On Dec 18, 2008, at 8:42 PM, Srini Ramakrishnan wrote:
On Thu, Dec 18, 2008 at 6:55 PM, lukhman_khan <[email protected]> wrote:
Who wants the police? The army is the right choice.

*shudder* You are scaring me. Do you really think policing with the
army is a good idea?

This is not about placing as many warm bodies as possible in street
corners. The army is trained from the ground up for a very different
role. The world armies are even now deathly scared of the street
warfare roles they are increasingly asked to play. Traditional
military combat troops are good at advancing under artillery fire and
shooting up just about everything in their gun sights.


The doctrinal assumptions of infantry and police are inverted. Infantry operate in a hostile environment in proximity to a few friendly people, police operate in a friendly environment in proximity to a few hostile people. Their tactics and procedures reflect this.


From my limited knowledge even I know this:  The INSAS rifle uses
ammunition designed to maim rather than kill.


The 5.56x45mm is *not* designed to maim except to the extent that maiming leads to death. This is an old urban legend based primarily on the fact that it uses a significantly smaller bullet than the cartridges it replaced. This particular cartridge has the distinction of being one of the very few military cartridges that can undergo explosive fragmentation when fired from common weapons. In terms of terminal lethality, you would be better off getting hit by a larger bullet that does not undergo explosive fragmentation.


The Special forces like NSG use
sub-machine guns like the HK MP5 which are designed to kill rather
than maim...


Actually, the H&K MP5 has very benign terminal ballistics as military weapons go, since it uses a 9mm pistol cartridge. Survival rates for these types of wounds is very high, though in the case of the MP5 the standard practice is to hit the target with a burst of well-placed bullets which mitigates the relative non-lethality of a single random shot.


The INSAS is cheap to produce but will
overheat after 10 rounds of continuous fire.


It stretches plausibility that a modern AK-47 derivative would overheat after 10 rounds of continuous fire, since that is barely enough rounds to warm the steel. Even the lightest of lightweight military rifle actions -- and the INSAS is not lightweight -- can absorb the thermal waste of a full 30-rd magazine at maximum cyclical rate without overheating. Military small-arms of the last half century are designed to indefinitely sustain fire of 50-100 rounds per minute, including AK-47 derivatives actions, which is roughly rapid semi- automatic fire.


As another example, I couldn't believe that they were allowed to use
the AGS-17 in Mumbai.
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AGS-17
...

I have no idea how many rounds were fired - but there is absolutely no
way to be sure you are hitting a terrorist and not a civilian when
using a high explosive fragmentation warhead like this.


This particular type of weapon shoots a vast array of non-lethal specialty rounds. I'm not saying that is what they were using, because I have no idea and they can be used for very localized direct- fire, but these kinds of weapons are popular the world over for things like riot control precisely because they have such a diverse range of payloads they can deliver. Even in the military context, you carry a number of non-lethal utility rounds for these types of weapons in case you need them.

In the hands of someone well-trained, they can put a tiny explosive charge through a small opening in someone's cover e.g. if they are shooting through a small window. The lethal radius is pretty small, 3-5 meters, and the fragments have very short range, so it is even plausible to use such things in a city if you need to clear a room your target is hiding in.


I can't blame them too much
since they were fighting with whatever they had on hand, however this
should illustrate why the army is just not designed to be in civilian
security situations.


While I agree that military units make poor police, the reasons have more to do with doctrine and training assumptions than the particular weapons they use.

Cheers,

J. Andrew Rogers


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