Mutulese Army: Difference between revisions

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The second is the ''Ik'ak Tzuk'' ("ఇఖక జుకు", "Fire Wind Brigade"). Its organisation is similar to those of the regional infantry units. However, the brigade’s personnel are trained in parachuting and air assault operations. It is primarily intended to play a rapid reaction ‘fire brigade’ role to deal with internal contingencies, or in the alternative support the [[Royal Mutulese Marine Corps]] in an offensive operation.
The second is the ''Ik'ak Tzuk'' ("ఇఖక జుకు", "Fire Wind Brigade"). Its organisation is similar to those of the regional infantry units. However, the brigade’s personnel are trained in parachuting and air assault operations. It is primarily intended to play a rapid reaction ‘fire brigade’ role to deal with internal contingencies, or in the alternative support the [[Royal Mutulese Marine Corps]] in an offensive operation.


The final formation is a special forces brigade known as the ''Taj  Tzuk'' ("తహ జుకు", "Obsidian Brigade"). Consisting of three battalions of commandos, it is highly skilled in unconventional warfare, counter-terrorism special reconnaissance and direct action missions.
The final formation is a special forces brigade known as the ''Taj  Tzuk'' ("తహ జుకు", "Obsidian Brigade"). Consisting of three battalions of commandos, it is highly skilled in unconventional warfare, counter-terrorism, special reconnaissance and direct action missions.


==Small unit organisation==
==Small unit organisation==

Revision as of 01:16, 12 June 2024

Mutulese Army
File:Capture2.PNG
Logo of the Mutulese Army
FoundedReform of 1860
Country Mutul
AllegianceDivine Kingdom
TypeArmy
Size90,000

The Mutulese Army (Mutli: "ముతుల కబ లకమజులు", "Mutul Kab Lakamtzul") is the land combat arm of the Mutulese Armed Forces, alongside the Royal Mutulese Navy, Mutulese Air Force and the Royal Mutulese Marine Corps. As of 2018, it is a professional army staffed with 90,000 long-service personnel.

Organisation

Mutul is fortunate in having no hostile neighbours sharing a continguous land border. Accordingly, the Mutulese Army is configured primarily for general territorial defence, whilst the 30,000-strong Marine Corps undertake the main strategic offensive role. It is organised around three Military Regions – Peninsular, North East and South West, as well as a Mobile Reserve.

Regional forces

Each Military Region is home to an infantry division, with one mechanised infantry, two regular light infantry and two reserve light infantry brigades. Each brigade consists of a HQ company, three rifle battalions, an artillery battalion, and a support battalion with a reconnaissance company, an engineer company, an air-defence company and a logistics company. The mechanised brigades are equipped with the VBTP combat vehicles (gradually replacing the older EE-11. The light infantry brigades are usually well-trained in jungle or mountain warfare, depending on its native environment. All infantry and mechanised brigades possess a company of EE-9 armoured cars for reconaissance and fire support purposes.

In addition, each military region has at its disposal two independent tank battalions, a rocket artillery group, an anti-air command, a helicopter group, an engineer brigade and a logistics command.

Each Infantry Brigade consists of approximately 4,000 personnel, with the entire Military Region disposing of some 30,000 troops upon full mobilisation.

Mobile reserve

The mobile reserve, stationed near the capital city, consists of three units.

The largest of these is the K'uhul Tupilob Tzul ("ఖుకౢ తుపిలిభొ జులు", "Divine Guards Division") . This is the only division-sized formation in the Mutulese Army configured for large-scale tank operations. It consists of three armoured brigades, each with two tank and two mechanised infantry battalions, an artillery battalion, and a support battalion with a reconnaissance company, an engineer company, an air defence company, a logistics company and a maintenance company. The full strength of this unit is 15,000 personnel.

The second is the Ik'ak Tzuk ("ఇఖక జుకు", "Fire Wind Brigade"). Its organisation is similar to those of the regional infantry units. However, the brigade’s personnel are trained in parachuting and air assault operations. It is primarily intended to play a rapid reaction ‘fire brigade’ role to deal with internal contingencies, or in the alternative support the Royal Mutulese Marine Corps in an offensive operation.

The final formation is a special forces brigade known as the Taj Tzuk ("తహ జుకు", "Obsidian Brigade"). Consisting of three battalions of commandos, it is highly skilled in unconventional warfare, counter-terrorism, special reconnaissance and direct action missions.

Small unit organisation

A Mutulese infantry battalion consists of a headquarters, three rifle companies and a support company. Its total strength is roughly 700 personnel.

Rifle companies are divided into a headquarters element, three rifle platoons, an anti-tank team (with three PF-98 recoilless rifles) and a grenade launcher team (with three Type-87 automatic grenade launchers).

Each rifle platoon consists 30-men in total, divided into three squads. The squads, each commanded by an NCO serving as squad leader, consist of two fireteams of four men. One of these is centred around a light machine gun, the other around an RPG-7. The platoon is commanded by a junior commissioned officer, supported by a platoon sergeant and a radio operator.

The battalion's support company contains its main heavy weapons assets. Typically, it possesses a mortar platoon with eight 120mm smoothbore mortars, an ATGM platoon with twelve anti-tank missile launch posts, as well as a scout/sniper team.

Equipment

Small arms

Name Image Origin Type Cartridge Details
Thunder 9 Bersa Thunder 40 Pro.jpg  Mutul Pistol 9×19mm
MP74 Pa3dm-fmk3-mod2.jpg  Mutul Sub-machinegun 9×19mm
Type-83 FARA 83.JPG  Mutul Assault rifle 5.56x45 To be relegated to reserve
FX-05 Fusil FX-05 noBG.png  Mutul Assault rifle 5.56x45 Gradually being introduced as main service weapon
HP9-1 File:Hp-91.png  Mutul Shotgun 12 Gauge Shotgun
T93 sniper rifle T93 sniper rifle.jpg  Mutul Sniper rile 7.62×51mm
Ultimax 100 Section Automatic Weapon.jpg  Lion's Rock Light machine gun 5.56x45
NTK-62 Japan Type 62 General Purpose Machine Gun.jpg  Tsurushima Medium Machine gun 7.62×51mm
W85 heavy machine gun TankBiathlon2016Final-11 (cropped).jpg  Mutul Heavy machine gun 12.7×108mm

Grenade-based weapons

Name Image Origin Type Details
M75 hand grenade M75 Grenade.JPG  Elatia Grenade
Type 06 rifle grenade Type 06 rifle grenade.jpg  Tsurushima Rifle grenade
Q-87 Type 87 grenade launcher 20170919.jpg  Mutul Automatic grenade launcher 35mm

Anti-tank weapons

Name Image Origin Type Details
RPG-7 Rpg-7.jpg Various Shoulder-launched anti-tank weapon Upgraded to use the PG-7VR tandem-warhead
MARA (anti-tank weapon) CITEFA Mara.jpg  Mutul Disposable shoulder-launched anti-tank weapon
Type 79 Jyu-MAT Type 79 Jyu-MAT anti-tank missile front.jpg  Tsurushima Anti-tank guided missile Largely replaced in high-readiness units. Still used by reserve forces.
Type 01 LMAT 01式軽対戦車誘導弾 (8465113148).jpg  Tsurushima Anti-tank guided missile Replaced Type-79 in high-readiness units
PF-98 Chinese PF98 120 mm rocket launcher.jpg  Mutul Anti-tank recoilless-gun Main medium-range anti-tank weapon of infantry forces
Model 1968 recoilless gun Czekalski cañón sin retroceso.JPG  Mutul Anti-tank recoilless-gun Mainly in storage
ALAS Ракета АЛАС изложена на сајму наоружања и војне опреме Партнер 2011.jpg  Elatia NLOS loitering missile

Combat vehicles

Name Image Origin Type Numbers
EE-T1 EE-T1 Osório.jpg  Mutul/ Sante Reze Main battle tank 600
Type 05 amphibious fighting vehicle ZBD-05 amphibious IFV in Beijing.jpg  Mutul Amphibious infantry Fighting Vehicle Primarily used by the Mutulese Marines
Type 63A Type 63A Amphibious tank 20131004.JPG  Mutul Amphibious light tank Primarily used by the Mutulese Marines
Type 74 74式戦車 (8465384154).jpg  Tsurushima Main Batle Tank Obsolete, replaced by the EE-T1, mostly used for training purposes and in storage
VBTP Guarani (6125539182).jpg  Mutul/ Sante Reze Armoured personnel carrier
EE-11 EE-11 Urutu — 15RcMecEs.jpg  Sante Reze Armoured personnel carrier Being shifted to storage, replaced by the VBTP
EE-9 Cascavel EE-009.JPG  Sante Reze Armoured car One company of fourteen per brigade. Primarily used as a reconnaissance vehicle and for infantry close fire support.
IBV-81 Elatia BMP-2 IBV-81.png  Elatia Infantry Fighting Vehicle 400x utilised by the Royal Guards Armoured Division as infantry carriers.
Bronco All Terrain Tracked Carrier NDP2010 CR3 Bronco ATTC 1.JPG  Lion's Rock Articulated tracked vehicle 100+
UR-53 Tuina.jpg  Mutul General utility vehicle Replaced the LC-49 in 2004

Artillery

Name Image Origin Type Numbers
Mortar 60mm M57 Минобацач М57 60мм.jpg  Elatia 60mm mortar
120mm M2 RAIADO Morteiro 02.JPG  Mutul/ Sante Reze 120mm mortar Main battalion-level fire support weapon
SLWH Pegasus SLWH Pegasus.jpg Template:Country data Lion’s Rock 155mm howitzer 18 utilised by the Airborne Brigade
Type-01 Cañón 155 mm L 45 CALA 30.jpg  Mutul 155mm towed howitzer Main artillery weapon of the Infantry Brigades
Type-77 CITER L33 155 mm.JPG  Mutul 155mm towed howitzer Former main artillery weapon of the Infantry Brigades, currently mostly in reserve
Type 75 155 mm self-propelled howitzer JGSDF Type75 15HSP.jpg  Tsurushima 155mm Self-propelled howitzer 54x, in service with the Royal Guards Division
Astros II MLRS Avibras ASTROS-II SS-30.JPEG  Mutul/ Sante Reze MLRS Five battalions, one per Military Region plus two in reserve

Air Defence Weapons

Name Image Origin Type Numbers
Flak-23 Zu-23 30 M1-3 - InnovationDay2013part1-40.jpg  Velikoslavia 23mm
Type 91 surface-to-air missile JASDF SAM-2(Launcher) at Hamamatsu Air Base Publication Center 20141124.JPG  Tsurushima MANPAD Main air-defence weapon of light infantry brigade groups
Type 93 surface-to-air missile JGSDF Koukidousha (TOYOTA) 10.jpg  Tsurushima SHRAD Main air-defence weapon of mechanised brigade groups
Type 03 Chū-SAM 03式中距離地対空誘導弾 高射学校・中SAM射撃.jpg  Tsurushima SAM system Main medium-range air defence system for military regions (i.e. division-level)
Huraqan missile Tien Kung Ⅱ Missile Launcher Display at Hukou Camp Ground 20140329b.jpg  Mutul SAM system Long range SAM system used to defend key strategic targets. Block 2: SARH, 150km. Block 3: ARH, 200km.

Army Aviation

Name Image Origin Type Numbers
W-3 Polish Army PZL-Swidnik W-3WA Sokol Idaszak-1.jpg  Mutul Light transport/utility helicopter
Mil Mi-17 Mil Mi-17-V5 (Mi-8MTV-5), Russia - Air Force AN1905918.jpg  Velikoslavia Medium lift helicopter
Mi-26 Russian Air Force Mi-26 Beltyukov.jpg  Velikoslavia Heavy-lift helicopter
Mi-24 Mi24CP (modified).jpg  Velikoslavia Attack helicopter
U-96 UAV Lipan II.JPG  Mutul Tactical drone
U-06 AladinDrohne.jpg  Mutul Handheld drone
U17 DJI Mavic Pro.jpg Quadcopter mini-drone Common civilian-grade miniature UAV, purchased in bulk commercially 'off-the-shelf'
U-19 Army-2020-315.JPG  Velikoslavia Kamikaze drone

Surface-to-surface missile systems

Name Image Origin Type Numbers
DF-26 Dong-Feng 26.JPG  Elatia Mobile IRBM
DF-21 DF-21A TEL - Chinese Military Museum Beijing.jpg  Elatia Mobile MRBM
SS-21 Scarab Tochka-U rep parad Yekat.jpg  Velikoslavia TBM
SS-26 Stone Army2016demo-075.jpg  Velikoslavia SRBM
Type 88 Surface-to-Ship Missile JGSDF Type88 SSM-02.jpg  Tsurushima Short- to medium-range coastal defence missile system