Airsoft Action 06 - Feb 2012 | Page 23

rustling sweetie papers. The rear protection commander will also have comms with the overall ambush commander, because it’s no good having eyes all round if the commander has no way of finding out what’s going on around him. The 360° around your roving patrol or location are broken down for simplicity, into four 90° angles. Each of you will be allocated an arc to watch, or if there are more of you then the Commander might do it by eye, the situation will dictate. Don’t forget though that the 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. And so when you’re asked, ever so politely and in a reasonable tone, to cover your arcs, you should watch your 90° section, and where possible do it over the sights of your weapon. That way you’ll be in a position to engage the enemy quickly, thus denying him the element of surprise. So by covering your arcs you’re keeping your eyes open for the opposition. And this is not a technique that was thought up by the British Army either – it’s a basic of any military unit. The Roman Army were so impressed with the vigilance of geese they encountered in the wild that they used them to guard the perimeters of their forts over 2,000 years ago. While hunting them for food the Roman soldiers observed that, while the majority of the flock were heads down, eating grass, there were always smaller groups of threes and fours standing watch on each of the corners, and without any noticeable communication they would occasionally swap duties, thereby always maintaining a constant watch over the flock, who were exposed on the fens and mud flats. So the Romans caught live Geese and stationed groups of four or five at the corners of their forts and camps, and during the night the ever-watchful geese would call out in alarm if they were approached. Effective, and considerably cheaper than drones and computers – and they could eat them too! So if you find yourself static or in a base location, and you haven’t remembered to bring the geese, it’s down to you. While out SKILLS ROOM patrolling you still have to cover your arcs, but you have to do it on the move, so how do you divvy up the duties? You divide up the arcs using your line of march or advance, so the soldier at the front is responsible for the 180° to his front, and obviously the rear man is responsible for the rear 180°. The rear man can’t walk backwards otherwise he’d be forever falling over, so what he does is every so often walk swiftly up to the man in front of him, and then turns to face the rear and have a good scan of his arc for 10 seconds or so, and then continue his march. The soldiers in the patrol will then alternately take the left and right, but all will look to cover the whole of the flank 180° and not just 90°. The guy at the front has the hardest job, and the most stressful; he is probably the most vulnerable, depending on where you think the enemy is, and he will be the first to get it if he stumbles into an www.airsoftactionmagazine.com 023