Well, again, the old equipment is what we're using today. Because it's useful. We're still using those big fuckoff field radios from the 50's, because they're hardy as fuck and they're reliable at getting a signal where it needs to be.
The
new equipment, which are these point-to-point field telephone rigs, apparently has a much clearer signal quality... However, it's reliant on having a clear, unobstructed line of sight to the point it's trying to contact, it's much larger than a radio, and they're fragile as a neighbor's flowervase (as well as costing thousands to repair/replace).
And, since they're directional, they need to receive a radio transmission to tell them to change facing anyways...
That's what got phased out in the 60's, because there just wasn't any reason to have it. Sure, if you get the connection steady, it's apparently a great, clear, secure method of communication. ...but Norway is filled with bulk forests and discount mountains, good luck trying to get LOS on your target. So rather than using them alongside the radios they were already using, they just went back to using the radios exclusively. But the process of actually removing the directional teletransmitters has apparently gotten so deeply bungholed by the powers that be that a clean break is apparently out of the question.
As for having a few people around who are trained in the use of these things just in case they decide to use some, that's also kinda moot because the singular platoon that gets trained with these things is never sent out of the country, the law prevents it. So, yeah. Almost as effective as when they made new combat gloves standard issue for all the national defense, most of whom are stationed in the northern reaches of Norway where it easily hits -41 degrees (and below!) effective at times during the winter.
The gloves were made for desert combat, and were purchased for our deployed troops in the middle east... They're specifically designed to diffuse heat away from the hand, and make it possible to touch very hot metal things like grenades that have been out in the sun.
It got so bad that, during our boot period (lasting a whole 8 weeks, because they needed to get more boots on the ground for a big exercise, so they didn't have time to actually train us fully), we went from having the gloves be mandatory parts of the uniform to being specifically disallowed from wearing them if the temperature was below freezing.
Oh, yeah, I ended up reading a military news magazine while waiting for a doctor's appointment while I was in... In there they talked about how the Navy had just bought 3 big new battleships from the US. ...and then, I think 2-3 months later, found out that the "maintenance costs were beyond projected budget constraints", and sold 2 of them. For about 25% of what they'd paid to buy them in the first place. Whoever wrote up that expenditure analysis must have been high on some god damn Destroyer-class mushrooms.
So... the soldier doing guard duty in ome of the buildings was, among other things, supposed to inventory the weapons in a meeting room. No big deal, some old rifles... and a saber. See, everyone included the sabre in the inventory because noone had ever bothered in writing it out, and in fact nobody in living memory had actually ever seen the saber. But all inventory checklists acknowledged the saber was there. For years.
One day, one noob did the inventory and foolishly reported the saber as missing. Guess who ended up in front of a court martial to give explanations about the saber's disappearance
Oh man, that... That hits entirely too close to home. We didn't have any sabers, but that whole kind of thinking is just so fundamentally a part of military life that it's ridiculous.
During my time, they revised the standard equipment checklist for infantrymen in my division, changing around how many pairs of this type of underwear, what kinds of auxiliary equipment and consumables you'd be given etc... The problem, of course, is that we'd received the old list when we first took everything out at the start of our service. But when we were discharged, and were supposed to return all military equipment, most people got stopped and questioned as to why they hadn't returned everything on the list. Well... Because we were being asked to return 3 pairs of long johns, out of the 2 we'd been given.
The only people who filled the checklist acceptably were people who'd stolen from other soldiers and thus had more than what they were assigned.