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Mexican Army Equipment 1995

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  • Mexican Army Equipment 1995

    Here is some I put together since I was wondering what the Mexican army had at the begin of twlight

    Sources

    SIPRI Arms Transfers Database: http://armstrade.sipri.org/armstrade/page/values.php



    And yes the Mexican Army still has US half tracks and M-520 Goers see the link below which has photos taken of them in 2003 of them. They also still M8 Greyhounds and some M74 Tank Recovery Vehicles

    Attached Files
    I will not hide. I will not be deterred nor will I be intimidated from my performing my duty, I am a Canadian Soldier.

  • #2
    Mexico isn't listed specifically.... Most of their non-domestic equipment can be found in this older edition of the WWEG.

    Comment


    • #3
      Almost of the army domestic equipment was developed until later on (2000's) and the army still relay a lot of imports

      An interesting possibility would be the Sedena Henschel HWK-11, which was a joint project between the Mexican defense secretary (SEDENA) and Henschel Wehrtechnik GmbH of West Germany. Originally 450 were to be produced but on 40 were actually made.

      I am thinking that some of that would be factory is still around as SEDENA did an upgrade of their AMX-VCI recently. Could they start making new HWK-11 agian

      Just a though!

      I also wonder how the Mexican would fair in their US invasion. I mean they have never mounted a campaign outside of Mexico and they prohibited by their constitution unless war is declared. They have also never had fought huge foreign invasion that it won. The Soviets have a lot of work to do.
      I will not hide. I will not be deterred nor will I be intimidated from my performing my duty, I am a Canadian Soldier.

      Comment


      • #4
        I looked at Concise World armies 2009 - by Ravi Rikhye and have a few updates to your list - some of this equipment would be in storage - the M5 tanks were used in Chiapas in 1999 so they would have been around in the game invasion timeline for sure

        M3 light tank - 30 in service
        M5 light tank - 15 in service
        M8 Armored Car - 50 in service
        MAC-1 Armored Car - 50 in service
        M3A1 scout car - 100 in service
        Mowag - 30 in service

        You also have the DN-IV Caballo AOC - 40 in service

        thus the only real tanks they have are the 45 M3/M5's

        Comment


        • #5
          but again keep in mind who they fought at least initially - mostly a collection of small National Guard transportation and military police companies, SWAT teams, local militia and State Guards who probably had almost no way to stop any kind of armor

          Comment


          • #6
            Most US forces were in Europe, Africa, Iran, Korea/Japan/china.

            Comment


            • #7
              basically all there was as to armor still in the US was the 36th that was deployed to the north and one mech infantry division that was reforming - that and two independent armored brigades (which if I remember right were training brigades)

              the new light divisions were either truck born or foot infantry - if they were lucky they probably had some M113's but thats about it

              there were several MP brigades but they only had light armor at best - and considering vehicle losses in Europe they may have had everything except their Hummers taken away and sent there instead

              and I think the 42nd got sent to Yugoslavia before the Mexicans crossed the border and thus they were out of the picture

              and canon missed the training brigade in California- but at best they would have had Sheridan's and M113 made to look like BMP's and Soviet tanks

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Olefin View Post
                basically all there was as to armor still in the US was the 36th that was deployed to the north and one mech infantry division that was reforming - that and two independent armored brigades (which if I remember right were training brigades)

                the new light divisions were either truck born or foot infantry - if they were lucky they probably had some M113's but thats about it

                there were several MP brigades but they only had light armor at best - and considering vehicle losses in Europe they may have had everything except their Hummers taken away and sent there instead

                and I think the 42nd got sent to Yugoslavia before the Mexicans crossed the border and thus they were out of the picture

                and canon missed the training brigade in California- but at best they would have had Sheridan's and M113 made to look like BMP's and Soviet tanks
                You'd be amazed as to the amount of LAWS and the like are available to such units.

                Comment


                • #9
                  normally I would say yes - but considering how long the war had been going on, how much had been sold to the Chinese and how much had to have been shipped over to Europe and Iran and Korea before the TDM the question is how much anti-armor was left - and with CivGov and MilGov playing at shipping men over to Europe still how much of what was left did they take with them

                  normally I would say they had more than enough LAW's and the like to give a good showing - but they werent expecting a Mexican attack - meaning those units along the border may not have been equipped to deal with armor

                  they were on missions to secure the border against refugees - thats more of a riot control mission - so did they go with their anti-armor equipment left behind at the depots

                  consider that transport by then had broken down - given that they may have sent them without a lot of their anti-armor and anti-air weaponry - possibly even without any light armored vehicles they had as well to conserve fuel

                  now they eventually did get them because they stopped the Mexicans eventually - but could that explain the Mexican success - possibly

                  after all a bunch of troops with riot gear, light weapons and maybe at most tear gas and stunning grenades arent going to be able to stand up to an armored attack, even if its not a tank heavy one

                  and with air units restricted due to lack of fuel they may not have even known the Mexicans were building up to attack until it was too late (i.e. sounding the alarm when they are crossing the border into El Paso with Stuarts is way way too late)

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    I'm one of the folks- a minority, it appears- who is OK with the Mexican invasion/occupation scenario presented in T2K v1.0. I find that it makes a much more interesting setting for CONUS-based campaigns. Therefore, I like to find ways to make it more plausible, instead of tearing it down as impossible.

                    With that in mind, it's possible that the Mexican army kept its mid-'60s era Sedena-Henschel HWK-11s in storage and that they could have reopened the production lines that manufactured them.

                    Also, due to the continuation of the Cold War in the v1.0 timeline, it's possible that a more left-leaning Mexico could have acquired additional IFVs from China or the Soviet Union, especially if there were increased tensions between Mexico and the U.S.A. (border security, "War on Drugs", trade disputes). Even 40 Chicom Type 59 MBTs could have been a handful for the the American forces still in CONUS when the Mexican invasion occurred. If Soviet or Chicom weapons would have been too risky, diplomatically, there were Brazilian and Argentinian IFVs on the market as well.

                    I'm fine with a little buffing of the Mexican Armed Forces, if it makes for a more interesting campaign.
                    Author of Twilight 2000 adventure modules, Rook's Gambit and The Poisoned Chalice, the campaign sourcebook, Korean Peninsula, the gear-book, Baltic Boats, and the co-author of Tara Romaneasca, a campaign sourcebook for Romania, all available for purchase on DriveThruRPG:

                    https://www.drivethrurpg.com/product...--Rooks-Gambit
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                    https://www.drivethrurpg.com/product...liate_id=61048
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                    Comment


                    • #11
                      I was always dubious that the historical Mexican Army would have been in any shape to conduct offensive operations against even a modest residual force in the US. You would have had a considerable number of troops (and armor) still in the CONUS, with much of it out in the field doing relief. While many would have been state guard troops, police and civilians, there would have still been considerable numbers of National Guard troops present, combat veterans who for one reason or another had been sent home (e.g. wounded, 40th Div, etc). There were also divisions, according to cannon, fully trained but awaiting deployment (e.g., 49th Armored).

                      I drafted some notes based on a hypothetical buildup by Mexico. I think some such buildup would have been necessary for a successful invasion.
                      Attached Files

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Olefin View Post
                        I looked at Concise World armies 2009 - by Ravi Rikhye and have a few updates to your list - some of this equipment would be in storage - the M5 tanks were used in Chiapas in 1999 so they would have been around in the game invasion timeline for sure

                        M3 light tank - 30 in service
                        M5 light tank - 15 in service
                        M8 Armored Car - 50 in service
                        MAC-1 Armored Car - 50 in service
                        M3A1 scout car - 100 in service
                        Mowag - 30 in service

                        You also have the DN-IV Caballo AOC - 40 in service

                        thus the only real tanks they have are the 45 M3/M5's
                        None of these has the armor plate to survive light anti armor weapons like the M203 or MK19.

                        M203s are organic to every fire team regardless of Combat Arms, Combat Support, or Combat Service Support.

                        For Military Police, The MK19 is issued one per vehicle except a few units that have an M2HB in a squad. Three M1025 or M1114 HMMWV with a MK19 per squad. This or two Mk19s and one M2HB.

                        This is in addition to three M9s, two M4s, one M203, and in the 90s an M60, later an M2HB. One transitional unit I was in it was one M4 dropped and an M249 and an M60.

                        The ammunition load is 10 cans of 40mm linked HEDP.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by .45cultist View Post
                          You'd be amazed as to the amount of LAWS and the like are available to such units.
                          In Iraq in 03, we built a sand bagged bunk to store excess.... there was to much to carry anytime we left the wire. A claymore per truck, two (then later one) AT4, six (then 4, then 2, then 1) frag, so much smoke (HC, color), spare smoke candles for the dischargers on the M1114s.

                          One lucky hit and any of our trucks probably would have cooked off for an hour.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by Olefin View Post
                            normally I would say yes - but considering how long the war had been going on, how much had been sold to the Chinese and how much had to have been shipped over to Europe and Iran and Korea before the TDM the question is how much anti-armor was left - and with CivGov and MilGov playing at shipping men over to Europe still how much of what was left did they take with them

                            normally I would say they had more than enough LAW's and the like to give a good showing - but they werent expecting a Mexican attack - meaning those units along the border may not have been equipped to deal with armor

                            they were on missions to secure the border against refugees - thats more of a riot control mission - so did they go with their anti-armor equipment left behind at the depots

                            consider that transport by then had broken down - given that they may have sent them without a lot of their anti-armor and anti-air weaponry - possibly even without any light armored vehicles they had as well to conserve fuel

                            now they eventually did get them because they stopped the Mexicans eventually - but could that explain the Mexican success - possibly

                            after all a bunch of troops with riot gear, light weapons and maybe at most tear gas and stunning grenades arent going to be able to stand up to an armored attack, even if its not a tank heavy one

                            and with air units restricted due to lack of fuel they may not have even known the Mexicans were building up to attack until it was too late (i.e. sounding the alarm when they are crossing the border into El Paso with Stuarts is way way too late)
                            When you deploy you deploy with everything. Every long deployment I have been on the barracks are cleaned out, the troops personal items are picked up by movers, and the buildings turned over to Garrison for issue to another unit.

                            Your connexes are shipped by truck or rail, ship if necessary. Everything goes because your unit has no buildings or motor pool to call home.

                            Any rear detachment is working out of temporary offices in your parent battalion or brigade.

                            Everything goes, every scrap of kit because mission change happens or your shuffled to another larger parent unit.

                            I have three brigade combat patches for one deployment being shuffled around theater.

                            There is one caveat.......... All MP units are not equal..... There is three distinct MP company types and then detachments.

                            Division MP, Corps MP, EPW MP (also rail guards and escort guards) , and then detachments like dog handlers.

                            There is wide variance in MTOE for these types and equipment not normally on MTOE for that type. Example, 82nd MP is the Division MP company for the 82nd ABN Division... They unlike most MP companies have the FIM92A stinger on their MTOE because the Division Commander requires it.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Raellus View Post
                              I'm one of the folks- a minority, it appears- who is OK with the Mexican invasion/occupation scenario presented in T2K v1.0. I find that it makes a much more interesting setting for CONUS-based campaigns. Therefore, I like to find ways to make it more plausible, instead of tearing it down as impossible.
                              I'm with Raellus on this. We're presented with the game which comes with certain "facts" about the world. Work with that information, not against it.

                              Change the world too much and you're no longer playing Twilight:2000, but something that only uses the game mechanics - may as well go play starwars or robotech instead.
                              If it moves, shoot it, if not push it, if it still doesn't move, use explosives.

                              Nothing happens in isolation - it's called "the butterfly effect"

                              Mors ante pudorem

                              Comment

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