Not really. Having armored vehicles simplifies only a few things about conducting airborne operations, while vastly increasing the airlift and logistical requirements in general (things Russia sucked at) and conversely the Russian military was and is weak on helicopters for its size, and had no usefully night capable attack helicopters until the past decade. Every US division had as many helicopters as a Soviet Army in the 1980s. Some had significantly more, and US army corps typically had several additional Apache battalions.Honorius wrote: But it works and gives the Russians an unsurpassed capability to deliver a hard hitting force to a critical area in the enemy's rear where it can do a lot of damage and hold long enough for its main force to arrive.
Except you still have to pay for it. Idiot logic like this is how the USSR imploded on armaments spending.
If something works an gives you an advantage, you're foolish not to use it.
Irrelevant and stupid comparison, and since the American airborne unit has twice as many men it actually stands a far greater chance of holding any position on the defensive. But I bet you had no idea of that, and never considered the implications of the BMD series holding so few men when equipped with a major caliber weapon.
When you think about it, what group is likely to last longer against a strong armored counter attack till their relief gets to them:
82nd Airborne Battalion paradropped on a key road junction with light Humvees and TOWs or a Soviet BMD Battalion backed by some 2S25s?
The US Airborne get their anti armor firepower from missiles, and from being designed as part of a larger integrated unit with a large number of attack helicopters, able to operate from a remote location in support of isolated units. That also makes their artillery highly mobile. Resupplying and vacuating by helicopter is far fucking more realistic then BMDs landed with zero logistical support ever escaping by tracks. That is also against Soviet doctrine. The Soviets were willing to consider expending units on suicide distraction units, the US was not interested in such wasteful tactics, it was interested in units that could sustain a fight. NATO units in general were far better supported then Soviet anything, and worth several Soviet units of like size in a real battle because by intentional design Soviet units could not sustain combat.
Also you realize some armor on a BMD is only 7mm thick aluminum right? The thing averages about half the armor of an M113 and has less effective protection then some armored hummer models.
Being amphibious was nice certainly, that could make planning certain airborne operations easier since a small waterway could be between the objective and the landing zone, but again, American units had shitloads of helicopters to cover situations like that. And all combat since the 1970s has indicated that amphibious vehicles will be massively destroyed in combat, and are unfit for it. The BMD series is vulnerable to literally everything past frag grenades.