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197 Page February 1944 FM 21-75 Scouting Patrolling And Sniping Manual on CD

$ 7.91

Availability: 72 in stock

Description

All derivative (i.e. change in media; by compilation) work from this underlying U.S. Government public domain/public release data is COPYRIGHT © GOVPUBS
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PREFACE
This publication contains doctrinal guidelines for the employment and training of ranger
units. The intended audience is intermediate and higher level commanders, staffs of those
headquarters, and newly assigned officers and NCOs of the ranger regiment. It is to be
used with all other published US doctrine concerning NBC operations and the climatic or
geographic influences on combat. The fundamentals apply to the employment of ranger
units on worldwide operations and across the spectrum of conflict from low to high
intensity warfare. This includes all aspects of the integrated battlefield: nuclear,
biological, and chemical. It is not intended to apply to the employment of long-range
reconnaissance patrol (LRRP) companies, even though such units carry the designation
"ranger." These LRRP companies, as well as the long-range surveillance company
(LRSC) (corps level) and the long-range surveillance detachment (LRSD) (division
level), are organized, trained, and equipped for long-range reconnaissance in enemy
territory.
The scope of this publication addresses the mission, organization, equipment,
capabilities, limitations, planning, training, operations, and logistical support of ranger
units. It describes how the ranger regiment and its subordinate battalions train, receive
taskings, plan missions, task-organize, deploy, and integrate supporting elements to perform the mission.                                                                                                                                                                    Once in combat, the ranger regiment maneuvers to accomplish the
mission in the manner of other light infantry units. Ranger units make full use of
published light infantry doctrinal guidance. This manual will repeat procedures or
techniques contained in other publications only if necessary for understanding or
continuity.
This publication does not contain everything the ranger needs to know to successfully
execute a unit mission. Rather, it supplements unit training and the ranger unit
commander's guidance; it does not supersede it.