You completely lost me, but that's ok. I posted what I believe might be of benefit to the OP. He can do with it what he may, but I shared something that might be worth him taking a look at.
Yeah, he is too far and deep into his imagined word that he now can’t distinguish between it and the actual reality.
You might want to take a second look at your decision making process. That attitude demoralizes your troops and you will never win them back, ever.
Maybe why your guys sleep on the cold ground in the winter snow, you can afford a four seasons travel trailer, and you will sleep in the heated travel trailer why your guys sleep near you on the frozen ground?
Might be a significantly better investment to invest your time in learning basic military leadership skills than researching higher end vehicles.
On the contrary, buying a vehicle with your own money and using it for military purpose is a rather a positive.
No one is sleeping on a cold ground. There is a heated and cosy blindage next to a dug in canon with a starlink internet, hot beverages and meals. Personnel is constantly rotated out for rest in the nearby towns. And so on.
Yeah, it’s not exactly south of France, but it is not — for though man — too terrible of conditions. Being an active fire target is terrible, but you get somewhat adjusted to that too.
As to your comment about “higher end vehicles”… A 5-7 year old mid size body on frame pick up truck with a 4 cyl diesel engine is higher end? LMAO
Basic military leadership consists of:
a) treating personnel, even the dumb ones, with respect
b) demonstrating genuine concern for placing them into a calculated risk and defending them from being placed into an uncalculated one
c) care for them as for your children as far as their basic needs
d) always be upbeat and see the glass as half full
e) get dirty with them
f) remind them from time to time they do not serve me, but their country
Not necessarily in the above order.