How to Study a Battle

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How to Study a Battle Military History and Combat Leader Development PME for Company Officers LtCol B.B. McBreen

New Challenges for Officers Lower echelons of combined arms teams Lower echelons of decisionmaking Increasing Technology / C2 / SA / Media Combat Power, Precision, and Range / Joint Operations Weapons / System complexity / Close urban terrain Irregular conflicts / COIN / Indigenous Forces / Cultures Smaller Combined Arms Forces + Complex conflicts = Increasing Expectations of Competence Of both you and your people 2

Increasing Expectations of Competence Solution: Increase abilities of commanders Increase experience, training, and education: Fanatical pursuit of tactical excellence Increase pace of self-development: Old heads on young shoulders Squeeze 20 years of experience into 10 years The Marine Corps cannot adequately prepare you. What do we do to compensate? 3

Fight alongside your ancestors The human dimension never changes Battle references: shorthand of the profession The Key Leaders and the Key Decisions Read widely, outside USMC, pull carefully Know 20 battles Naktong Bulge: 1950 2 / 5 Operation COBRA: 1944 CCA 3rd AD 4

Ancestors Capt Charles MacDonald Capt Hans von Luck Capt Richard Winters Maj John Howard Capt William E. DePuy Capt Samuel Jaskilka Capt Ron Christmas Capt I / 3 / 23 Inf K / PzAA 37 E / 2 / 506 PIR D / 2 / OBLI C / 1 / 357 Inf E / 2 / 5 Mar H / 2 / 5 Mar OEF / OIF 2ID 7PzD 101AB 6PD 90ID 1MarDiv 1MarDiv USMC 5

How to Select a Battle Teach in order to Understand Select a battle that interests you. Select something small. Stay focused. Select something relevant. Sources: The military leader is a historian Read as if you are going to explain it later you are. Say more than you show. Hand out more than you say. Know the one standard text. Review the others. 6

How to Present a Battle Why do I care? Justify your issues to the audience Like a movie, create interest in the first two minutes Use the stories of real people to gain interest Specificity is the Key: Focus! One take-away lesson. One memorable thesis. Follow a single Unit. Follow a single Leader. Follow a single Decision, Issue or Event. 7

Battle Study: The Seven Products 1. An Overview Strategic to operational to tactical 2. A Map on the Wall Combat leaders know that the dirt is reality 3. A Task Organization 4. An Enemy Organization 5. A Timeline 6. A Lessons Learned Summarize relevant issues 7. A Bibliography [Op HUSKY Handout] 8

Go Deeper than the Fight Compare their army to ours What does this battle mean to us today? Learn about armies IOT look at ourselves Look for deeper issues: Military Anthropology How are institutions Built? Evolve? Fail? Officer Selection? Education? Professionalism? See Atkinson, Perret or DePuy on the U.S Army, Doughty on the French, Van Crevald on the Germans Not battles, but institutions 9

COIN Battle Study Challenges Diplomatic, Economic, Information vectors No battles. No states. No governments. No enemy order of battle Years and years of conflict Revolutionary theory vs tactical decisions Insurgents start with nothing but a cause the counter-insurgents start with everything but a cause and gradually decline 10

COIN Battle Study Questions How well did the army know their enemy? How well did the army adjust to the fight? How well did key leaders direct the fight? What tactical actions supported or contradicted the strategic goals? How well did military leaders support diplomatic, economic, and information leaders, organizations, and objectives? What can Marines learn from this conflict? Who else can learn from this conflict? 11

Dozens of Battle Study Examples: www.2ndbn5thmar.com/history/battlestudies.htm Task Force Smith 1950 2ndbn5thmar.com/history/TFSmith1950.pdf Op HUSKY 1943 2ndbn5thmar.com/history/505thPIR1943.pdf The Battle of Goose Green 2ndbn5thmar.com/history/2Para1982.pdf Kampfgruppen in BARBAROSSA 2ndbn5thmar.com/history/6thPzDiv1941.pdf 12