Monday, November 3, 2014

"Such gear was for killing civilians, not enemy soldiers."

When I was at the range the other day scrounging brass from the weeds and empty packaging from the trash cans, there was a fellow who was wearing his full battle-rattle and had at least two pistols, a shotgun on a back scabbard and a tricked out Kalashnikov. Also hanging from his webbing were two knives and a machete, the latter also slung on his back. He had no butt pack for rations or extra ammo. Pretty much suspecting the answer beforehand, I asked him if he was a veteran of the Southwest Asian conflicts. No, he said, but he had studied under a prominent "prepper trainer." "I see," I replied. "Don't you find that a bit heavy and restricting on the move?" I asked. No, he replied, "it's just a matter of getting used to it." He was also more than a little overweight. I commented that he didn't seem to have a water source on him -- nary a canteen nor a hydration bladder. Yeah, well, he was going to get around to that, he replied. I also noted to myself that he positively clanked every time he moved. I was tempted to try to counsel the boy, but time was running short, my scrounging work was done and more fund-raising beckoned down the road. I hung around long enough to also note that his marksmanship with the AK was of the "empty-the-mag-spray-and-pray" sort. I did give him my card, so perhaps he will read this and reassess his "preps."
In any case, I was reminded of him when, last night in my usual insomnia, I pulled down my dog-eared copy of David Rieff's Slaughterhouse: Bosnia and the Failure of the West, and read these paragraphs:
Still. if the ordinary Bosnian Serb soldier was often cold, wet, and homesick for his family, he was also overconfident as a result of experiencing the fighting as a nearly unbroken string of victories. Except in a few places like the area around Brcko, where Bosnian army and Croat militia forces had achieved some tactical parity, even Bosnian Serb regiments that had simply been transformed as units to General Mladic's command by their former Yugoslav National Army commanders after April 1992 often took on the appearance of irregulars. Spit and polish gave way to the Rambo look. To watch these soldiers strut around in their headbands and their beards, often carrying not just an assault rifle but a submachine gun and a pistol, and an impressive assortment of knives, was frightening but not impressive. As a UN military observer once commented to me, such gear was for killing civilians, not enemy soldiers. If, he said, the Serbs had believed that they were going to face people who could effectively shoot back, they would have carried more ammunition and fewer weapons, and have fired in the short bursts necessary to hit a particular target, rather than in the wild, clip-emptying salvos of fighters who neither knew nor cared much about where their bullets would finally land.
Another foreign military man, a British member of the European Community peacekeeping monitors . . . once told me that what had most impressed him was that "no one seems remotely interested in digging in." His incredulity did not exactly jibe with the anxieties that his colleagues in UNPROFOR expressed so religiously. And yet, as he pointed out, the tactics the Bosnian Serb Army used -- heavy bombardment,; then shooting at random with small arms to produce the maximum amount of terror in the civilian population; rape, if one believed the stories -- were perfectly chosen tactics if ethnic cleansing was the real goal. "When you fire an automatic weapon," he said, "the whole trick is to squeeze the trigger and then immediately stop squeezing. Even in that time, some of the bullets will go wide or high. But of course those fellows are not aiming at other soldiers. They're aiming at the whole village, so you might say that from their point of view, every shot they fire hits the mark."

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

In the old west, the guy who won a gunfight wasn't the fast-draw guy. It was the guy who took that extra split second, keeping his cool, to place the well aimed shot. I've watched clowns on TV's "Doomsday Preppers" with the AR 15's with all the bells and whistles that couldn't hit the broad side of a barn. If you can't even hit the paper at 100 yards with iron sights then you need practice, not bells and whistles. What's needed is decent physical condition for fast movement, carry the basics for being out in the woods a night or two (that includes water!) and get out there and practice how to move quickly and quietly.One more thing I've found: know your area of operations. To me that means, know footpaths, streams, railroad right-of-ways, where properties have fences and where there aren't any, ambush points along all those ways of travel. How to read topographic maps and use a compass. Get out there and walk those paths. If a 1000 ft. mountain is one of your paths you better get in shape to move up that thing or a five year old will be able to catch up to you. When you've got all that down pat, then worry about the bells and whistles..

Anonymous said...

Most "militia" don't have a hope in hell of actually fighting anyone. They; like the "tacticool" weenies, and super range Rambo's ,don't train because they believe that looking all bad ass and a tricked out AR are all you need to scare off the "Feds". Honestly they think that CWII will consist mostly of riding around drinking PBR . Shooting will only consist of mag-dumps, and "cutting the pie" OH! and tactical walking---Ray

Anonymous said...

Mike, fear not that your wisdom is going unappreciated.

I believe your site is an archive of accumulated wisdom, just like the comment of the poster before me.

Also one that is quietly appreciated by those who are far enough to know better, who have done the work to know its a process, a discipline to be ready.

And while good gear matters, and how to use it, its really not about the gear.

Max said...

I am a seventy-one-year old woman, and I totally get what this means:

...Carry more ammo and fewer weapons....

j said...

Good stuff. And you gotta watch out for those \clip emptying salvos', which I guess are like gremlins who sneak in at night and empty your Garand clips.

Anonymous said...

Bet'cha it was the Fat Ninja: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=EWvgAM7ISmI

The internet is to blame for this. You were much too kind to that semi-mobile resupply point. Oh well. All you can do is light a candle and not curse the darkenss.

REM1875 said...

Rather impressive skill there. If I ever need gun bearer, I would love to look this fellow up. I also realise he wont cut and run on me because of the weight and there fore he will be one they target if I need to leave the ao quickly.