

Towed Military Vehicles
Definition (tight)
Systems that:
- Do not self-propel
- Require a separate vehicle (truck, tractor, etc.) for movement
- Become operational only when deployed/unhitched
These are not “vehicles” in the same sense as tracked/wheeled—they are payload platforms dependent on mobility providers.
Core Types
1. Towed Artillery (Primary Category)
- Howitzers, field guns, anti-tank guns
Examples:
- M777 howitzer (US)
- D-30 howitzer (Russia/legacy users)
Role:
- Indirect fire support
- Long-range bombardment
2. Towed Air Defense Systems
- Missile launchers or gun systems on trailers
Examples:
- MIM-104 Patriot components
- S-400 support launchers
Role:
- Area defense against aircraft/missiles
3. Towed Support Systems
- Radars, generators, logistics modules
Role:
- Detection, power, communications
- Backbone of deployed systems
Who Uses Them
Universal across all modern militaries
- United States, Russia, China, NATO, etc.
- Even highly mechanized forces retain towed systems
Why They Still Exist (critical insight)
| Factor | Advantage |
|---|---|
| Cost | Far cheaper than self-propelled equivalents |
| Weight | Lighter → easier airlift (e.g., helicopters) |
| Simplicity | Fewer failure points |
| Deployability | Can be positioned in difficult terrain |
Core Weaknesses
| Constraint | Impact |
|---|---|
| Mobility Delay | Must stop, deploy, then fire |
| Crew Exposure | Operators more vulnerable |
| Relocation Speed | Slower “shoot-and-scoot” |
| Dependency | Requires towing vehicle at all times |