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BATTLE TACTICS

TANKS AND PLANES EXERCISES IN DOMINION As part of the realistic training which aims to give vehicles and crews the widest possible simulation of active service conditions, a battalion of the New Zealand Army Tank Brigade recently carried out spectacular battle exercises, in cooperation with planes of the Royal New Zealand Air Force. Performed on the rugged country adjacent to the headquarters of the brigade, there was ample room for manoeuvre, and the whole demonstration was first-class experience for both tank crews and airmen. The exercises opened with the tanks formed in "open harbour'-— dispersed with some distance between tanks, but close enough to pull into squadron formations in quick time. They were camouflaged and taking advantage of the breaks in the terrain to get as much cover as possible from observation. Reconnaissance planes droned overhead, quartering the area to locate the fighting vehicles, and taking photographs in an endeavour to pick up their disposition. Later these aerial pictures were analysed to determine the effectiveness of the camouflage adopted and the use made of natural ground cover. On radioed orders from the battalion commander, relayed through the squadron leaders, more than 50 tanks began to appear and form up for an attack. As one squadron swung off to make an approach from the flank, the other two started down the escarpment to advance along the broken flat below. Planes Drop Smoke Bombs Peeling off from formation one after the other, planes swooped below the edge of the escarpment to drop smoke bombs, zoomed out and back to repeat the performance. As the tanks approached nearer to their objective, the planes dived low ahead of them to keep the opposition pinned to the ground with machinegun fire. Further back they kept the drivers of "enemy" supply trucks occupied by tearing along above the road at vehicle height. As tanks and planes manoeuvred in these exercises, the spectators were given a vivid demonstration of the speed of modern war, a speed which * does not permit of the fumbling of orders, or indecision in executing them. During a minute the whole aspect of an action may be changed, demanding a lightning rearrangement of formation and plan of attack. Later in the manoeuvres the planes took -the role of tank attackers. Firstly the tanks took up "hulldown" positions in natural dips and hollows, so that only their gun turrets were showing. Natural camouflage made up from tussock and scrub was added, and the tanks lay doggo as the planes circled and searched for them. Defensive Ring Formed For the final exercise of the day the tanks formed into "close leaguer." Under actual combat conditions this formation is only used at night, and is broken before dawn brings enemy planes out on reconnaissance. The close leaguer is a modernised version of the Boer laager, and the defensive ring of wagons which the American pioneers used to fight off Indian attacks. In >the tank formation the battalion forms up in a triangle, with the tanks and their guns facing outwards, ready for an instant break in case of alarm. Inside this close barricade of steel 'are placed the "soft" vehicles accompanying the battalion—fuel and supply trucks and the like. In the meantime the planes engaged landed to refuel on an emergency aerodrome some miles away, and came back to the attack in a breath-taking, low-level fight which hid them from the tank crews until they were only a few hnudred yards away, and thundering in on the leaguer position over the tops of the sand hummocks. Tank crews slid into their machines, revved up, and moved out as fast as they could, scattering over the landscape to present the smallest possible target for the raiding planes. In a few seconds all were clear of the leaguer position, tacking and dodging as the planes banked and swooped over them. The whole.demonstration was just another proof that New Zealand's fighting forces are being trained to handle their machines under realistic conditions, and in the diverse circumstances which war to-day creates.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19430206.2.22

Bibliographic details

Auckland Star, Volume LXXIV, Issue 31, 6 February 1943, Page 4

Word Count
674

BATTLE TACTICS Auckland Star, Volume LXXIV, Issue 31, 6 February 1943, Page 4

BATTLE TACTICS Auckland Star, Volume LXXIV, Issue 31, 6 February 1943, Page 4