Airsoft Action 06 - Feb 2012 | Page 22

FIELDCRAFT COVERING YOUR ARCS Billy Basics: “Doing the basics well is the foundation of all soldiering” A nyone who has put on a military uniform, be it as a TA Soldier, a Regular or as an airsofter, will have heard the term ‘Cover your arcs’ – sometimes as a quick reminder in a brief, sometimes in a harsh tone from the Section Commander or Squad Leader encouraging you to switch on. But what does it actually mean? How do you do it, and why? The word arcs (in the dictionary: an unbroken part of the circumference of a circle or curved line) refers to the 360° horizontally surrounding your location (which must be observed if you are to guarantee your security). Another term you might have heard is ‘all-round defence’ which speaks for itself. That might be when you’re out patrolling, in an offensive role, or in a static base location. Even in an ambush situation, despite the fact that it’s an offensive patrol it is still a patrol with not unlimited firepower, and therefore potentially vulnerable. The ambush group would still have its arcs covered, with the left cut off/right cut off fulfilling their roles, the main killer group facing the expected direction of the enemy approach. But what about the rear area, behind all the firepower? What if an enemy patrol ahead of the main force to be ambushed, stumbled into the rear of the ambush group? Contact to the rear? Confusion would reign. So this is where we find the oft-forgotten rear protection, which will have the important task of guarding the Bergen cache or day sacks. They’ll be keeping an eye on the rear and hopefully they won’t be “…arcs need to be interlocking, or in layman’s terms overlapping, so that there are no gaps in your vigilant watch through which a cunning enemy can approach” 022 February 2012