Posts: 506 Location: NC
Sun 20 Nov, 2011 12:03 am
I did a 300 or so yard sprint down a Bagdad street in IBA (Body armor), water, weapon, gear and ammo, about 50 to 60 pounds. I don’t know how fast I was running, everything goes in to ‘combat time’ in your brain. I hate to say ‘unless you have been there you just don’t know’. Its sort of like being in an accident or such, it is sort of slow motion but really it’s your brain thinking faster. Time is weird, but I covered the distance and was able to engage in; 1 a physical altercation (nice way of saying I kicked a guy in the chest to put him down, call for a medic, and start rendering first aid on two other guys. Back then I wore my ammo on leg rigs off my belt, so its sort of like having leg armor on. The whole crappy part of it was, they were drunk and blew through the barrier we put up and meant no harm. No one died by the way. I just use that as an illustration of what a person can do. I am not trying to brag or toot my own horn, just using a personal experience to relate to what someone can do. The driver by the way spoke fairly good English and when I realized he was drunk I chewed him out and called him everything but the son of a kind and benevolent Superior Being and told him his friend was shot up because they were drinking and driving, every body lived. (don’t drink and drive it ends badly every time)
There was no real thought through the whole thing, just observations and actions based on training. Any how, a knight put in ‘combat mode’ would move and react the same way. So that is why I sort of defaulted to ‘what would an insurgent do a thousand years ago’
I don’t know how many arrows you could shot at close combat range, if I had a bow, at that range and no armor I am going to try to get away. Nothing fancy just get away. More importantly as an insurgent bowman I am going to plan carefully so I don’t engage an armored opponent at close range. Longbow archers shoot from behind
shieldwalls at 100 or so yards for a reason. Heh, I have a really nice Hungarian bow, but I never shot it. If I do engage at close range it is going to be where I have the advantage, like where a road said armored guy is riding and has to go up a steep bank that horse cant/will not go up, and climbing in armor is nearly imposable, or across a wide deep trench, ditch, canal, stream, something with steep banks and soft sides and more importantly, none of his friends have bows either.
Back when I was a combat engineer we use to ‘sculpt the battle field’ by creating obstacles, and obstacle belts, we had different ways of laying them in for different effects. There were Turn obstacles to move an opposing force in a direction you wanted or to ground you wanted them in, Fix obstacles that temporary fixed an opposing force in place while they expended breaching assets and our forces engaged with heavy weapons from dug in positions and Block obstacles which did just that, blocked a path. Block took the longest to put in, and on the other side expended the maximum amount of resources, equipment and men to breach. Mostly I am talking about minefields, but there are wire obstacles, both barbed wire and concertina wire (think meter wide slinky made of barbed wire) you could do the same with vines, rope and twine. One obstical is called tangle foot that is just a ankle high grid of wire to ‘tangle you up’ see here
http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/librar...907_10.htm do not skip the use of ‘explosive’ obstacles or land mines, the concept of use if not the actual mines themselves apply, by the way in 1272 the Chinese used the first explosive land mines, and some were Very complex with time delays and all sorts of nasty effects. But look at the use of obstacles rather than what they are made of. There are lots of wire, trench, fence obstacles. Pay particular attention to the section on improvised obstacles. Phony obstacles work too “They left a wagon in the road last year, when we approached they fired arrows from uphill, turn back, we will be pincushioned” you could look here
http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/librar...ch3.htm#s3 on ambushes a bit more than halfway down the page and how to do basic combat patrolling as well.
It is pretty dry reading by the way, army tec manuals.