This article is part of the Antistasi Commander's Handbook.
Battle Quotes
“The infantryman has a traditional horror of the tank. But a tank is just a coffin for its crew if it is not supported by infantry. It is the job of our infantry to kill the enemy infantry, and then the tank is ours.”
— Anonymous Finnish Officer, Winter War
To establish the doctrine for the identification, engagement, and destruction of enemy armored fighting vehicles (AFVs). The adversary's armor is their most potent and intimidating ground asset. This document provides the tactical framework for transforming our fighters from prey into disciplined and effective tank hunters, thereby neutralizing the enemy's key advantage on the battlefield.
The enemy will consistently deploy AFVs—including Main Battle Tanks (MBTs), Infantry Fighting Vehicles (IFVs), and Armored Personnel Carriers (APCs)—to spearhead assaults, secure key terrain, and intimidate the populace. While formidable, these vehicles are not invincible. They possess critical vulnerabilities that a well-trained and determined irregular force can exploit.
Our anti-armor strategy is predicated on the mindset of a hunter. We do not engage the beast head-on in the open field where it is strongest. We stalk it, learn its habits, channel it into terrain of our choosing, and strike its weak points with precision and violence from positions of concealment. This is a battle of wits and will, not of brute force.
The single most common cause of failure is impatience. An AT gunner who fires prematurely at a target's strong frontal armor has not only wasted a precious round but has also revealed their position to be annihilated. You must wait. Wait for the perfect side or rear shot. Wait for the vehicle to enter the pre-planned kill zone. Discipline is lethality.
The fundamental principle is to attack the vehicle where it is most vulnerable. A 7-ton truck carrying an ATGM is a greater threat to a 70-ton tank than another tank, provided it strikes from the right place. Your goal is a mission kill (disabling the vehicle) or a catastrophic kill (destroying it). An immobilizedtank is a mission kill.
Tank hunting is not a solo endeavor. It is a team sport. A typical Hunter-Killer Team consists of:
Battle Quotes
“The giant steel beasts are not as dangerous as they seem. You just have to get close, stay calm, and know where to hit them. They bleed, just like anything else.”
— Chechen Fighter's Maxim
Never shoot a modern tank in the front unless it is your only option. Focus on high-percentage shots that disable or destroy.
Priority: 1. Rear Shot > 2. Side Shot > 3. Mobility Kill (Tracks) > 4. Frontal Shot (Last Resort).
Insurgent Commander's Note
Capturing a vehicle is always preferable to destroying it. If the opportunity arises, a well-placed shot to the tracks to immobilize a tank is the first step. Once it is stopped, your Hunter-Killer team can eliminate the supporting infantry and force the crew to either surrender or be destroyed inside their steel coffin.
The enemy tank is a machine. It does not think. It does not feel. It follows the orders of its crew and the path of least resistance. You are a thinking, adaptable fighter. Use your intelligence to overcome its strength. Use the terrain to your advantage. Use your patience to create the perfect shot. Be the hunter, not the hunted. Stalk the steel beast, learn its ways, and when the moment is right, strike with precision and send it to the scrap heap.
Battle Quotes
“Courage is not the absence of fear, but rather the judgment that something else is more important than fear.”
— Ambrose Redmoon