enfield
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I'm posting this here as a reply to a tangent that developed in this thread: http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/58084.60.html. The Mods may want to clean this up, but I wanted to seperate the replies.
I don’t have anything handy for other armies or WW2, but I will note I said “Allied” armies in my post, since I realize their policies were different from, say, Germany and Russia in ‘41-‘45. I pulled some stats from Mud, Blood and Poppycock by Gordon Corrigan, who gives figures for WW1. A British infantry battalion in WW1 rarely spent more than 10 days a month in the firing line, often much less, and almost never spent more than 4-5 continuous days there.
When not in the frontline they were in the secondary lines (out of most small arms fire, but subject to artillery fire) or were in the rear areas, essentially billeted in completely safe French towns, and divisions spent long periods out of the line altogether on training, R&R, or preparing for an offensive - battalions could go months without nearing the frontline, as Marshals and Adjutants arranged their forces. Of course the battles and offensives were bloody, horrible, and long and soldiers could be there until their divisions were ground to pulp, but this was the exception, not the rule - the major battles were not constant. The war was by no means easy, but there were longer breaks between the stress of combat or immediate danger.
The advent of fast transport rapidly increased the amount of combat time soldiers accumulated and increased the combat stress per soldier. Helicopters especially erased the transit time (the many days spent moving to the front, the weeks on ships, etc) and made almost everyday a combat day for Western soldiers in wars since the 1960s. I’ve read some interesting studies of the effect of airmobility on infantry combat in Vietnam and Rhodesia – distance was no longer a limitation to combat. No matter where the enemy was, troops could be flown in to meet them, whereas in previous wars combat was limited to local troops, and reinforcements took longer to move in.
The move to asymmetrical warfare increases this tendency. I won’t get into a discussion of its worse or harder or gorier, as that would be a disservice to all veterans. I am simply looking at days spent on "the front" or "in combat". I think it goes without saying that Afghanistan (or Iraq) lacks the intensity or scale of WW1/2, but for the troops involved the stresses and feelings are probably similar.
Matt_Fisher said:I'm with Kiwi on this one, in that I don't think that we should assume that simply by being in theatre someone is going to go insane or experience levels of PTSD that will incapacitate them. Lets look at history, in the First and Second World Wars, we had troops that remained in combat/in theatre for years at a time.
Staff Weenie said:Enfield - suck back and reload here - go back and read your basic history texts on WWI and WWII combat. Rotation in/out of the lines was particular to each nation's approach, and could differ greatly. Some nations ground their Divisions to a pulp before replacing them. Having units in high intensity combat day in, day out, for over a month, was entirely within the realm of possibility.
I don’t have anything handy for other armies or WW2, but I will note I said “Allied” armies in my post, since I realize their policies were different from, say, Germany and Russia in ‘41-‘45. I pulled some stats from Mud, Blood and Poppycock by Gordon Corrigan, who gives figures for WW1. A British infantry battalion in WW1 rarely spent more than 10 days a month in the firing line, often much less, and almost never spent more than 4-5 continuous days there.
When not in the frontline they were in the secondary lines (out of most small arms fire, but subject to artillery fire) or were in the rear areas, essentially billeted in completely safe French towns, and divisions spent long periods out of the line altogether on training, R&R, or preparing for an offensive - battalions could go months without nearing the frontline, as Marshals and Adjutants arranged their forces. Of course the battles and offensives were bloody, horrible, and long and soldiers could be there until their divisions were ground to pulp, but this was the exception, not the rule - the major battles were not constant. The war was by no means easy, but there were longer breaks between the stress of combat or immediate danger.
The advent of fast transport rapidly increased the amount of combat time soldiers accumulated and increased the combat stress per soldier. Helicopters especially erased the transit time (the many days spent moving to the front, the weeks on ships, etc) and made almost everyday a combat day for Western soldiers in wars since the 1960s. I’ve read some interesting studies of the effect of airmobility on infantry combat in Vietnam and Rhodesia – distance was no longer a limitation to combat. No matter where the enemy was, troops could be flown in to meet them, whereas in previous wars combat was limited to local troops, and reinforcements took longer to move in.
The move to asymmetrical warfare increases this tendency. I won’t get into a discussion of its worse or harder or gorier, as that would be a disservice to all veterans. I am simply looking at days spent on "the front" or "in combat". I think it goes without saying that Afghanistan (or Iraq) lacks the intensity or scale of WW1/2, but for the troops involved the stresses and feelings are probably similar.