Over-the-beach capability

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A primary measure of a nation's power projection is its over-the-beach capability. This consists of the number of soldiers, tanks, vehicles, and helicopters that a nation can stage over an adversary's defended coast in a time of war. Generally, these elements only count if they can be projected across hundreds of miles of open ocean. Over-the-beach capability determines a nation's power projection together with forward airpower (strength of aircraft carriers and/or overseas airbases), alliances, and nuclear options.

Leading Nations of the World

India

3,370 men (from 14 ships); 65 tanks; 30 Harrier jets; 10 helicopters

Australia

2448-2792 men (from 10 ships); 59 M1A1 Abram tanks; 24 MRH-90 helicopters

EU total

13,384 men (from 18 ships); 234 tanks; 40 Rafale jets; 72 Harrier jets; 92 helicopters; 42 Tiger helicopters

France

4,450 men; 70 Leclerc tanks; 88 light tanks; 40 Rafale jets; 42 Tiger helicopters

UK

3,034 men; 108 Challenger tanks; 44 Harrier jets

Spain

3,000 men; 36 Leopard 2 tanks; 12 Harrier jets; 42 helicopters

Netherlands

1,400 men; 20 Leopard 2 tanks; 30 helicopters

Italy

1,500 men; 16 Harrier jets; 20 helicopters

[1]

References

  1. John Pike. "Reliable Security Information". GlobalSecurity.org. Retrieved 2011-08-17. 
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.