this post was submitted on 09 Sep 2024
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Clearly they just didn't believe in the vests hard enough.
You make a joke but it is true. The vest isn't meant to save troops life, it is meant to get to troop to go to the front line
I think that that's a little from column A, a little from column B.
I don't think that Russia is intentionally putting sub-par plate out there. I think that protective gear is procured with the intent of providing protection, and that if the armor doesn't meet up with what it's specified to do, that's probably because somewhere, procurement or manufacturing screwed up in Russia.
On the other hand, militaries do really spend money and are willing to accept tradeoffs on things where they cannot protect a soldier and something makes a soldier feel safer, if they feel that it'll make them more effective due to psychological impact. I remember reading about how American soldiers kept adding ad-hoc armor to tanks in WW2, sandbags and such. It wasn't very effective. But...it also made soldiers feel safer to do it, so commanders often let them go ahead with it...shrugs My guess is that at least some of the benefit of body armor is that it does make soldiers more-comfortable with taking on dangerous tasks, and that that's probably been taken into consideration.
https://old.reddit.com/r/WarCollege/comments/18hmn90/did_adding_sandbags_to_tanks_in_wwii_actually/