-knockout- Classified-- The Reverse Art Of Tank Warfare- Official
Reverse crews practice firing blanks. For weeks. They learn the sound, the recoil, the flash. Then, on the day of combat, they fire live rounds. The goal is to treat a high-explosive anti-tank (HEAT) round with the same emotional weight as a blank. No adrenaline. No rush. Just geometry. Conclusion: The Last Knockout The -KNOCKOUT- CLASSIFIED-- doctrine is not for the heroic. It is for the cunning. It is not for the soldier who wants to be remembered. It is for the soldier who wants to never be seen .
Once blinded, the enemy tank will reverse. That is instinct. And a reverse-moving tank exposes its front lower glacis to your hidden wingman who is positioned 90 degrees to your left. -KNOCKOUT- CLASSIFIED-- The Reverse Art Of Tank Warfare-
In reality, you are towing a chain with empty fuel barrels behind your tank. The enemy, focused on your erratic movement, fails to notice the towed artillery piece hidden in the barrels. When they close to 800 meters, you drop the chain and your wingman (hidden in a defilade) fires through the gap. The enemy never sees the actual firing platform. Reverse crews practice firing blanks
For a century, the tank has been worshipped as the god of the modern battlefield. Military doctrine, from the Blitzkrieg to Desert Storm, has been built around one central thesis: He who controls the heavy armor, controls the terrain. The art of tank warfare, as taught at every war college from Fort Moore to the Kubinka Tank Academy, is the art of mass, momentum, and firepower. Then, on the day of combat, they fire live rounds
Reverse Art reconstruction: The crew, callsign Tikhiy (Quiet) , removed the reactive armor bricks from their left flank and replaced them with welded sheet metal painted to look like a destroyed BTR. They covered their IR spotlight with a smoked lens. They never drove faster than 5 kph.
A standard Main Battle Tank (MBT) has a frontal arc of approximately 60 degrees where its armor is strongest. Standard doctrine says: Point your nose at the enemy.