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This work is the continuation and revision of a project started in
2006 with the publication of In Contact by the Combat Studies
Institute. The original concept was to present a series of military
vignettes in a style similar to the widely used case-study
methodology commonly found in military literature. The final
version of Between the Rivers, instead of following this strict
case-study format, presents combat action vignettes as narrative
accounts of the various types of actions challenging combat leaders
in Iraq in 2003-2005.
John McGrath's Crossing the Line of Departure is a wide-ranging
historical overview of that most difficult aspect of military
leadership, the art of battle command. McGrath leads the reader
through case studies beginning with Alexander the Great leading up
to the recent war in Iraq. Among others, he analyzes Napoleon's
technique, French and British practices in World War I, the German
experience with "Blitzkreig" in World War II, and the Soviet
approach to battle command. McGrath also extends his historical
analysis to the present day by presenting a description of battle
command theory in the "Modular Army" and the Information Age.
Through it all, he finds that the key to successful command in
battle, particularly in mobile operations, is found in the
successful interplay between technology and personal technique.
Unlike some pundits today, McGrath does not conclude that
information age technology is likely to shift the balance between
these poles in favor of technology dependence. The commander's
personal sense of where to be on the battlefield, where to locate
and how to use his headquarters staffs, and how to communicate with
his subordinates have been-and remain today-crucial elements of
successful battle command. A 21st century commander has use of
technology beyond the comprehension of an Alexander, a Napoleon, or
a Guderian; but he will continue to grapple with the same issues of
personal presence and technique that they mastered so well.
Crossing the Line of Departure brings to the fore insights, trends,
and leadership qualities needed for successful battle command.
While possessing knowledge of these traits does not guarantee
success on the battlefield, their absence will almost assuredly
bring defeat.
This work is the continuation and revision of a project started in
2006 with the publication of In Contact by the Combat Studies
Institute. The original concept was to present a series of military
vignettes in a style similar to the widely used case-study
methodology commonly found in military literature. The final
version of Between the Rivers, instead of following this strict
case-study format, presents combat action vignettes as narrative
accounts of the various types of actions challenging combat leaders
in Iraq in 2003-2005.
This Global War on Terrorism Occasional Paper (GWOT OP), by Dr.
Lawrence Yates, provides his thoughts and analysis of the US Army's
participation in stability operations (SO) since 1789. Dr. Yates, a
member of the CSI Team since 1981, has spent twenty plus years
intensely studying this aspect of Army operations. Prior to his
retirement in 2005, CSI asked him to put in writing his impressions
formed by his research in this field. The result is this monograph.
Dr. Yates makes several key arguments about the Army's involvement
in SO. Among the key points he makes is his contention that the
Army has an institutional habit of forgetting the lesson learned
about SO, when, after conducting a stability operation, it returns
to conventional warfare preparation. He also point out, correctly,
that the Army, which has participated in far more SO-type
activities sine 1789 than it has conventional wars, has hitherto
retained a mindset that stability operations are an anomaly rather
than the norm in American military operations. It is our hope that
this GWOT OP will be of great value in providing the military
professional with a broad overview of the history of the US Army's
participation in stability operations, and at least one historian's
view on how well it performed. Some may disagree with Dr. Yates'
views on specific aspects of his analysis; that is well and good.
If this GWOT OP stimulates a vigorous debate, Dr. Yates' study will
have achieved its purpose.
The Combat Studies Institute provides a wide range of military,
historical, and educational support to the Combined Arms Center,
Training and Doctrine Command, and the United States Army. The
Combat Studies Institute researches, writes, and publishes original
interpretive works on issues of relevance to the US Army. The
Combat Studies Institute (CSI) publication collection contains
reports and books pertaining to American history, military
guidelines, foreign affairs, and more. Titles featured in this
collection include: Art of War Papers: Protecting, Isolating, and
Controlling Behavior, Law of War: Can 20th Century Standards Apply
to the Global War on Terrorism? and Traditions, Changes, and
Challenges: Military Operations and the Middle Eastern City. This
title is one of many in the Combat Studies Institute collection.
The genesis of this work, "Fire for Effect: Field Artillery and
Close Air Support in the US Army," was the controversial decision
in 2001 to deploy Army combat units to Afghanistan without their
supporting field artillery units. Fire for Effect provides a
historical survey of the relationship between field artillery and
close air support (CAS) in the US Army since World War I. A
recurring theme in this survey is the desire of air operators for
independence in operations. This first occurs at the organizational
level in the development of strategic bombing theories and forces.
The desire for independence emerges also in Air Force doctrine
which stressed the importance of interdiction over CAS missions.
Eventually, the Army aviation community also sought independence in
the idea of the independent strike of attack helicopters, known as
the deep attack. This last concept became at least partially
discredited in the sands of Iraq in 2003. Independent air
operations contrast with the Army's traditional combined arms
concept where the arms and services work together to complement
each other's strengths and cover weaknesses. The field artillery
has long been a key member of the combined arms team. The Army
ground commander has controlled all the elements of this team
except the fixed-wing close air support. Despite the differences in
theory and practice, since the 1960s the two services have
developed cooperative and coordinated systems that have solved most
difficulties. Over these last 40 years, much progress has also been
made with the development of precision guided munitions, giving
both services the ability to use point fire weapons in their
delivery of CAS. As this study shows, the introduction of
sophisticated precision weapons has separated CAS from artillery,
creating distinct and complementary systems of fire support. Both,
however, remain necessary to give the ground commander responsive
and powerful fires in the broad variety of combat situations that
characterize the modern battlefield.
Making history useful to the reader - this is one of the missions
of the Combat Studies Institute. We strive to produce works that
recount historical events to inform decision makers and to enable
experiential learning. This collection of events put together by
John McGrath, which occurred in Iraq during the 2003-2005
timeframe, addresses that mission. The authors largely used primary
source material - interviews and unit histories - to develop these
vignettes and in doing so have made the works relatable not only to
Soldiers who experienced similar situations but to any reader who
can imagine themselves having to function in these types of
situations. We honor those involved in these actions and hope that
by recounting their stories others may not only recognize them for
their service but may also learn and grow from their experience.
This work is the continuation and revision of a project started in
2006 with the publication of "In Contact " by the Combat Studies
Institute. The original concept was to present a series of military
vignettes in a style similar to the widely used case-study
methodology commonly found in military literature. The final
version of "Between the Rivers," instead of following this strict
case-study format, presents combat action vignettes as narrative
accounts of the various types of actions challenging combat leaders
in Iraq in 2003-2005. The present volume lies directly within the
tradition of these predecessor works on small-unit actions. Since
the fall of2001, the United States Army, along with the other
American armed services, has been engaged in military actions in
Iraq and Afghanistan. Because the current conflict has so many
different fronts and facets, no handful of small- unit case studies
could do justice to such a complex tapestry of events. This book
thus represents a volume that showcases the American soldier in
combat operations within the context of the Global War on
Terrorism/The Long War. This series of five case studies is drawn
from events in Iraq. Four of the studies discuss combat operations
within a counterinsurgency framework at the company and battalion
levels. The final case study presents a deployment dilemma facing a
brigade-level task force commander when he was asked to replace a
whole division in the same geographical space. In each case, the
story is derived from oral interviews and key documents and is
fully annotated. The primary purpose for presenting these vignettes
is to provide a vicarious education in what future participants
will face as the War on Terrorism continues and beyond.
These proceedings are the third volume to be published in a series
generated by the annual military history symposium sponsored by the
US Army Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC). Each year, these
conferences bring together both military and civilian historians,
as well as formal and informal students of military history,
literally from around the world, for the purposes of presenting
ideas and points of view on current military issues from a
historical perspective. This year's symposium, hosted by the Combat
Studies Institute, was held 2-4 August 2005 at Fort Leavenworth,
Kansas. The 2005 symposium's theme was An Army at War: Change in
the Midst of Conflict. As this title indicates, presentations at
this event focused on how an Army changes while concurrently
fighting a war. Changing an Army in peacetime is difficult enough.
Transformation can include changes to the personnel system, the
turning in old and the fielding of new equipment, new training
requirements, and at times, learning an entirely new way of viewing
the enemy and the battle space in which operations will occur.
Practical and cultural changes in an Army always cause tremendous
turbulence and angst, both inside and outside of the Army. The
United States Army and the nation are facing these challenges
today, and they must make these changes not in a peacetime
environment, but while fighting the Global War on Terrorism (GWOT).
The panelists presented a series of topics addressing the current
transformation challenge that ranged from maneuver warfare, to
asymmetrical operations, to insurgencies, to logistics, to unit
manning, to doctrine and many others. This third collection of
proceedings contains the papers and presentations of participating
panelists. It also includes transcriptions of the question and
answer periods following the panelists' presentations. These annual
symposiums are proving to be a key annual event for those students
and masters of military history who believe that the past has
something useful to provide in the analysis of current military
problems.
This work studies the evolution, organizational structure, and
employment of the maneuver brigade. In passing, it discusses other
army brigades, such as those consisting of field artillery,
aviation, and engineer units. This special study illuminates the
history and evolution of the brigade as an organization in the US
Army, from the earliest days to the current era. It follows both
organizational structure and how it was actually employed on the
battlefield. It provides an organizational history of the maneuver
brigade and case studies of its employment throughout the various
wars. Apart from the text, the appendices at the end of the work
provide a ready reference to all brigade organizations used in the
Army since 1917 and the history of the brigade colors.
The Combat Studies Institute is pleased to present Scouts Out The
Development of Reconnaissance Units in Modern Armies by CSI
historian John J. McGrath. Scouts Out is a wide-ranging historical
survey of the theory, doctrine, organization, and employment of
reconnaissance units since the era of mechanization in the early
20th century. Reconnaissance and counterreconnaissance are
battlefield missions as old as military history itself and missions
for which many armies have created specialized units to perform. In
most cases, these units were trained, equipped, and used
differently from the majority of an army's fighting units. Horse
cavalry performed these missions for centuries, for it had speed
and mobility far in excess of main battle units. Once the horse was
replaced by mechanization, however, the mobility advantage once
enjoyed by the horse cavalry disappeared. Since the early 20th
century, the search for the proper mix of equipment, the proper
organization, and the proper employment of reconnaissance units has
bedeviled armies around the world. This survey uses a diverse
variety of historical cases to illustrate the enduring issues that
surround the equipping, organizing, and employment of
reconnaissance units. It seems that these specialized units are
either too heavily or too lightly equipped and too narrowly
specialized or too conventionally organized. Prewar reconnaissance
doctrines tend to undergo significant change once fighting begins,
leading to postconflict analysis that reconnaissance units were
"misused" in one way or another. McGrath ends his study with an
intriguing conclusion about the role that specialized
reconnaissance units should have in the future that may surprise
many readers. Scouts Out is a thought-provoking historical study
that we believe will contribute to the Army's current and future
transformation efforts.
The Combat Studies Institute provides a wide range of military,
historical, and educational support to the Combined Arms Center,
Training and Doctrine Command, and the United States Army. The
Combat Studies Institute researches, writes, and publishes original
interpretive works on issues of relevance to the US Army. The
Combat Studies Institute (CSI) publication collection contains
reports and books pertaining to American history, military
guidelines, foreign affairs, and more. Titles featured in this
collection include: Art of War Papers: Protecting, Isolating, and
Controlling Behavior, Law of War: Can 20th Century Standards Apply
to the Global War on Terrorism? and Traditions, Changes, and
Challenges: Military Operations and the Middle Eastern City. This
title is one of many in the Combat Studies Institute collection.
John McGrath's The Other End of the Spear is a timely historical
analysis and an important follow-on work to his earlier analysis of
troop density trends in CSI Occasional Paper 16, Boots on the
Ground. As that work showed, this paper also shows the timeless
value of history and its relevance to current events. Boots on the
Ground analyzed the ratio between the numbers of troops employed in
military operations relative to the population in a number of
irregular conflicts. This study analyzes the composition of such
forces to answer the question: what have been the historical trends
in the ratio of deployed forces directly engaged in fighting,
relative to those engaged in noncombat functions? This ratio is
commonly, if inaccurately, called the "tooth-to-tail ratio."
McGrath's study finds that the tooth-to-tail ratio, among types of
deployed US forces, has steadily declined since World War II, just
as the nature of warfare itself has changed. At the same time, the
percentage of deployed forces devoted to logistics functions and to
base and life support functions have both increased, especially
with the advent of the large-scale of use of civilian contractors.
A segment of American military historians and policy makers has
long been enamored with a genre of military history that seeks to
quantify war, to reduce it to known variables, and to posit
solutions to future military conflicts based on mathematical
formulae. The practice of war contains a strong element of science,
but in the end, the practice of war is an art. This study cannot be
used to guarantee victory simply by composing a force of the
proportional figures presented in the conclusion. However, it does
provide a good baseline, based on historical precedent, for future
planning. This work, coupled with Boots on the Ground, provides a
unique analysis of the size and composition of military forces as
found in historical patterns. Policy makers, commanders, and staff
officers should use these two studies as a basis from which to
begin their analysis of the particular campaign at hand. They will
then need to apply their understanding of the objectives, the
nature of the conflict, and local and regional culture and
conditions to the analysis to create a winning military plan. It is
our belief at CSI that this kind of historical analysis will inform
and educate today's military and civilian leaders as they carry out
our nation's most important policies.
This book looks at several troop categories based on primary
function and analyzes the ratio between these categories to develop
a general historical ratio. This ratio is called the Tooth-to-Tail
Ratio. McGrath's study finds that this ratio, among types of
deployed US forces, has steadily declined since World War II, just
as the nature of warfare itself has changed. At the same time, the
percentage of deployed forces devoted to logistics functions and to
base and life support functions have increased, especially with the
advent of the large-scale of use of civilian contractors. This work
provides a unique analysis of the size and composition of military
forces as found in historical patterns. Extensively illustrated
with charts, diagrams, and tables. (Originally published by the
Combat Studies Institute Press)
Originally published by the United States Army Combat Studies
Institute Press in 2009, this monograph is a wide-ranging
historical survey of the theory, doctrine, organization, and
employment of reconnaissance units since the era of mechanization
in the early 20th century. This study examines the development,
role, and employment of units in modern armies designed
specifically to perform reconnaissance and security
(counterreconnaissance) missions. The analysis discerns common
threads from the past. Conclusions are drawn from historical trends
that may apply to future force development planning and unit
operational employment. In the past, dedicated reconnaissance units
were unique in their organization and capabilities due to the
presence of the horse. This provided cavalry with a marked mobility
differential over infantry and artillery. In the mechanized age,
this monopoly on mobility vanished. Nonreconnaissance mechanized
and motorized forces were equipped with similar weapons and
vehicles. Reconnaissance units then became distinctive primarily by
their organizational structure and specialized mission rather than
by their equipment. This conceptual transformation has created a
great dichotomy for modern reconnaissance forces. Should such
forces be light or heavy? A lighter force might be able to conduct
reconnaissance operations, at least theoretically, in a more nimble
fashion, while a heavier force could defend itself when conducting
reconnaissance and security operations. An additional consideration
is the question as to what organizational level should dedicated
reconnaissance forces be provided and used. This work examines
these two major threads from a historical perspective since World
War I.
John McGrath's Crossing the Line of Departure is a wide-ranging
historical overview of that most difficult aspect of military
leadership, the art of battle command. McGrath leads the reader
through case studies beginning with Alexander the Great leading up
to the recent war in Iraq. Among others, he analyzes Napoleon's
technique, French and British practices in World War I, the German
experience with "Blitzkreig" in World War II, and the Soviet
approach to battle command. McGrath also extends his historical
analysis to the present day by presenting a description of battle
command theory in the "Modular Army" and the Information Age.
Through it all, he finds that the key to successful command in
battle, particularly in mobile operations, is found in the
successful interplay between technology and personal technique.
Unlike some pundits today, McGrath does not conclude that
information age technology is likely to shift the balance between
these poles in favor of technology dependence. The commander's
personal sense of where to be on the battlefield, where to locate
and how to use his headquarters staffs, and how to communicate with
his subordinates have been-and remain today-crucial elements of
successful battle command. A 21st century commander has use of
technology beyond the comprehension of an Alexander, a Napoleon, or
a Guderian; but he will continue to grapple with the same issues of
personal presence and technique that they mastered so well.
Crossing the Line of Departure brings to the fore insights, trends,
and leadership qualities needed for successful battle command.
While possessing knowledge of these traits does not guarantee
success on the battlefield, their absence will almost assuredly
bring defeat. We at the Combat Studies Institute believe that
McGrath's monograph, by casting light on the art and science of
battle command through the ages, will be a useful tool for
commanders and staffs as they prepare for future operations.
John McGrath's Crossing the Line of Departure is a wide-ranging
historical overview of that most difficult aspect of military
leadership, the art of battle command. McGrath leads the reader
through case studies beginning with Alexander the Great leading up
to the recent war in Iraq. Among others, he analyzes Napoleon's
technique, French and British practices in World War I, the German
experience with "Blitzkreig" in World War II, and the Soviet
approach to battle command. McGrath also extends his historical
analysis to the present day by presenting a description of battle
command theory in the "Modular Army" and the Inforamation Age.
Through it all, he finds that the key to successful command in
battle, particularly in mobile operations, is found in the
successful interplay between technology and personal technique.
Unlike some pundits today, McGrath does not conclude that
information age technology is likely to shift the balance between
these poles in favor of technology dependence. The commander's
personal sense of where to be on the battlefield, where to locate
and how to use his headquarters staffs, and how to communicate with
his subordinates have been-and remain today-crucial elements of
successful battle command. A 21st century commander has use of
technology beyond the comprehension of an Alexander, a Napoleon, or
a Guderian; but he will continue to grapple with the same issues of
personal presence and technique that they mastered so well.
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