303rd Army of Observation
The 303rd Army of Observation, a New Alexandrian formation of the Grand Army of the Federation, established in 1753 AN.
History
Established in the eastern states of Santander during IV.1753 AN to monitor developments in neighbouring Mala. As a new establishment, the Army of Observation was formed by combing the ranks of the Grand Army of the Federation for surplus personnel, trainees, officers without billets, and reservists on half pay. Over the course of a matter of weeks, the Department of Defense and the General Staff were able to throw together 10 Generals of Division, 61 Brigadier-Generals, 1,006 colonels and majors, 2,446 junior officers, 24,800 other ranks and 7,058 horses. In addition there were 21 regiments of Home Guard with 500 men in each, a total of 10,500 men.
Organisation
| Unit | Subordinate Units | Headquarters | Garrisoned Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| XX Corps | |||
| 77th Division |
|
San Juan | Zanhuesa |
| 78th Division |
|
Mancos | |
| 79th Division |
|
Malanj | |
| XXI Corps | |||
| 1st Santander Home Guard Brigade |
|
Punta Carolina | The Green |
| 2nd Santander Home Guard Brigade |
| ||
| 3rd Santander Home Guard Brigade |
| ||
Establishment
| Equipment | Origin | Type | Quantity | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Logistics & Utility | ||||
| Ahvaz Utility Land Cruiser | Light Utility Vehicle | 18,000 | The primary mode of operational mobility. Soft-skinned 4x4 vehicles used for troop transport, towing light artillery, and logistics. | |
| Santanderian Mountain Garron | Cavalry / Pack Animal | 7,058 | Locally procured draught and riding horses. Essential for patrols in the underdeveloped Malan border highlands where fuel infrastructure is non-existent. | |
| Armoured Fighting Vehicles | ||||
| APC-18 Protector | Armoured Personnel Carrier | 1,050 | Older stocks drawn from reserve depots. Allocated primarily to the cavalry and command & control regiments to provide limited armoured spearhead capability. | |
| IFV-3 Puma | Infantry Fighting Vehicle | 920 | Older marks lacking the 1750 AN electronics upgrade packages. Provides the army's primary direct fire support. | |
| Ahvaz Psilos IMV | Infantry Mobility Vehicle | 215 | A nominal allocation of the 'Common Platform' vehicle, likely early production models or training units diverted to the front. Used exclusively by command elements. | |
| Artillery & Indirect Fire | ||||
| M1681 Howitzer | 155mm Towed Howitzer | 140 | The backbone of the army's fire support. Towed by Ahvaz Land Cruisers. High availability due to other armies transitioning to self-propelled systems. | |
| BK-IV Bastiat | 155mm Self-Propelled Howitzer | 36 | Legacy systems. Sufficient to equip three artillery battalions. Likely suffering from lower serviceability rates than frontline units. | |
| Tempest MRLS | Multiple Rocket Launcher | 48 | Held in the army reserve. Provides saturation fire capability to deter massed incursions. | |
| M120 Heavy Mortar | 120mm Towed Mortar | 260 | High-angle fire support suitable for the mountainous terrain of the border region. Can be pack-loaded onto horses if necessary. | |
| Support & Engineering | ||||
| ARV-20 Recovery | Armoured Recovery Vehicle | 45 | Critical shortage. The ratio of recovery vehicles to armour is dangerously low, necessitating reliance on field repairs and civilian heavy towing equipment. | |
| CEV-20 Pioneer | Combat Engineering Vehicle | 25 | allocated to the Divisional Engineering Regiment for route clearance and defensive entrenchment. | |