Special Warfare: Training The Special Operations NCO
Special Warfare: Training The Special Operations NCO
Special Warfare: Training The Special Operations NCO
The Professional Bulletin of the John F. Kennedy Special Warfare Center and School
Training
the Special
Operations
NCO
PB 80901
Winter 1990
Vol. 3, No. 1
Spring
PB 80901
1989
Contents
Winter 1990
Special Warfare
Features
4
Editor
Jerry D. Steelman
Graphic Art Director
Bruce S. Barfield
VE R
IT
AS
ET
LI B
ER
16
22
28
37
42
44
12
TAS
Vol. 3, No. 1
Departments
2
Letters
48
50
52
Update
56
Book Reviews
Spring
1989
Letters
Special Warfare
Winter 1990
Non-partisan caption
I was really enjoying the (Summer 1989 issue) ... when suddenly I
reached page 42. The caption on the
photo (soldier holding UNPFK banner) was so far off-base that I just
had to write. My first reaction was
Is this a test? Then I thought,
wistfully, Maybe theyre trying for
a reunion and want to know if
theres any of us still out there.
Anyway, be advised that the soldier holding the banner is not a
member of any peacekeeping
forces. He is most definitely from
The
Special
Forces
Course
by Maj. James R. Fricke
Phase I
Following CLT, students move to
the James Nick Rowe Special
Operations Training Facility at
Camp Mackall, located approximately 40 miles west of Fort Bragg.
Newly renovated, the training facility can house up to 750 students at
one time and is a dramatic change
from the tar-paper buildings of only
two years ago.
During the first day at Camp
Mackall, students are introduced to
their Special Forces trainer, who
serves as instructor, mentor and
adviser. He will be responsible for
their training for the next 28 days
and will provide instruction and
assistance in all practical exercises.
He is available at any time
throughout training to give individual feedback or remedial instruction. His role is not that of a drill
instructor he does not get the
students up in the morning; he tells
them to meet him at a specific location at a certain time. The students
own chain of command fills those
housekeeping roles, and students
receive treatment appropriate to
their rank during training.
The first training event in Phase
I is an airborne operation which
ends with a cadre-led terrain walk.
The objective is to identify students
weak in land navigation so that
they can receive additional training
to help them improve. The additional training places the student in a
series of situations in which he
must navigate over varying terrain.
The first week of Phase I gives
soldiers training in air operations,
small-boat operations and basic
survival classes designed to teach
them to live off the land. At the end
of this survival training, soldiers
Winter 1990
Special Forces
Qualification Course
Phase I
WEEK 1
WEEK 2
WEEK 3
WEEK 4
AIR OPS
SURVIVAL
SMALL BOAT OPS
SMALL UNIT
TACTICS
ADV PATROLLING
Phase II
13 WEEKS
MOS SPECIFIC TRAINING:(18B) WEAPONS SERGEANT
(18C) ENGINEER SERGEANT
(18D) MEDICAL SERGEANT
(18E) COMMUNICATIONS SERGEANT
Phase III
WEEK 1
WEEK 2
WEEKS 34
SPECIAL OPS
AIR OPS
DET CROSS-TNG
ISOL/MSN PREP
Phase II
After successfully completing
Phase I, the students attend their
respective individual specialtytraining phase. In this phase, each
soldier will be introduced to his
chosen specialty and taught those
skills necessary in his role as the
junior NCO on an A-detachment.
Weapons sergeant
The Weapons Sergeant Course
(18B), emphasizes the weapons systems most commonly found
throughout the world. The training
plan is conducted in related blocks
of instruction and ends with livefire practical exercises. In addition,
the weapons sergeant learns lightinfantry tactics.
Lessons learned from the war in
Afghanistan have re-emphasized
the importance of hand-held air-
defense-artillery weapons, and students receive 33 hours of instruction, from emplacement and operation to identification and engagement of targets. They learn the
characteristics and capabilities of
U.S. and foreign air-defense systems. A majority of the training is
spent on practical exercises in
which the student tracks aircraft in
a simulator.
Weapons NCOs also learn the
characteristics and capabilities of
U.S. and foreign anti-tank weapons
and threat vehicles. They study the
operation, crew duties, target
engagement and maintenance of
selected free-world and opposingforce anti-tank weapons. After 50
hours of instruction, the students
take a comprehensive examination
which includes written and handson testing.
The next major block of instruction (and sometimes the most difficult for the student) is indirect-fire
weapons. The future weapons
sergeant learns all aspects, from
Students in the
Weapons Sergeant
Course learn clearing
procedures, assembly
and disassembly of
the most common
weapons systems
found throughout the
world.
Engineer sergeant
Although students in the Engineer Sergeant Course concentrate on demolitions, they also learn construction techniques necessary in base-camp and
civic-action projects.
construction projects; to prepare a
bill of materials; to prepare site and
building layouts; and to construct a
theater-of-operations building. This
instruction includes estimating
required materials and mixing,
placing, finishing and curing concrete to design specifications. Fieldfortifications subjects provide
instruction on the construction of
wire obstacles, fighting positions,
bunkers and shelters. Both field
fortifications and TO construction
are the basic components needed
for the construction of base camps
or civic-action projects.
Students next receive 37 hours of
instruction on land-mine warfare
which teaches them the skills they
need to support combat operations.
They learn to describe the nomenclature, characteristics and functions of selected anti-personnel and
anti-tank mines; to perform minefield installation, reporting and
recording; and to perform minefield
detecting and breaching with and
without mine detectors. One of the
practical exercises the student
must complete is to have his team
install a minefield with practice
mines and record them on a minefield-recording form. Another team
Winter 1990
After successfully
completing Phase I,
the students attend
their respective individual specialtytraining phase. In
this phase, each soldier will be introduced to his chosen
specialty and taught
those skills necessary
in his role as the
junior NCO on an Adetachment.
dent the skills necessary to design,
construct and classify selected
bridges. All students are involved
in the design of a non-standard,
semipermanent, fixed bridge, and
they construct the superstructure
Medical sergeant
After completing Phase I, the
medical sergeant currently attends
the Phase IIA Course at the Academy of Health Sciences, Fort Sam
Houston, Texas. The 31-week Phase
IIA includes an initial 26 weeks of
classroom instruction on basic aidman skills, anatomy and physiology, pharmacology, infectious diseases and introduction to care of a
trauma patient.
Following an intense week-long
trauma-management field training
exercise, the medical sergeants are
sent to various Army and Public
Health Service hospitals for a fourweek period of on-the-job training. There they rotate through a
variety of clinical services to gain
practical experience before returning to Fort Bragg for the final
phase of medical training.
The Fort Bragg instruction is
predominantly hands-on. Students
7
Communications sergeant
An A-detachments only contact
with the outside world is through
the skills of the communications
sergeant, and his training must be
thorough. All communications on
the team use Morse code, and one of
the prerequisites for the course is
that a soldier be a graduate of the
eight-week Advanced International
Special Forces
Qualification Course
FY 90
FY 91
CLT
Phase I
Phase II
Phase III
2 WEEKS
4 WEEKS
13 WEEKS
5 WEEKS
MOS Phase
CLT
Branch Training
13 WEEKS
2 WEEKS
5 WEEKS
Special Warfare
to explain the teams plan to several field-grade officers from both the
Special Warfare Center and School
and the 1st Special Operations
Command.
Robin Sage begins with a night
combat-equipment jump into
remote drop zones in the Uwharrie
National Forest in central North
Carolina. During the exercise, students perform individual and group
tasks as part of a special-operations
mission. The exercise lasts for 11
days and is conducted with a realistic guerrilla force and a welltrained, well-equipped and wellmotivated counterinsurgency force
manned by members of the 82nd
Airborne Division. Students are
evaluated on their abilities to lead,
function as members of a detachment, plan and conduct missions,
and train the guerrilla force.
Upcoming changes
Effective Oct. 1, 1990, the SF
Qualification Course will be
A student in the
Communications
Sergeant Course
practices using a code
key in the field. In
addition to Morse
code, students learn
antenna theory and
must be able to succesfully transmit
messages thousands
of miles.
Phase III
The final phase of the qualification course combines all of those
skills learned in the previous 19
Winter 1990
Three Special Forces students and a member of their guerrilla force (right)
discuss a mission during the Robin Sage field training exercise.
revised. The major revision will be
made in combining the current
Phases I and III into one nine-week
field phase. Even though the field
phase will teach, for the most part,
the same subjects now taught in
Phases I and III, changes will be
made in the sequence and techniques of instruction. Instruction
will still be sequential and progressive, beginning with individual
skills and progressing to collective
skills.
The new qualification course will
begin with the MOS phase, the current Phase II training which concentrates on the occupational skills
required for each individual specialty. The MOS phase will change
very little from the way it is currently taught, but by taking this
phase at the beginning, students
will have a chance to learn their
MOS-specific tasks before they
attend the field phase.
This change in the Q-Course will
produce a number of advantages. It
will aid the Communications
Sergeant Course by eliminating the
break between the Advanced International Morse Code Course and
the MOS-specific training. Since
Morse code is a perishable skill, the
student will benefit by being able to
10
Winter 1990
11
Special
Forces
Assessment
and Selection
An SFAS candidate
takes a break during
a field activity. Activities during the first
10 days assess students as individuals;
during the last 11
days, they assess students as members of
a team.
13
Maj. James L. Velky is currently a student at the Army Command and General Staff College.
A former infantry NCO who
served two tours in Vietnam, he
Winter 1990
15
&
Keeping pace with Special Forces missions
by Maj. Rex H. McTyeire
Students in the O&I Course work as a group during an operational planning practical exercise. Such exercises evaluate individual and group abilities to plan and conduct Special Forces operations.
17
3 years experience (AC or RC) in 18-series MOS in operational Special Forces unit. 1
A student team deploys during the O&I field training exercise. The FTX is
a week-long performance-oriented exercise to evaluate what students have
learned in O&I.
Special Warfare
Training Management
Winter 1990
19
SPECIAL FORCES
ASSESSMENT & SELECTION
SF
BNCOC
SF QUALIFICATION
COURSE
18B 18C
WPNS ENG
18D 18E
MED COMO
OPERATIONAL
SF ASSIGNMENT
3 YEAR
MINIMUM
SF
ANCOC
OPERATIONAL
SF ASSIGNMENT
O&I
180A
SF WARRANT
PROGRAM
18F
ASST
O&I
ADD'L OPN'L
ASSIGNMENTS:
SWCS INSTRUCTOR
NOMINATIVE SOF
ASSIGNMENT
18Z
ODA OPNS
SERGEANT
SFSOF
ASSIGNMENTS
ECHELONS
ABOVE ODA
SGM
ACADEMY
Winter 1990
21
NCOs
Tra in in g
NCOs
The mission of the SWCS NCO
Academy is to train NCOs to lead
and train their soldiers to fight and
win.
Established in August 1987, the
NCO Academy has its origins in the
creation of the Special Forces
career-management field 18 in
1985, according to 1st Sgt. Peter
Van Borkulo, the NCO academys
deputy commandant. With its own
CMF, Special Forces also had the
requirement to professionally develop its enlisted soldiers.
The Armys Noncommissioned
Officer Education System provided
the regulatory requirement to
develop skill-level-three (basic NCO
course) and skill-level-four
(advanced NCO course) training for
each MOS within the CMF. As a
result, the Special Warfare Center
and School began to look for effective ways to conduct BNCOC and
ANCOC using existing courses.
This approach was further expanded to include the newly formed
PSYOP MOS under the proponency
of the SWCS.
22
Forces soldiers.
Advanced NCO training for SF
was a different matter, not as easily
fixed, because there were no SF
skill-level-four tasks identified. SF
NCOs continued to attend the
ANCOC of their previous conventional MOS, and though the common-leader-training portion was
standard, the MOS and CMF common-task training did not meet the
unique needs of SF NCOs. SF
NCOs who attended the Infantry
ANCOC, for instance, learned
mechanized tactics, Van Borkulo
said. The SWCS had to begin development of a separate SF ANCOC.
Before the course could be developed, however, a distinction had to
be made between skill-level-three
tasks of junior-level NCOs and
skill-level-four tasks of more senior
NCOs. Generally, experienced
senior NCOs serve in more supervisory roles. The SWCS focused on
identifying those tasks that separated the new SF NCOs from the
more capable, seasoned A-detachment soldiers.
Special Warfare
SSgt. Donny H.
Boles, an instructor
at the NCO Academy,
inspects of one of the
Academys students.
23
SF ANCOC
To attend the SF ANCOC, soldiers must first be active or
reserve-component enlisted soldiers
in the rank of staff sergeant or
sergeant first class. They must be
qualified in a CMF 18 MOS, be
BNCOC graduates and be on jump
status. Active soldiers are selected
Winter 1990
Upcoming changes
One of the challenges to the
course curriculum is to stay current
with changes in SF doctrine, and
CSM Reginald Salinas, commandant of the SWCS NCO Academy, is
directing the integration of Special
Forces joint planning and operations into SF ANCOC.
Special Forces is moving more
and more into the joint arena. Both
FM 31-20 (Special Forces Operations) and FM 100-25 (Doctrine for
Army Special Operations Forces)
reflect this increased emphasis on
joint operations, Salinas said.
A curriculum review board held
at the SWCS in January 1990
approved a milestone in the evolution of SF ANCOC: In fiscal year
1991, instruction in CMF 18 skilllevel-four common tasks will place
more emphasis on the relationship
between Army SOF and conventional forces and on the role of Special Forces in joint operations.
Other courses
The academy also teaches two
other courses: the five-week, threeday PSYOP Basic NCO Course,
which trains soldiers in commonleader skills, intelligence-related
26
New courses
In the future, the SWCS NCO
Academy plans to add two more
courses to its curriculum: Resident
Phase 2 of the reserve-component
SF ANCOC, and the PSYOP
ANCOC.
Phase 2 of the SF ANCOCRC
will be a resident MOS phase of the
course for reserve-component soldiers who have already completed
Phase I, U.S. Army Common Leader Training. Common-leader training is conducted at selected U.S.
Army National Guard regional military academies and U.S. Army
Reserve Forces schools. Soldiers
enroll in those courses through
their units. (Individual-mobilization-augmentee and Individual
Ready Reserve soldiers must enroll
through the Army Reserve Personnel Center.)
Resident Phase 2 will be 21 days
long; it will contain the same skilllevel-four MOS and SF commontask training covered in the activecomponent ANCOC, and a graded
command-post exercise. Training
will be conducted using the same
small-group instruction as in other
courses at the academy.
During the MOS portion, students will be grouped by MOS, but
in the SF common-skills and CPX
training, each group will mix soldiers with different specialties,
regional orientations and experiences to get a better cross-section of
team members strengths and to
promote the exchange of ideas.
To make up for the shortening of
the course, the NCO academy will
Special Warfare
Winter 1990
27
Early
Special Forces
Medical Training
1952 1971
by Lt. Col. Louis T. Dorogi
From humble
beginnings in
1952, SF medical training
evolved into an
extensive program to meet
the demands of
SF missions
and the challenges of the
war in Vietnam.
28
(later Brig. Gen.) Russell W. Volckmann no doubt drew on vast experience with Filipino guerrilla groups
in formulating global unconventional-warfare plans, while others, such
as Bank, synthesized their OSS
insight in reviewing the requirements for the force structure necessary to carry out the unconventional-warfare mission.
As a special staff section under
the Department of the Army,
OCPW directed the establishment
of psychological-warfare training at
the Army General School at Fort
Riley, Kan. This was quickly followed by the transfer of the 1st
Radio Broadcasting and Leaflet
Group from Fort Riley to Fort
Bragg to form the nucleus of the
future Psychological Warfare
Center.2
Bank arrived in April 1952 to take
interim command of the first contingent of psy-warriors coming from
Fort Riley and, by May 16, 1952, the
Psychological Warfare Center
became operational. Col. Charles H.
Karlstad soon took over the command as Bank left to become the
first commander of the initial Special Forces group, the 10th.3
Bad Tlz
By the late summer of 1953, the
10th Group was alerted for overseas movement. Commensurate
with the activation of the 77th Special Forces Group at Fort Bragg in
September 1953, the 10th departed
to Bad Tlz, Germany, Nov. 10,
1953.8 Its relocation closer to anticipated operational areas no doubt
heightened the feeling of necessity
for increased medical proficiency.
Accompanying the 10th as its
surgeon was 1st Lt. Bill E. Freeland, Medical Corps. He was a
bear of a man, nearly 300 pounds,9
and thoroughly dedicated to ensuring the medical preparedness of
Special Forces. Freeland implemented an effective program of onthe-job training to establish and
maintain medical proficiency: At
selected U.S. military hospitals
and dispensaries in Germany, Spe-
Okinawa
30
AMTS
With the need to revise and
streamline all Special Forces training, the newly constituted Medical
Training Committee of the Training
Group took over the task of revising
medical training. The laboratory
was promptly renamed the Special
Forces Advanced Medical Training
School. Even while the AMTS was
being organized, there were external pressures for moving all medical training to Fort Sam Houston.
Preliminary discussions with representatives from the Office of the
32
300F-1 Course
The precursor to the Special
Forces mid-level medical training
course in the 1970s was the Medical
Special Warfare
A medic from the 1st Special Forces Group conducts sick call for Rhade
villagers near Ban Me Thout, Vietnam, in March 1962.
the Special Forces medical training
conducted at the Medical Field Service School. He was able to modify
the course content appropriately to
resolve many of the shortcomings he
noted during his Okinawan tour.
Training was made more rigorous;
innovative approaches, such as the
use of a mock dispensary, gave students a more realistic setting in
which to demonstrate overall
knowledge gained.
By use of a mannequin as a
patient, the student obtained the
patients history of illness and/or
injury as well as other basic information concerning the patient. A
diagnosis was determined, treatment was prescribed, and evacuation as needed ... and each phase of
his training was tested, such as
anatomy, physiology, pharmacy,
nursing, types of evacuation, and
medical and surgical treatment. In
the detection of weak areas, immediate on-the-spot critique was made
and re-teaching was accomplished
effectively.27
From about 1963 on there were a
number of variations of training at
Fort Bragg which entailed sending
graduates of the 300F-1 training to
the Clinical Specialist (MOS 91C)
SFC Larry Dickinson, a medic from the 46th Special Forces Company,
examines a child as part of a civic-action program conducted in Thailand
in November 1967.
34
A new lexicon of
terms evolved,
reflecting the medical
operational realities
of Vietnam. During
the Vietnam era the
training had become
the most lengthy and
concentrated, as well
as perhaps the most
controversial, of the
five basic Special
Forces skills.
centrated, as well as perhaps the
most controversial, of the five basic
Special Forces skills. The enlisted
training cycle was best, with multiple hurdles beginning with the
selection process, followed by
parachute, medical training and
Special Forces branch training. The
total time invested was well over 40
weeks.
Doctrinal focus on the maintenance and improvement of the
Notes:
1 In a letter to the author on 24 March 1976, Col. Bank described
some of the thinking that went into organizing Special Forces teams.
Many of the old OSS operatives and veterans were able to translate
their knowledge and experiences into shaping the basic operational
unit of the Special Forces, the A-team, or Special Forces operational
detachment. An initial consideration of placing physicians on each
operational detachment was quickly dropped when the planners
realized the lack of available assets. Originally only one medically
qualified team member was contemplated. Bank wrote:
Based on my OSS experience I was determined to eliminate one
major flaw in the conduct and support for unconventional operations. That flaw was in the area of medical aid and support. I would
never forget how a neighboring Jed(burgh) team had lost a lieutenant who had been dropped initially in my sector because of lack
of trained personnel. ... No medical personnel were in the entire
Jed(burgh) operation. I also had noted that many of the guerrillas I
had organized had a latent fear of the consequences of getting
wounded in action because of the lack of proper and immediate medical support. This in turn affected their efficiency and morale.
2 Headquarters, Psychological Warfare Center, Psychological Warfare Center Questionnaire, Fort Bragg, N.C., 5 September 1952.
Winter 1990
health of guerrilla units was challenged by the need for health-andsanitation improvements among the
indigenous civilian populations of
Southeast Asia. Special Forces medical training, always extensive and
rigorous, responded well to that
challenge. From its humble beginnings in 1952, it evolved into a formalized training cycle distinguished
by the fact that it was the only form
of medical training for enlisted personnel not always fully under the
control of Fort Sam Houston.
35
36
Special Warfare
The
PSYOP
Specialist
by MSgt. Calvin Rome
CMF 37
PSYCHOLOGICAL OPERATIONS
COMMAND
SERGEANT
MAJOR
PSYCHOLOGICAL
OPERATIONS
SPECIALIST
00Z50
E9
37F50
E8E9
37F40
E7
37F30
E6
37F20
E5
37F10
E3E4
TRAINEE
38
Professional development
To meet the Armys requirement
of training and leading, the PSYOP
NCO must have a wide range of
military knowledge and skill and
must demonstrate job proficiency in
all aspects of psychological operations. Perishable skills, such as foreign-language proficiency and airborne operations, must be trained,
learned and maintained on a continual basis.
Professional development for
PSYOP soldiers, with the exception
of MOS-specific training, is similar
to that of other MOSs. Generally,
the Army uses a three-level
approach to professional development: institutional, unit and
individual.
On the institutional level, the key
component is the NCO Education
System. NCOs must be skilled
trainers and leaders, able to train
soldiers while demonstrating their
own proficiency. Trainers need
enthusiasm, innovation, the ability
to motivate others, and the ability
to learn and communicate the subject matter. NCOES provides training in all these areas. For the
sequence of NCOES courses for the
PSYOP MOS, see the NCO professional-development chart (next
page).
Ideally, NCOES is sequential,
progressive and provides soldiers
the training they need prior to promotion. (It does not, however,
include functional courses such as
the First Sergeant Course.) This
applies equally to all branches of
the Army. NCOES has four levels:
Primary. Primary-level training prepares specialists and
sergeants for NCO duties. The Primary Leadership Development
Course is a non-MOS-specific leadership course built around basic
soldier skills. Unit commanders
select and schedule soldiers for
attendance.
Basic. Basic-level training prepares sergeants for duties as staff
sergeants. The Psychological Operations Basic Noncommissioned OffiSpecial Warfare
GRADE
EXPERIENCE
ASSIGNMENTS
OTHER
NCOES
E2 46 MO
BCT
E3 612 MO
E4 1226 MO
AIRBORNE SCHOOL
37F AIT
PSYOP TM MEMBER
PLDC
37F BNCOC
E5 1 1/25 YRS
LOUDSPEAKER TM CHIEF
E6 58 YRS
AUDIO-VISUAL TM CHIEF
37F AIT INSTRUCTOR
E7 913 YRS
RECRUITER
DRILL SGT
BASIC LANGUAGE
TRAINING
PSYOP CRSE (ACCP)
INTERMEDIATE LANGUAGE
OR SECOND LANGUAGE
CMF 37 ANCOC
SR DRILL SGT
RC ADVISOR
RECRUITER
RC ADVISOR
USSOCOM J-9
OPS SGT
PROMOTION TO
MOS 37F50 E9
E9 1822 YRS
STAFF SGM
ROTC CADRE
SR OPS SGT IN A
PSYOP GP S-3
USSOCOM J9
SR OPS SGT
cers Course emphasizes PSYOPrelated subjects, intelligence functions and common-core leadership
tasks. Soldiers attend PSYOP
BNCOC at the Special Warfare
Center and School NCO Academy.
The Army Personnel Command
nominates the best-qualified soldiers to attend training, and the
unit commander has the option to
approve, substitute for, or defer a
candidate. The PSYOP BNCOC is
five weeks, three days long and is
conducted once per year.
Advanced. Advanced-level
training prepares staff sergeants
and sergeants first class for duties
as senior noncommissioned officers.
PSYOP specialists currently attend
the MI ANCOC, which emphasizes
Winter 1990
SGM ACADEMY
PREFERRED DEGREES:
POLITICAL SCIENCE
PSYCHOLOGY
SOCIOLOGY
JOURNALISM
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
MARKETING/ADVERTISING
TELECOMMUNICATIONS MANAGEMENT
GEOGRAPHY, ECONOMIC/POLITICAL
FOREIGN AFFAIRS
NCO promotions
NCO promotions are managed
through two systems, semi-centralized and centralized. The semi-centralized system is used to select soldiers for promotion to sergeant and
staff sergeant. The centralized system selects NCOs for promotion
to sergeant first class, master
sergeant and sergeant major, and
for appointment to command
sergeant major.
Under the semi-centralized system, to be selected for promotion to
sergeant and staff sergeant, NCOs
must appear before a local promotion board. Based on an evaluation
of the NCOs past performance and
potential, the board awards promo-
tion points, which are a major factor in determining if the soldier will
be selected for promotion. Since
July 1, 1986, the Primary Leadership Development Course has also
been a requirement for promotion
to staff sergeant.
Under the centralized system,
the authority for selecting and promoting NCOs to the top three
grades rests with Headquarters,
Department of the Army. The centralized system relies completely on
information contained in the NCOs
Official Military Personnel File and
on the NCO Personnel Qualification Records (DA Form 2A and 2-1).
To increase the possibility of
selection for promotion, PSYOP
NCOs should ensure that their
records reflect that they have met
all prerequisites, as outlined in the
promotion boards guidance instruction, prior to the suspense date.
The DA photo is a critical part of
the OMPF. To be competitive, NCOs
must present a professional personal appearance, and their uniforms
must conform to standards provided in AR 670-1. Height and weight
should be proportional and within
the limits established by AR 600-9.
Winter 1990
41
IS FITNESS
IMPORTANT
FOR
LEADERS?
by CSM Henry Bone
A leader must always be at the
forefront of the soldiers he leads.
Not only in time of war, but also in
training, the leader must display
and constantly set the example for
his subordinates. This is especially
true in the area of physical fitness.
A successful leader must project
the image of mental, physical and
spiritual wellness to his soldiers,
adversaries and to the people of his
country. His bearing, shown by posture, overall appearance, and manner of physical movement, is an
outward display of the state of
inner feelings and confidence. Bearing can either hurt the confidence
of soldiers or help inspire them.1
History teaches the importance of
fitness on the battlefield. A demonstration of the physical qualities of
leadership under the most adverse
of conditions was exhibited by Lt.
Gen. Joseph W. Stilwell, who organized and led the retreat from
Burma of an unorganized mob of
men and women Chinese,
British, Burmese and a few Americans in May, 1942.
42
army commander, speaks of physical fitness as one of the most important ingredients of leadership.
Because of strenuous and unremitting physical training, I was able to
keep up with the best of my troops
in the hottest sectors and the
toughest terrain and climate.3
Ridgway also prescribes what he
believes the standard for commanders of large units should be. The
division commander should have
the physical endurance, stamina,
and reserves of his best infantry
battalion commanders, because
that is where he belongs with
them a good part of the time.4
Ridgway feels that a leader should
be in excellent physical condition at
all times, since at any time, he
could be thrust into a combat situation, and there will be no time to
get into shape.
It is hard to predict the kinds of
physical challenges soldiers will
face in future wars; however, in
almost any situation, there will be
Winter 1990
43
When
Youre
On
Patrol...
Editors note: The following article is taken from
B-720 Tips, published in 1988 by the 7th SF Group.
B-720 Tips was, itself, based on B-52 Tips, published
by the 5th SF Group in 1970, but updated to include
changes in weapons, equipment and doctrine.
Leader tips
No individual or team can practice or train too
much or too often.
Teamwork is the key to success and will only come
through constant training and rehearsal.
While on a mission, minimize fatigue; tired men
become careless.
If you show confidence, your team will have
confidence.
Always have an alternate plan. Think ahead.
If you lose your temper, it will effect your judgment. Keep cool.
Dont be afraid to take advice from your team
members.
Realism must be injected into all phases of training, such as zeroing weapons at targets in the jungle,
using live training aids for prisoner-of-war snatch or
ambush practice, etc.
Conduct at least half of your training at night.
Teams that have a good physical training program
have fewer health problems.
44
LCE/ruck tips
Be sure that all snaps and buckles are taped. Do
not use paper tape.
Always carry a sharp knife or bayonet on patrol.
Always wear your load-carrying equipment buckled
when not sleeping. If youre wounded, your teammates
can drag you by your LCE shoulder straps.
For survival, each individual should carry a cutdown MRE in his pants cargo pocket, and one tube of
bouillon cubes in the first-aid pouch on his LCE. One
bouillon cube dissolved in one canteen of water will
provide energy for one or two days.
Dont use two-quart canteen covers to carry
30-round magazines. You can fit eight magazines in
one, but once you take the first one out, the others rattle loudly and spill out easily. Use regular ammo
pouches.
Sew a long slim pocket on the side of your ruck to
accommodate the long antenna, or use an accessory kit
bag clipped and tied to the side of the ruck.
Ensure that the snap link on your rucksack is
snapped through the loop in the upper portion of your
rucksack-carrying straps or the frame, so you wont
lose it during exfil when you snap it on a ladder or
extraction fast-rope.
Insect repellent leaks and spills easily, so put it in
a zip-lock bag and isolate it from your other equipment
in the rucksack. Also, squeeze air from the repellent
container and screw the cap on firmly.
Always use the water from canteens in or on your
rucksack before using water in the canteens on your
belt. This will ensure a supply of water should you
ditch or lose your rucksack.
Test the shoulder straps on the rucksack before
packing it for patrol. Always carry some parachute
cord to repair straps on patrol.
Use a waterproof bag in the rucksack to protect
equipment while on patrol. This is extremely important during the rainy season.
Camouflage your rucksack with black spray paint.
Night-vision-goggle tips
At night, carry night-vision goggles in a claymore
bag around your neck on your chest. This allows easy
access and protects the NVGs from the elements.
Always carry a spare battery for your NVGs.
When in an observation post at night, scan with
NVGs for only a few moments every five minutes or so.
If you scan continuously, you increase the chance of
the enemy spotting your position (when two persons
using NVGs in the passive mode look directly at each
Winter 1990
Weapons tips
Never assume that your weapon is clean enough on
an operation. Clean your weapon daily.
Always carry rifle-cleaning equipment on operations; i.e., bore and chamber brushes, cleaning rag and
patches, cleaning rod with handle and tip, and a small
vial of weapons oil. A shaving brush is very useful.
When you fire your weapon, shoot low, particularly
at night; ricochets will kill just as well, and most people hit the ground when shooting starts.
Use one magazine full of tracer during infiltration
and exfiltration. If taken under fire during infil or
exfil, the tracers can be used to identify enemy positions to friendly air support.
The last three rounds in each magazine should be
tracer to remind the firer that he needs a fresh magazine. Alternate: The last eight rounds are three tracer
followed by five ball.
Quietly replace the cartridge in the chamber of
your weapon each morning. Condensation may cause a
malfunction.
Oil the selector switch on your weapon daily and
work the switch back and forth, especially during the
rainy season. This will prevent the common occurrence
of a stuck switch.
Always carry your weapon with the selector switch
on safe.
Use a plastic muzzle cap or tape to keep water and
dirt out of the barrel.
To improve noise discipline, tape all sling swivels.
Rig the jungle sling so it is easily adjustable (for
easy transition from rappel/fast-rope to carry/fire).
Tape a spare field dressing to the sling at the stock,
using a single strip of wide cloth tape with a quickrelease tab.
Check all magazines before going on an operation
to ensure they are clean and properly loaded and that
the springs are oiled and functioning. Magazine problems cause the majority of weapons malfunctions.
Place magazines upside down in their pouches to
keep out dirt and water.
Do not retrieve your first expended magazine during contact; it will consume valuable time.
If you use a PAQ-4 aiming light on an M-16A2 rifle,
you must modify the hand guard to allow the thumb
switch to travel far enough to activate the light. Using
the serrated edge of your bayonet, file down the area
45
Claymore tips
Claymores are factory-packed backward; i.e., to be
emplaced from the firing position to the mine position,
with the excess wire left at the mine. Correct by removing all the firing wire from the plastic spool, discard the
spool, re-roll the wire in an S or figure-8 fashion, and
replace it in the bag so the mine can be emplaced first
and the wire laid back to the firing position. The clacker with circuit tester attached is pre-connected to the
firing wire and stowed in the mine pouch. The unit
commander must make the decision whether to prime
the mine before departing on the mission or only to put
the shipping plugs on the electric and non-electric
blasting caps to speed priming during emplacement.
Dual-prime each claymore for both electric and
non-electric firing. The time fuse should be pre-cut for
30-, 60-, or 120-second delay, for pursuit or break-contact situations. However, the burn time on the fuse
becomes undependable the longer the fuse is exposed
to wet or humid conditions.
Waterproof your non-electric firing systems.
Carry the claymore in the rucksack so its immediately accessible; after breaking contact it can be quickly armed and emplaced on the back trail (even while
its still in the ruck) to delay pursuers.
Claymores placed around your position (observation post, ambush, remain-overnight, etc.), should be
emplaced one at a time by two men, with one man
46
Grenade tips
Make continuous daily checks on all grenades
when on patrol to ensure that the primers are not coming unscrewed.
Do not bend the pins on the grenades flat. The
rings are too hard to pull when needed.
Fold paper tape through the rings of grenades and
tape the ring to the body of the grenade. The paper
tape will tear for fast use, while plastic or cloth tape
will not. It also keeps the ring open for your finger,
stops noise and prevents snagging.
All team members should carry a mixture of fragmentation, CS and white-phosphorous grenades on
their belts for the following reasons:
- Fragmentation grenades are good for inflicting
casualties.
- CS grenades are ideal for stopping or slowing down
enemy troops and dogs pursuing your team, and are
effective in damp and wet weather, whereas CS powder will dissipate.
- WP grenades have a great psychological effect
against enemy troops and can be used for the same
purpose as CS grenades. The use of CS and WP at the
same time will more than double their effectiveness.
Thoroughly train and test your indigenous troops
in grenade-throwing, particularly WP. Not all of them
will be adept at baseball-style throwing.
Violet and red are the smoke colors most visible
from the air; however, in dense jungle or wet weather,
use WP to signal aircraft.
Notify aircraft before signalling with WP; gunships
or fighter-bombers may mistake it for a marking rocket indicating an enemy position, and attack you.
Camouflage smoke, CS and WP grenades, using
black or OD spray paint.
Smoke grenades should be carried in or on the pack
and not on the LCE. You dont fight with smoke
grenades, and if you need one, 99 times out of 100 you
will have time to get it from your pack.
Each team should carry one thermite grenade for
destruction of either friendly or enemy equipment.
Special Warfare
Commo tips
Commo is everyones responsibility, not just the
commo sergeants.
Always inventory and inspect your radios, kit bags,
secures and sensors before and after all missions.
Place a plastic cover over your PRC-77/KY-51 and
wrap them in an additional waterproof bag.
Pre-set frequencies on the PRC-77 so that a quick
turn of the dials will put you on the desired frequency.
This is especially helpful at night when you want to
avoid a light.
Carefully inspect your X-mode cable for bent pins
and dirt in the female connectors.
Take along secure hand-held radios with earphones
and whisper mikes for internal in-position team
commo during ambush and prisoner-of-war snatch
missions.
Perform pre-mission radio checks:
- with your radio and secure packed in your ruck
exactly the way you will carry them in the field;
- after your crypto has been loaded;
- with and without the secure hooked up;
- with your operational base, helicopters, fire support, the hatchet team, other teams operating adjacent
to your area of operations, and your internal radios;
- bending the X-mode cable while receiving/transmitting to check for excessive static and/or loss of commo.
Before a mission, always place fresh batteries into
your commo gear and sensors, especially the BA-1372
memory battery for the KY-57.
Always carry spare PRC-77 and KY-57 batteries,
but do not remove the spares from their plastic wrapping prior to use or they may lose power.
Carry the lithium BA-5598 batteries for the PRC77; this cuts weight, and since the spare is in the battery cover, it speeds emergency replacement.
Ensure the PRC-77 battery cover vent is operational, because of the gases produced by the lithium
batteries.
Ensure the cover vent is on the same side as the
battery connector.
After you put the battery in your TEMIG beacon,
Winter 1990
cycle the TEMIG to make sure it is off and not silently transmitting.
Dont try to weatherproof your hand mike with a
plastic wrapper; water condenses on the inside anyway, the wrapper rustles loudly, and at night, it shines
like a signal light when viewed through NVGs.
Always carry a spare hand mike in a waterproof
bag.
Dont carry your spare hand mike where it might
get crushed when you drop your ruck.
Clean all contacts daily with the eraser end of a
pencil.
Waterproof your communications-electronics operating instructions, or CEOI, and authentication tables
by laminating them with acetate or putting them in a
plastic zip-lock bag.
Constantly check your CEOI to ensure your
authentication tables are folded open to the page
showing the most current set. This will prevent dangerous delays when your AC-130 requests authentication, especially at night.
Carry a single strand of claymore firing wire or
WD-l cut to your operating frequency for use as a fieldexpedient antenna. Secure one end (stripped of insulation) to the radio with an antenna base, then string
the wire straight up to a branch (omni-directional), or
lay it on the ground in the direction of the receiving
station (uni-directional).
Minimize radio traffic.
Do not send same or no change when reporting
team location. Always send your coordinates.
Repeat grid coordinates sent to you to ensure accurate copy.
The operational base must avoid making unnecessary, unscheduled radio checks just because they
havent heard from a team for a while. Be patient.
Whisper into the hand mike while in the field.
Exhale first, then speak, or your transmission will
sound like a tire leaking air. To mask your voice, cup
your hand over the hand-mike mouthpiece and your
mouth.
Always remain calm and professional, no matter
what happens. Screaming or speaking in emotional,
angry or desperate tones will cause the operational
base to doubt your judgment and the accuracy of whatever youre saying.
47
Spring
1989
The calendar-year 1989 E-7 selection rate for soldiers in CMF 18 was one
of the highest in the Army, with an overall selection rate of 44.4 percent,
compared to the Army average of 15.6 percent. From a field of 478 eligible
NCOs, 212 were promoted. The following figures show how other Army
CMFs fared:
CMF 11 11.7 percent
CMF 13 8.3 percent
CMF 31 7.4 percent
The average time in service for SF soldiers promoted in the primary zone
was 10.5 years, while the average time from the secondary zone was 7.7
years. The Army average time in service for the primary zone was 12.7
years, and from the secondary zone, 9.5 years. Average ages for CMF 18
soldiers were 29.9 years for the primary and 28.2 years for the secondary
zone, in comparison to the Army average of 32.9 and 30.0 years for those
same zones. The average CMF 18 primary-zone time in grade, 4.6 years,
was better than the Army average of 5.4 years, but the secondary-zone
average time in grade, 2.7 years, was the same as the Army average. The
following matrix shows the breakdown within the CMF by MOS:
MOS
18B
18C
18D
18E
18F
Total
Primary
nr zn nr sel %
45
40
88.9
26
23
88.5
11
10
90.9
32
20
62.5
3
2
66.7
117
95
81.2
Secondary
nr zn nr sel %
96
33
34.4
75
9
12.0
68
61
89.7
116
8
6.9
6
6 100.0
361
117
32.4
Totals
cons sel %
141
73 51.8
101
32 31.7
79
71 89.9
148
28 18.9
9
8 88.9
478 212 44.4
Questions related to professional development or assignment of SF soldiers in grades through master sergeant (sergeant majors have their own
branch) should be directed to either Capt. Jeffery Waddell or MSgt. Thomas Rupert at the Enlisted Personnel Management Directorate at PERSCOM. Phone AV 221-8340/5497, commercial (202) 325-8340/5497, or write:
Commander; USTAPC; Attn: TAPC-EPK-S; 2461 Eisenhower Ave.; Alexandria, VA 22331-0452.
48
Special Warfare
PERSCOM releases
selection list for SF ANCOC
BNCOC to become
requirement for SFC
Winter 1990
The newly released list for the Special Forces Advanced NCO Course contains the names of 194 SF NCOs. This number represents an overall
selection rate of 44.8 percent, versus the average rate for combat arms of
34.5 percent. Those NCOs selected will be integrated into the current
CMF 18 list and scheduled to attend class. ANCOC scheduling is now
automated, and soldiers will attend the course according to primary military occupational specialty and date of rank. The Armys goal is to have a
soldier attend CMF 18 ANCOC within two years of his promotion to
sergeant first class. PERSCOM will no longer delete a soldier from
ANCOC without written notification from his unit. Tentative dates for
upcoming SF ANCOC classes are:
Class no.
Start date
3-90
1-91
2-91
3-91
Sept. 4, 1990
Jan. 7, 1991
May 6, 1991
Sept. 8, 1991
End date
Nov. 29, 1990
April 4, 1991
July 28, 1991
Dec. 7, 1991
Beginning Oct. 1, the Basic NCO Course will be required for promotion to
sergeant first class. according to the Army Personnel Command. Soldiers
are nominated to attend BNCOC by PERSCOM. Unit commanders must
confirm the nomination and ensure that soldiers meet the eligibility
requirements in Chapter 5, AR 351-1, Individual Military Education and
Training. Commanders must also ensure that soldiers attend BNCOC as
scheduled only under extreme circumstances should soldiers be
deferred from the training, and if a soldier is unable to attend, his status
must be reported through the chain of command to PERSCOM. Commanders also have the option to substitute other qualified soldiers. Sergeants
first class who have not attended BNCOC and who have a date of rank of
July 31, 1988 or earlier should receive priority for BNCOC training.
Soldiers who apply for Special Forces training through the Bonus Extension and Retraining Program, BEAR, no longer need to submit an extensive packet. Under the BEAR program, the Army awards a bonus to soldiers who reclassify from an over-strength MOS to a shortage MOS. SF
applicants through BEAR will now complete Special Forces Assessment
and Selection before initiating their BEAR packets. After SFAS, a soldier
interested in the BEAR program should provide his re-enlistment NCO a
copy of his SFAS certificate of completion. The re-enlistment NCO will forward the certificate and BEAR packet to PERSCOM for processing. At
PERSCOM, the Retention Management Branch, along with the Special
Forces Branch, will process the application, and the soldier will be
scheduled for the Special Forces Qualification Course.
49
Spring
1989
Special Warfare
Functional Area 39 officers are required to have either their foreignlanguage proficiency or a qualifying score (85 or better) on the Defense
Language Aptitude Battery posted on their Officer Record Briefs. FA 39
officers who have not yet taken the DLAB should take steps to test as
soon as possible. Those who have taken the test and failed to qualify
may retest after waiting six months from the date of the original test.
Language qualification is important, and officers should be sure that
their ORBs correctly reflect their language proficiency officers who
fail to take the DLAB or to attain a qualifying score will lose their FA
39 designation.
FA 39 officers who anticipate going to a fully-funded graduate degree
program must ensure that their records at PERSCOM contain both a
complete college transcript and a current score on the Graduate Record
Examination.
The current time line for the FA 39 graduate program calls for classes
to begin at Fort Bragg in September. There will be 30 student positions
in the 12-month program. FA 39 officers interested in attending should
contact their branch assignment officer now, before submitting an application, to determine whether they are competitive for selection. For
further information, contact Maj. Georgia Bemis, SWCS Special Operations Proponency Office, at AV 239-6406, commercial (919) 432-6406.
50
The SF Branch is looking for Spanish-speaking volunteers for reassignment to Panama. Currently the tour for captains assigned to the 3rd Bn.,
7th SF Group is one year, unaccompanied. This means that the branch
requires 25 captains each year who have a minimum language rating of
1/1 in Spanish. SF captains with 36 months on-station who are interested
in attending the Defense Language Institute for Spanish should contact
the branch.
Besides the Panama assignments, there are four exchange positions for
captains in Latin America which require language-qualified officers, normally rated at 2/2. All positions are one year, unaccompanied.
Exchange officer with Colombias Lancero (Ranger) School Must be
airborne and Ranger-qualified and willing to attend the Lancero course.
The officer serves as an instructor at the school. Position is available in
March 1991, but the officer must begin school in January 1991. Language training is available.
Exchange officer at the Argentine Mountain School Course requires
a Spanish speaker, preferably with mountaineering experience. Course
is one-year-long and will make the officer an expert climber and skier.
Course begins January 1991.
Adviser to a Colombian special-operations unit in Bogota Officer
must be a senior captain. Position is available in June 1991.
Guest instructor at the Jungle Operations School in Manaus, Brazil
This is a new position; it will require an officer who is self-reliant and
able to handle an environment which may provide little U.S. Army support. For further information on any of these positions, contact Capt.
John Bone at AV 221-3175, commercial (703) 325-3175.
Year-group 81 officers who have not yet completed the nine-week second
phase of the Combined Arms and Services Staff School at Fort Leavenworth,
Kan., have until the end of FY 90, according to Lt. Col. John E. McNett, CAS3
operations officer. Failure to attend may jeopardize promotion and staff-college selection. Graduation from CAS3 is now a prerequisite for enrollment in
the Command and General Staff Officer nonresident Course. Phase II classes
in FY90 are also open to captains in year groups 82 and later who have completed their advanced courses and Phase I of CAS3. For report dates, officers
may refer to the Army Training Requirements and Resources System computer network or call the CAS3 operations office at AV 552-2113/2602.
The Special Operations Staff Officer Course is an eight-week course for majors
and senior captains, designed to allow SOF officers to make the transition from
operators to planners and strategic thinkers. The course is organized into three
phases: national strategic policy formulation (foreign policy, national interests
and power, and national strategy); USSOCOM (operational concept, roles, missions, command relationships, SOF of the various services); and doctrine (joint
operations, special-operations procedures, joint-task-force planning, AirLand
Battle, low-intensity conflict, SF operations, PSYOP, civil-military operations
and campaign planning). There is also a guest-speaker program, briefings on
regional hot spots and an automated planning command-post exercise. Students attend the course in a TDY-and-return or TDY-en-route status. The
course is currently running two classes per year. For more information, contact
Maj. Steve Bucci at AV 239-5608, commercial (919) 432-5608.
Winter 1990
51
Spring
1989
Update
Special Warfare
The 1st Special Forces Operational Detachment-Delta is currently recruiting worldwide for soldiers
to plan and conduct a broad range
of special operations.
Delta is the U.S. Armys specialoperations unit organized for the
conduct of missions requiring a
rapid response with surgical application of a wide variety of unique
skills and the flexibility to maintain
the lowest possible profile of U.S.
involvement. Because of this,
Deltas soldiers are carefully selected and specially trained.
Delta affords officers and NCOs
unique opportunities for professional development. Both undergo the
same assessment, selection and
training and, after training, are
assigned to operational positions
within the unit. Training and experience gained while in Delta are much
in demand, and soldiers will enjoy
expanded assignment opportunities.
Delta conducts worldwide recruiting twice a year prior to its fall and
spring assessment-and-selection
courses. Recruiting for the fall
53
File photo
Construction begins
on free-fall simulator
Construction has begun at Fort
Bragg on a $5-million facility to be
used for training parachutists in
military free fall.
The Military Free Fall Simulator
Facility will contain an enclosed,
vertical wind tunnel to simulate the
55
Spring
1989
Book Reviews
Special Warfare
Inside Spetsnaz - Soviet Special
Operations: A Critical Analysis.
Edited by Maj. William H. Burgess
III. Novato, Calif.: Presidio Press,
1989. ISBN 0-89141-339-1. 312
pages. $24.95.
At the beginning of the 1980s, a
defector from the Soviet Army, writing under the pseudonym of Viktor
Suvorov, both alarmed and thrilled
Western audiences with tales of derring-do by a heretofore unknown
group of super-soldiers the spetsnaz.
But Suvorovs accounts of the
spetsnaz were not much more than
war stories gleaned from conversations overheard at numerous Oclub bars. Unfortunately, much of
what Suvorov said was accepted at
face value. Hence, a distorted view
of the true nature of the Soviet special-ops threat has taken hold in the
West.
Fortunately, Inside Spetsnaz Soviet Special Operations: A Critical Analysis, is now available. This
is a very important book, and as the
title suggests, analyzes critically
Soviet special operations. Compiled,
partially written, and edited by
William Burgess, a U.S. Army
major and Special Forces officer
assigned to the John F. Kennedy
Special Warfare Center and School,
the book contains a series of essays
on Soviet special ops from the Spanish Civil War through Afghanistan.
The book makes three points that
set it apart from the majority of
spetsnaz books. First, it avoids the
hype and hero worship often associated with books on elite forces. For
instance, a chapter by Jim Short on
spetsnaz Organization, Capabilities, and Countermeasures was
based on an interview with the com56
tion of the motives for Soviet spetsnaz excursions into Sweden and
Norway.
Second, Burgess, in his chapter,
Spetsnaz and the Deep Operation,
provides the best definition in Western literature of spetsnaz. Spetsialnoe naznachenie (special purpose/appointment) is imprecisely
employed by the Soviets. On the one
hand, Soviets use it to refer to elite,
highly trained commandos, and on
the other hand, use it in reference
Paul H. Vivian
Intelligence analyst
4th PSYOP Group
Fort Bragg, N.C.
The Training of Officers: From
Military Professionalism to
Irrelevance. By Martin Van Creveld. New York: The Free Press,
1990. ISBN 0-02-933152-8. 134
pages. $19.95.
Martin Van Creveld has produced
an important work in The Training
of Officers, if not for the accuracy of
his analysis, then for the questions
it raises and the issues with which
it deals. In a very short book, he
gives an overview of the history of
officer training at the critical seniorstaff level and attempts to analyze
the problems with the American
system as it exists today. These are
ambitious and important goals.
Unfortunately, Van Creveld obviously has an agenda that he wishes to
pursue from the outset, and one
gets the distinct impression that his
analysis was far from unbiased.
Van Creveld has organized the
book well and simply. He begins
Winter 1990
sustained fear one naturally experiences in combat. Frightened soldiers tire quickly, and loads easily
carried in training become unbearable in combat.
Marshall argues that the fighting
soldier should carry only those
items that he will need for personal
protection and to advance against
the enemy on the first day of the
battle. Items such as entrenching
tools, extra clothing and several
days rations are not of immediate
use to the soldier and so should be
carried in the supply trains to be
delivered when needed.
The second section of the book
deals with logistics from another
angle. Marshall argues here that far
too much of the U.S. logistics system
is concerned with providing soldiers
with accessories and comforts they
dont need. He complains that while
all effort in war should be directed
toward putting steel on target, the
Army logistics system staggers under a burden of soft drink machines,
mammy singers, and lollypops.
The consequences of burdening
our supply lines with mountainous
quantities of nonessential materiel
can only be and must ever be that
less fire is delivered upon the
enemy. A lean and strong-going
rifleman cannot spring fully armed
and ready from the brow of an army
that is elsewhere rolling in fat.
Marshall calls for a more mobile
doctrine that not only streamlines
both combat and combat-servicesupport units, but also reorients the
individual soldier to put ruggedness
and personal strength above personal comfort.
Marshalls arguments are cogent
and pertinent, clear and concise. He
was a soldier writing for soldiers
about soldiers. The book is peppered
with numerous real-life examples,
based on personal observations and
interviews, that Marshall uses to
support his position. One of the
most poignant is the number of soldiers who lost their footing on the
beaches of Normandy and drowned
when the tide came in because they
could not get back up under the
Special Warfare
Special Warfare
PIN: 067289000