The Reverse Art of Tank Warfare prioritizes survival through movement, positioning, and tactical withdrawal.
( \textExposure + \textConfusion = \textOwnership of Time ).
High-level "Knockout" tactics rely on knowing exactly where to aim: NATO vs. Eastern Bloc: -KNOCKOUT- CLASSIFIED-- The Reverse Art Of Tank Warfare-
The core idea was simple yet counterintuitive: instead of trying to make tanks more formidable, they would create a system that could neutralize enemy tanks without directly engaging them. The team's research led them to develop a cutting-edge, AI-powered system capable of analyzing and predicting enemy tank movements, identifying vulnerabilities, and deploying targeted, non-kinetic attacks.
When the enemy infantry clears the building, you fire a canister round point-blank into the adjacent structure, collapsing it onto their column. You do not engage the infantry. You engage the architecture . You force the enemy to fight gravity. The Reverse Art of Tank Warfare prioritizes survival
Most tanks retreat in a straight line. The Reverse Art mandates a sick retreat. You wiggle the tank. You smoke one exhaust manifold. You pop a smoke grenade but drive out of it, creating the illusion of a panicked driver. The enemy pursues, believing they have a Mobility Knockout (M-Kill).
This cliché has sent countless tank crews to their graves. In the reverse art, the best offense is a prepared defense —one that looks like a retreat, feels like a rout, and ends in a kill zone. Eastern Bloc: The core idea was simple yet
-KNOCKOUT- CLASSIFIED-- The Reverse Art Of Tank Warfare- Introduction
Without a single tank-on-tank duel, the enemy’s armor becomes a line of rusting statues. They have no fuel. They have no shells. They are -KNOCKOUT-.