At this stage of our de-occupation campaign we critically need more mine clearance equipment, from minesweeping trawls to Bangalore torpedoes,” he said.
I was gonna say that Bangalore torpedoes are World War II era technology, but according to WP, they're actually pre-World War I era technology.
Michael Kofman mentioned in an earlier podcast that those were a want from front-line soldiers in Ukraine.
I assume that if we're talking about the ongoing offensive, scaling up production isn't going to have time to have a lot of impact, so it's probably going to have to rely on consuming existing stores.
I don't know whether there might be other forms of combat mine-clearance equipment that other countries have.
Equipment for war needs to scale fast. We have learned that existing stores are not enough, and also existing stores tend to be obsolete so you wouldn't want to use them.
...was that Russia would have Ka-52s sit outside of MANPADS range and then fire long-range ATGMs at them.
I wonder how practical it is to throw enough smoke onto the minefield to obscure their approach. I believe that modern military smoke is opaque in the infrared. I dunno about radar, or whether the system in question can do radar.
I dunno if the helicopter has to use the designator or if Russia can fly a (more expendable) drone with a laser targeting pod over and maybe illuminate it from a safer angle.
I haven't really seen articles talking much about specifics of the problems hit in breaching the minefields, so I dunno if smoke is involved, but I suppose that that's probably partly reasonably operational secrecy.
googles
I don't know if this is combat or training, but it claims to be Ukrainians using MICLICs. There is no smoke obscuring the vehicle in this video: