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Military tactics and information
I'm going to be starting a Twilight 2000/2013 campaign soon. I was wondering if there was some information about military tactics, communication, organization, what officers do, and so forth that someone with more knowledge than me could direct me too. I've never been in the military and almost all of my information comes from the movies(defilade sounds cool! Don't know what it means, but it sounds cool).
Something that's not textbook size. Youtube would be great. Do any video games help with this that someone could recommend? Thanks, Michael |
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Fm 7-8
fm 7-10 |
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Quote:
Seriously, some short bits: 1. Duck. 2. Have scouts out. 3. Split your force into 2-3 elements, have 1-2 start shooting at the bad guys, while the other sneaks up beside or behind them (this is called the bounding overwatch). The Infantry School at Fort Benning used to summarize infantry tactics as, "Two up, one back; hit 'em in the flank and serve a hot meal." 4. The guy who commits his reserve last, or best, will win the day. Concerning organization and officers: a commander should have between 3-5 subordinates reporting to him, or that he gives directions to. Any more than that, and it's easy to overload.
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My Twilight claim to fame: I ran "Allegheny Uprising" at Allegheny College, spring of 1988. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Full_Spectrum_Warrior
I played this a few times and seems to be the best for working out tactics.
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************************************* Each day I encounter stupid people I keep wondering... is today when I get my first assault charge?? |
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As you are a film fan try watching the following:
* An Ungentlemanly Act (Falklands - possibly my favourite - very realistic and accurate) * Tumbledown (Falklands again - very gritty) * Falling Skies (Alien invasion - particularly the end of series two for civil-military relations but some very nice weapon handling drills throughout) * Apocalypse Now (Vietnam - if nothing else for the insanity of it) * Band of Brothers (WW2 although tactics have moved on) * Black Hawk Down (Somalia - good idea of urban fighting) * Bravo 20 (Gulf War - some of the best fire and movement on film) * Tears of the Sun (Africa - useful for how a fire team acts in combat) That should give a good starting point. |
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Two off the recommened reading list for the military is the NCO Handbook (US Army) and the Last Hundred Yards (USMC).
The Handbook covers basic leadership skills for new sergeants. The Hundred Yards covers in more detail (and easier to read format) a lot of the basic skills at small unit level. You can also cruise the DOD websites and look over the recommend reading lists, these books will give you a better feel for the military. And don't forget that we have a large number of current and former servicemembers on this forum, just ask and someone will respond!
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The reason that the American Army does so well in wartime, is that war is chaos, and the American Army practices chaos on a daily basis. |
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Quote:
Every nation has differing ideas on what is the RIGHT way to do things in combat.
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If it moves, shoot it, if not push it, if it still doesn't move, use explosives. Nothing happens in isolation - it's called "the butterfly effect" Mors ante pudorem |
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