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TOP TIP!

For creating and defending your position...

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  If you’re staying for a while dig a nice comfortable hole

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  If there is a chance of armour make sure you have something to stop it

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  Use mortars against infantry in the open

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  Use GMGs or .50cal Brownings against enemy protected by walls or in buildings

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  Sight-in heavy weapons onto likely targets before the off

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  Razor wire slows the enemy’s advance over the killing ground

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  Cover wire with guns and mines

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  Stay cool, go steady with the ammo but keep shooting

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Mortars lay down defensive fire. (Corbis)

Your mortar commander calls out there is a column of tanks coming over the bridge. They look like Russian T55s – the last-but-one generation main battle tank of the Soviet Union now sold all over the Third World. Not high-tech but reliable with thick armour and a heavy gun. So the nationals over the river are involved. Surely they can’t be hoping to keep armour on this side of the bridge? Your aircraft would destroy it in moments – if they were around. But they aren’t are they? They are sitting in their bunkers and hardened shelters 200 miles away while the airfield protection teams chase off the guys with the missile launchers.

You decide the opposition are aiming to assault and overrun your position with armoured support and then the armour will return to safety over the river leaving the visiting terrorists with a free hand. And you waiting for the body bags to take you home. There is no air support because NATO Air Forces are under unusually heavy attack at their base. The opposition has brought out some decent missiles – probably black market Stingers – for the occasion and if they are sacrificing these to keep friendly air assets on the ground just to attack your position they must be serious. And you are on your own.

Assessment

It looks like the opposition are going to make a serious attempt to take your position so they can get men into the country to disrupt the elections. They have tried artillery and, thank God, been stopped by a simple threat of destruction by the high-ups on your side. Now they are pressing forward with an infantry attack supported by ex-Russian tanks. Where the heavy artillery could have destroyed you in your bunkers with a couple of salvos the tanks would take some time and are really to keep your heads well down while the infantry close with you. But they can do that very effectively if you can’t neutralize them. You realize that this attack depends entirely on the tanks. If you don’t stop them you will be overrun and already the attacking infantry are in their assault positions.

Contact

Fortunately, they don’t seem to realize you have the Javelins. The .50cal Brownings could give armoured cars a headache but hardly scratch a T55. The Javelin, though, was designed to destroy a modern main battle tank and against these old jobs it will be like using a sledge hammer on a peanut.

The tanks are coming over the bridge now – if they fired from the other side there would be hell to pay with Division probably allowing our fly boys to launch a devastating air attack over the river against anything they could find. So the tanks are going to cross the river, take up a position a few hundred yards away and shell you steadily while the infantry advance from the flank. Classic stuff.

The attacking force have set up an 82mm mortar section about a half a mile away and they are starting to lob bombs onto your position. The tanks are over the bridge now and have turned along the road the form up line abreast facing the position. Then everything kicks off at once. You glance at your watch for your Contact Report and it is 21:07.

The Javelin team open up first and take out the lead tank, then the other end to block them in and work their way along the line. As it is hit each tank smokes then erupts in jets of flame and blows its own turret off as the propellant charges and shells inside detonate. In two or three minutes they are all burning wrecks.

As soon as the Javelins open fire so do the GMGs, the .50cal Brownings, your mortars and the rifle sections. The GMGs and Brownings take out the enemy mortars in moments as their heavy rounds cut straight through the sandbag wall protecting the crew.

The mortar crews have the key areas marked on their charts and they are able to bring down a murderous fire onto the attacking forces all around the position. Mortars are no use against men dug in holes but against troops caught in the open like this they are devastating. Stuck between the wire coils the attackers are slaughtered by mortar, GMG and rifle fire.

The few remaining enemy are visible running in the middle distance – until they are brought down by your snipers. You glance again at your watch and the time is 21:21.

It is all over in 14 minutes.

Summary

Every situation is different, of course, but I’ve tried here to give you a view of the principle weapons and events that the ordinary infantry soldier might come across in a set-piece firefight within a counter-insurgency situation. This ought to give you a feel of how different weapons are used for different tasks. Maybe not all at once, and maybe you don’t have the right ones when you need them, but this little scenario should show you why you have to do some things and how everything fits together. I always think weapons and tactics work like the game of Rock, Paper, Scissors.

Probably the most surprising thing to the soldier new to combat is how quickly things move when they start. Rather than a romantic struggle between two evenly matched teams most battles are a slaughter. This is because one side, normally the one initiating the contact, usually has a decisive advantage in terms of weapons, position, training or all three. An ambush should be over in a few seconds. An air strike on a road convoy the same. About the only time a contact should take a long time is when you are in a strong position and the enemy will not come close enough to be killed but rather take pot shots and loose off machine guns and RPG7s from the middle distance. Even then, you can often bring in air assets to destroy them quickly.

The long part is the waiting for something to happen. For the kick off. I suppose it has always been that way and that the Roman Legionnaires would have felt at home.

TOP TIP!

Surviving an interrogation

As a British SAS, US Navy SEAL, Russian Spetznaz or other SF operator you will often be behind enemy lines without heavy support to get you out of trouble. So if something goes wrong you may find yourself a prisoner and subject to an interrogation. In this situation, what can you do to improve your experience? To some extent knowledge dispels fear so let me tell you a little about interrogation techniques. But bear in mind that resistance is only a delaying tactic as a skilled interrogator will always get you to talk in the end.

Most amateur interrogators start with a beating. This is good as it does not hurt much, it may dull your senses for later and it may buy you some time. Remember when Andy McNab was captured by the Iraqis he was held for six weeks and tortured by amateurs. When released he had nerve damage to both hands, a dislocated shoulder and hepatitis – which is not too bad compared to what might have happened.