy
are startling: the Paladin can deploy from the march and be ready to fire
within thirty seconds. The Paladin is deployed today in field artillery
regiments as part of the Armoured Brigade Combat Team
(ABCT). An ABCT currently fields sixteen M109A6s in two batteries and they are
deployed in Poland and Germany as part of US Army Europe, as well as on the
Korean Peninsula.

The ultimate version of the M109, the M109A7, entered
low-level production in 2014. The M109A7 is the result of the Paladin
Integrated Management Program. The new variant sports an entirely new chassis
and drive train, engine, suspension and steering system, utilising components
from the Bradley Fighting Vehicle family. It also has an enhanced 600-volt on-
board power system designed to service the emerging technologies of the digital
battlefield. It is heavier and faster than the M109A6 but can sustain a one
round per minute rate of fire with deadly accuracy. The first vehicles were
delivered in April 2015 and full production of 48 vehicles in the initial batch
started this year.

The M109 in Action

The US Army’s M109s have seen action in Vietnam, in the
First Gulf War, in the former Yugoslavia, and, most recently, in Iraq. After
its first taste of combat in Vietnam, the M109 has proved itself a highly
effective weapons system. During the First Gulf War no fewer than 582
M109A2/A3s were deployed in 25 artillery battalions, firing some 43,000 rounds.
These were mainly DPICM rounds, which unleased a rain of sub-munitions and
steel fragments on the hapless Iraqi forces, but also included 100 Copperhead
laser-guided munitions used to destroy enemy tanks.

In Operation Iraqi Freedom and in subsequent operations in
that country the M109A6 cemented its reputation. The deployment of M109s for
the 2003 invasion of Iraq was less than half of that to the Gulf twelve years
earlier and as the United States fought the `War on Terror’ the continued
relevance of field artillery was called into question. Indeed, the proposed
successor to the M109, the Crusader project, had been cancelled in May 2002 and
the artillery was conspicuous by its absence from the operations in
Afghanistan.

During Operation Iraqi Freedom the Iraqi artillery both
outranged and outnumbered the divisional artillery deployed with 101st Airborne
and 3rd Infantry Division, yet time and time again it proved itself essential
in destroying enemy artillery and rocket systems. During sandstorms, the M109s
and other guns provided artillery cover in the absence of air support.
Essentially, during the invasion of Iraq the M109A6 excelled in the traditional
role of artillery: providing effective and integrated close fire support to the
infantry. The impact of the M109A6 was further enhanced by the presence of the
M7 Bradley Fire Support Team Vehicle, which could keep up with the forward
elements of the Combined Arms infantry and armour combat teams, providing
precise coordinates within 50 metres at ranges up to 8,000 metres. The ability
of the Paladin to keep up with the Bradleys and the Abrams, indeed the
insistence of field commanders that they did so, and to provide both direct and
indirect accurate fire support quickly was key to the remarkable success it
enjoyed in the opening encounters of Operation Iraqi Freedom. The Paladin’s
success in suppressing the Iraqi artillery meant that during the invasion no
American lives were lost to enemy artillery fire. A brigade commander from 3rd
Infantry Division noted “the Iraqis had a lot of artillery, he used it
extensively, but the combination of Paladin howitzers and the [Hughes AN/
TP]Q36 [weapon locating] radar was deadly. If he didn’t move, he was dead. The
1-10 Field Artillery fired about 1,000 rounds during the battles around An
Nasiriyah. The Iraqis [as a result] very seldom massed fires.” (`U. S.
Army Field Artillery Relevance on the Modern Battlefield’, Marine Corps
University, 2004)

Conclusion

Operation Iraqi Freedom and the subsequent actions by the US
armed forces in that country confirmed the importance of the M109 to combined
arms manoeuvre warfare. Alongside the M1 Abrams MBT and the Bradley Fighting
Vehicle, the M109 is central to American war-fighting doctrine as the US Army
reorients itself towards peer-to-peer or near-peer encounters. Put simply, the
Paladin will be around for a few decades to come.

By MSW
Forschungsmitarbeiter Mitch Williamson is a technical writer with an interest in military and naval affairs. He has published articles in Cross & Cockade International and Wartime magazines. He was research associate for the Bio-history Cross in the Sky, a book about Charles ‘Moth’ Eaton’s career, in collaboration with the flier’s son, Dr Charles S. Eaton. He also assisted in picture research for John Burton’s Fortnight of Infamy. Mitch is now publishing on the WWW various specialist websites combined with custom website design work. He enjoys working and supporting his local C3 Church. “Curate and Compile“
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