Unfortunately I can't open these U-tube spot, but to keep the record straight IIRC nobody mentioned "light" artillery so far.
I have forwarded the effect of a 20mm incendiary high explosive projectile of today's Bundeswehr, and as I mentioned before I will scan in the photo by tomorrow.
Pity that you cant open the link. It is not conclusive, but it does show buildings being hit by artillery, and standing up to the punishment quite well. It also shows the kill zone of grenades to be approximately 5 metres, and that 76mm artillery creates z crater of about 1 metre width and half a metre deep.
Looking forward to the scanned amaterial that you have
But let me ask you one question please if you are able to answer that, since you might have not been in an infantry unit. Does the Australian Army actually tell/recommend or teach its infantry guys to seek cover in houses? Or do they prepare trenches and bunker emplacements within urban areas with normal buildings, not taking the national library or other major buildings into account.
Dont know, am not an Infantryman, or ex-Infantryman. I can find out. I would be surprised if they do, for the reasons that you point out. However neither is that my point. What was intimated here was that buildings could be taken out by tank shells (ie generally 75mm or less) firring HE. It was not stated, but the intimation was also that Infantry did not occupay buildings for protection purposes. Historical evidence says that the uits of both sides did, and further the force that attacked those ensconced in the buildings would take hevier casualties than those defending inside the buildings. The Russians in 1945 suffered over 400000 casualties, a big part of those losses was because the germans were hiding inside the buildings and picking off the advancing Russians, despite the most fearful artillery bombardment.
There is clear evidence that shells of 75 mm or below are not generally powerful enough to take out a building in a single hit, and that is the focus of this whole thread
Australian houses are similar to American houses, wood and sometimes a basement and some stone walls around the chimney or 1st m of the ground floor with bricks. So protection wise not comparable with European houses at all. And as mentioned before by me, even a normal European house is not considered to provide cover for infantry at all in expectation of artillery bombardment or tanks and AFV assault.
No Australian Houses are usually Brick or masonary of some description. There are virutally no timber houses being built anymore.
Rember the p0arameters of the discussion. Can normal Tank armament (generally 75 mm or less) take out a building in a single hit. no, it cant (generally). Wgainst a sustained bombardment i think it would be a different story
If not to avoid the so called collateral damage, the US forces could blast away every single house in Iraq and go home in the next 2 month.
It would take longer than two months to destroy every building in Iraq. IOraq is a country of about 20 millions, and was once an affluent nation. There are an awful lot of buildings to destroy, if you assume a typical occupancy rate of 2.5 persons per dwelling, there are at least 5 million dwellings alone to destroy, and that does not even count the commercial, agricultural, industrial and goivernemt buildings of their ciies. The Americans are in iraq in basically Coprps strength, which gives them, very roughly, acces to about 500 artillery pieces. If we assume 5 hits per building, and there are , say 10 million buildings, it is going to take 50 million shells to destroy all the buildings, and that is going to take your 500 guns 100000 rounds each to complete the job. Given that on average, a standard artillery piece has an EFC of about 500, that means your artillery park is going to be worn out 200 times before completing the task. I dont exactly know how long it would take to effectively fire off 100000 rounds from a single gun, but it would propbably be in the order of years rather than months