n.
- An assault weapon.
- A turretless armored vehicle having the chassis of a tank but mounting a larger gun, used in antitank combat and infantry support.
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Similar to but not identical in form or function to the self-propelled (SP) gun, the assault gun provides very close support for attacking troops. Over the centuries, field guns have sometimes been used in the assault, but these should not be placed in the same category as pieces designed specifically for that purpose. In the Russo-Japanese war of 1904-5, the Japanese countered the weight of Russian defensive firepower by dragging light mountain pieces forward with their infantry in the assault, and the Germans used light field guns in a similar role to support their storm troops in WW I. The first tanks in 1916-18 were essentially the first assault guns, intended to breach defences and direct firepower onto the enemy position itself. When German tank doctrine embraced deep operations and exploitation, it left the infantry without close support, so in 1940 the Germans produced the most famous assault gun, the Sturmgeschuetz (StuG), to destroy enemy strong points in the path of attacking infantry and tanks. It was armed with a large calibre, low velocity gun, mounted on the chassis rather than in a turret. Guderian was a strong advocate of the assault gun. A few StuG took part in the invasion of France, but many more were deployed on the eastern front from 1941. The Soviets made assault guns such as the ISU-152 and others based on captured Pkw IIIs. British Churchill tanks were modified to provide the same service in Normandy.
The Russians employed assault guns after WW II, notably the heavy ASU-85 and the lighter ASU-57, largely designed to provide airborne forces with the firepower they traditionally lack. Elsewhere the assault gun has fallen out of favour, partly because lack of turret limits its flexibility, and partly because the MICV offers firepower (albeit rarely of the same weight) plus the ability to transport troops under armour.
Bibliography
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An assault gun is a gun or howitzer mounted on a motor vehicle or armored chassis, designed for use in the direct fire role in support of infantry when attacking other infantry or fortified positions.
Historically the custom-built fully armored assault guns usually mounted the gun or howitzer in a fully enclosed casemate on a tank chassis. The use of a casemate instead of a gun turret limited these weapons' field of fire, but provided a simpler construction that was cheaper to build and less prone to mechanical breakdowns. The increased space and reduced weight of the turretless design also allowed mounting a larger weapon and providing heavier frontal armour on any given chassis, and in most cases these turretless vehicles also presented a lower profile as a target for the enemy.
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Assault guns were primarily used during World War II, in the hands of the Germans and Soviets. Early in the war the Germans began to create makeshift assault guns by mounting their infantry support weapons on the bed of a truck or on obsolete tanks with the turret removed. Later in the war both the Germans and the Soviets introduced fully armored purpose-built assault guns into their arsenals.
Early on, the Soviets built the KV-2 , a variant of the KV-1 heavy tank with a short-barreled 152 mm howitzer mounted in an oversized turret. This was not a success in battle and was replaced with a very successful series of increasingly powerful turretless assault guns, the SU-76, SU-122, and the heavy SU-152, which were followed by the ISU-122 and ISU-152 on the new IS heavy tank chassis.
The primary German assault gun was the Sturmgeschütz III (StuG III). Armed with a high-velocity dual-purpose 75 mm gun, late production StuG III variants blurred the line between assault guns and tank destroyers. The Germans also built a number of other fully armored turretless assault guns, including the StuG IV, StuH 42, Brummbär and Sturmtiger. The latter two were very heavy vehicles, built only in small quantities.
Battalions of assault guns, usually StuG IIIs, commonly replaced the intended panzer battalion in the German panzergrenadier divisions due to the chronic shortage of tanks , and were sometimes used as makeshifts even in the panzer divisions. Independent battalions were also deployed as 'stiffeners' for infantry divisions, and the StuG III's anti-tank capabilities contributed much to the German's ability to draw out world war two after they had lost the strategic initiative.
British and American forces also deployed vehicles designed for a close support role, but these were conventional tanks whose only significant modification was the replacement of the main gun with a howitzer. Among these was the M4(105), an M4 Sherman tank armed with a 105 mm howitzer. Also, the Mark IV version of the Centaur tank, the Mark V and the Mark VIII versions of the Churchill Tank were all fitted with 95 mm howitzers. As the amount of German armour encountered by the Allies decreased, especially in Italy, a number of American tank destroyer units were used in the assault gun role for infantry support.
The AVRE version of the Churchill Tank was armed with a Spigot Mortar that fired a forty pound (18 kg) HE-filled projectile (nicknamed the Flying Dustbin) 150 yards (137 metres). Its task was to attack fortified positions such as Bunkers at close range (see Hobart's Funnies)
In the post-WWII era vehicles fitting into an "assault gun" category were developed as a light-weight air-deployable direct fire weapon for use with airborne troops. Current weapons were either based on jeeps or small tracked vehicles and the airborne troops thus always fought at a distinct disadvantage in terms of heavy weapons. The Soviet Union and the United States were the most attracted to the idea of providing this capability to traditionally light airborne forces. Their answers to the problem were similar with the United States developing the M56 Scorpion and the Soviet Union developing the ASU-57, both essentially air-droppable light anti-tank guns.
The Soviets would develop an improved air-droppable assault gun, the ASU-85, which served right through the 1980s. The US M56, and another similar vehicle the M50 Ontos, were to be the last of the more traditional assault guns in US service. Improvised arrangements such as M113 personnel carriers with recoilless rifles were quickly replaced by missile carrier vehicles in the anti-tank role.
The only vehicle with the qualities of an assault gun to be fielded after the removal of the M50 and M56 from service with the US military was the M551 Sheridan. The Sheridan's gun was a low-velocity weapon suitable in the assault role, but with the addition of the Shillelagh missile could double in the anti-tank role as well. It is important, however, to remember that the Sheridan was not developed as an assault gun, but as a light reconnaissance vehicle.
Currently, there appears to be a move toward wheeled vehicles fitting a "tank destroyer" or "assault gun" role, with the US testing the M1128 Stryker MGS. The Centauro Wheeled Tank Destroyer of the Italian Army and the French AMX 10 RC heavy armored car are also good examples. While these vehicles might be useful in a direct fire role, none were developed with this specifically in mind, reminiscent of the use of tank destroyers by the US military in the assault gun role during WWII.
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![]() | Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Read more | |
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