plawolf
Lieutenant General
i do wonder how practical that is in real life. lets say war starts, whatever missile or himars isnt going to just magically find their designated parking garage emptied of any vehicles that they will just be able to quickly hide into with whatever ammo. Also assuming they do get there, and remain undetected, what is the control measure to determine when they would come out to shoot? note that this will have to happen simultaneously with multiple launchers dispersed throughout the island, coordinating that kind of fire is a lot more than just typing on whatsapp "ok guys come out and shoot".
the other question being, what do you do after firing? if it is assumed that launcher location is compromised after firing, then it will have to move...again along with all the support vehicles etc. all of this seems not very well put together, a lot of things will have to go right for this to work and that doesnt tend to happen in a warzone.
Add to that the fact that in the event of actual war, the urban roads are going to be absolutely gridlocked with panicked civilian traffic. If their brilliant plan is to hide out in the cities, they may well find whole columns neatly lined up for the PLA while snarled in the traffic jam from hell.
Trying to move military convoys in cities is also going to expose them to countless civilian eyes, and everyone has a cell phone with a camera these days. They will be lucky their progress isn’t live streamed by half the city.
This is why the smart money has Taiwan stationing their HIMARs in the mountains, away from people where they have a better chance of keeping their location a secret so the PLA doesn’t wipe them all with the first strike wave.
Being in the mountains also presents challenges for HIMARs in terms of mobility and suitable firing positions.