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INFANTRY OVERLOAD

Major Scott R. McMichael, an expert in the field, once provided a list of “light infantry
proverbs” in Military Review Magazine. Just a few examples show what real light
infantry is.

Light forces are undaunted by terrain. Terrain is viewed as an ally, a combat multiplier
for the light infantryman. Light forces are terrain-oriented. Very little terrain is
impassable to true light infantry.

Light infantry does best when it lives on, in and off the land. It must be comfortable “in
the bush.”

Conventional tactics are no good for light forces.

Light infantry forces must be masters of improvisation, familiar with all kinds of
weapons, vehicles, landing craft, and so forth.

Light infantry must remain flexible in mind and action, capable of reacting quickly.

Weapons used by light forces must not impose a logistical burden. If equipment cannot
be man-packed or mule/donkey-packed, the light infantry generally has little use for it.

Light forces can operate separated from their lines of communications by depending on
enemy and indigenous supplies.

Light infantrymen must be able to climb, crawl, swim, ski, snowshoe, rappel, stalk, run
and hide.

That is what McMichael, H. John Poole, and William S. Lind mean when they talk about
classic light infantry.

Not this.
Unfortunately, as near as I can tell, the modern United States Army defines light infantry
as, “Ain’t got no trucks.” Light infantry means you can shove a whole bunch of heavy
infantry into C-5s and C-130’s and dump them off somewhere around the globe without
combined arms support or logistics and crow that you’ve deployed a division in so many
hours. Lacking any real mechanized capability, this light infantry walks wherever they
go, but they still have to wear and carry all the crap a mechanized grunt would while
riding in a Bradley.

While the infantryman’s load has always been too heavy in the rifleman’s opinion, the
modern American Army and Marines have taken gear to completely obscene new
heights. Or rather, their “leaders” have forced them to take their gear weight to
completely obscene new heights. For Pete’s sake, a mule, bred for centuries as a pack
animal, is not supposed to pack over one third of its body weight or it will ruin the
animal. You’d probably get arrested for animal cruelty for treating a mule the way the
Army treats its infantrymen and the Marines treat their riflemen.

It’s not like the knowledge that over-burdening soldiers is a bad thing was kept secret and
came as some big surprise that was suddenly sprung upon America’s military at the last
second before the latest deployment. At the turn of the last century, about the time of our
Spanish-American War, the Institute William Frederick in Germany was doing in-depth
studies and experiments concerning the infantryman’s load. Their conclusion: 48 pounds
per man. British studies in the 1920’s concluded that the load should be between 40-45
pounds, or one third of a person’s body weight. Further experiments in the 1930’s
suggested dropping the load to 31 pounds! At the end of WWII, the Russians came up
with a load of forty pounds after their own studies. Shortly thereafter, American General
S.L.A. Marshall concluded that 51 pounds was the optimal soldier’s load in training; for
combat, it should never be more than four-fifths of that amount. In 1954, the USMC
concluded a grunt should have a load of no more than 55 pounds for a road march, and 40
lbs for combat. Another study in 1971 concluded the Marine should carry 40% of his
body weight on the march, and no more than 30% in combat.

Yet today in Iraq and Afghanistan, the supposedly mythical 120-pound ruck is still alive
and well in the American military, doing fine, and even reproducing.

As for the other side, a Pakistani Army officer aiding the Mujahedeen during the Soviet-
Afghan War noted what little they needed to sustain themselves in combat.

In practical terms the Mujahid can live off the land, or rather from the villages, until the
Soviet scorched earth policy became widespread. Even when he takes rations on the
march all he needs is nan (flat bread) and tea to sustain him for days on end. The fatty
bread is carried wrapped in a blanket, or cloth, and becomes rotten with age, making it
the most revolting of meals. Nevertheless, it is eaten. The Mujahideen can walk for days,
even weeks, on the minimum of food; then, when the opportunity comes, they will stuff
themselves with huge quantities, stocking themselves up like camels for the next journey.

After their weapon, the next most valued possession is their blanket. It is usually a
grayish-brown colour, and is used day and night for a wide number of purposes. The
Mujahideen uses it as a coat, or cloak, for warmth in winter, or against the wind; they
crouch under it to conceal themselves from enemy gunships, as it blends perfectly with
the mud or rocks; they sleep on it; they use it as a sack; they spread it on the ground as a
table cloth, or upon which to display their wares; often it becomes a makeshift stretcher
and sometimes it is a rope; several times a day it becomes their prayer mat.

That sounds pretty silly and pathetic in this age of high-tech gear and precision-guided
weaponry, right? Maybe, maybe not. Major General Franklin Hagenbeck said of the
Taliban in an interview in 2003: “At night, when these groups heard a Predator or AC-
130 coming, they pulled a blanket over themselves to disappear from the night-vision
screen. They used low tech to defeat high tech.”

It’s not just guerrillas, either. Professional armies can create real light infantry as well, if
they try. During the WWI “Sideshow” in German East Africa, Colonel von Lettow
Vorbeck produced some of the greatest light infantry ever known in his Schutztruppe.
These were mostly natives trained with Prussian precision, especially in rifle
marksmanship.

They marched everywhere they went, which included just about the entire country, with
supplies borne by human porters. The Germans had destroyed the railroads to keep the
British & their allies from using them, the roads were too rough and muddy for British
trucks and armored cars, and the tsetse flies decimated their horses and pack mules. The
native Schutztruppe soldiers were largely immune to the diseases of the area, while the
white European soldiers succumbed in droves to the myriad of tropical illnesses.

While the regularly-equipped Entendre forces attempting to pursue them ground to a halt,
the Schutztruppe not only remained mobile but, with no supply line back to Germany,
they became absolute masters of improvisation to remain in the fight. Cloth was spun
from native cotton and dyed with the bark of mada trees to make new uniforms. Boots
were fashioned from captured saddles and antelope hides. Alcohol “gasoline” was
distilled from coconuts and precious salt supplies distilled from the ocean. Without
quinine, the German troops would have succumbed to malaria. A substitute was made by
boiling the bark of Peruvian trees, a vile-tasting foul brew that the troops christened “Von
Lettow Schnapps”.

By the end of the war, with no German supplies whatsoever getting in, the Schutztruppe
was equipped and armed almost entirely with captured enemy gear. The Schutztruppe,
never numbering more than 10,000 themselves, had tied down some 300,000 Allied
troops desperately needed on the Western Front in Europe, and inflicted some 60,000
casualties on the enemy.

The average soldier of the Imperial Japanese Army in WWII was a true light
infantryman, as noted by Major C. Patrick Howard among others.

“The usual load an IJA infantryman carried during this period was a steel helmet, a belt
with at least one ammunition pouch, a bayonet, a light pack, and an entrenching tool.
Soldiers wore a wide variety of footwear, and socks were usually heelless, probably to
slow deterioration. To assist in crossing water obstacles, many infantrymen carried the
inflatable belt they had worn during the initial amphibious landings. Most soldiers had a
1-yard x 1 1/2-yard camouflage net that they could drape over their bodies and stuff with
foliage to render themselves virtually invisible in the jungle. The only piece of equipment
that seemed to be standard among all soldiers was the waterproof shelter half, which
they wore instead of the army issue raincoat during inclement weather.3 Clearly, the
Japanese infantryman’s individual equipment was well suited for a fast-moving, mobile
campaign in the tropics.”
As for the Chinese infantryman in Korea, McMichael said he began an offensive with:
“3-days' rations, his bedroll, 4 grenades, 100 rounds of ammunition, and a mortar bomb
or 2. The Chinese procured some of their food locally, sometimes by force, sometimes by
legitimate means. At times, they required villagers to cook for them. Captured UN
supplies were also a ready source of ammunition, equipment, and rations; in many cases,
the Chinese replenished their stocks after a successful attack. The Chinese also buried
supplies when withdrawing from an area with the expectation that the caches would be
dug up and used upon their return. In the worst conditions, the CCF soldier learned to
do without. His self discipline led him to subsist on meager rations and to forego
nonessentials.”

The German Gebirgsjaeger mountain troops of WWII were essentially elite light infantry
as well. They had their skis for mobility in the snow; climbing gear for the high
mountains. They used any means possible to bring supplies and increase mobility; in
addition to their own horses and mules, they used reindeer and sleighs in Finland, camels
in Asiatic Russia, suspended tramways in Caucuses mountains, and the little Kettenkrad
half-track motorcycle just about everywhere.

But mostly they marched, marched endlessly pursuing the tanks and truck-mounted
infantry across Poland and then day after day across the endless steppes of Russia. They
could cover fifty kilometers a day, day after day, for weeks on end. How they could
manage this was no mystery. Instead of PT consisting of push-ups, sit-ups, and short
runs, they marched. James Lucas described the training. “And always the route marches.
Some of these were long, lasting all day…Other marches lasted all night through villages
lying quiet under the Alpine stars, or across frosty field, kilometre after kilometre…
Manoeuvres, exercises, marching and still more marching dominated their lives.”
The Gebirgs also knew how critical weight…or the lack thereof…was, and their manuals
continually stressed it. “In selecting equipment to be taken along, the aim must be to
achieve the greatest possible economy in weight. The equipment which will permit the
individual soldier to maintain his fighting strength must be based on the tactical
requirements of the contemplated action… Maximum fire power and mobility are
decisive factors in determining the type and number of weapons with which the
individual ski trooper should be equipped. The number of heavy weapons to be taken
along depends on the facilities for carrying sufficient ammunition. Fewer arms and
plenty of ammunition should be the rule.”

The successful British counter-insurgency in Malaya, one of very, very few successes by
Western armies in that category, showed that with common sense specialized training the
regular line doggie could become a superb light infantryman. British and Commonwealth
riflemen went out into the Communist Terrorists’ home turf, deep in the jungle,
sometimes for weeks at a time, and, as David Hackworth would say, “Out-G’ed the G’s”.
“The British also devoted some attention to lightening soldiers' loads while on patrol. To
further this end, light but appetizing rations were chosen. Because the soldiers looked
forward to breakfast and supper on patrol, the command provided palatable food for
these meals. In this manner, the light infantry held themselves in position to ambush for
some incredibly long periods of time. One platoon of the Green Howards staked out the
house of a terrorist food supplier for twenty consecutive nights. 32 In another case, a
patrol maintained an ambush for ten days and nights. Given seven days' rations, they
simply were told to make them last ten days.”

Fighting Communists in Rhodesia in a tactically successful counter-insurgency, nearly all


of the Security Forces were light infantry, including such famous outfits as the Rhodesian
Light Infantry and the King’s African Rifles. The most famous Rhodesia Special Forces,
uber-light infantry, were the Selous Scouts. Gruelingly trained, they traveled light and
did not have an official uniform. Water and ammunition were the two most important
items they carried, and in the largest quantities. Favored footwear consisted of rubber-
soled hockey boots known as “tackies”. Originally equipped with British Pattern 1958
standard web gear, the Selous Scouts soon developed their own Rhodesian vest that
provided light weight, mesh ventilation, and multiple pockets.
An American military observer noted: “Once in the unit, the men are prepared literally
to follow terrorist spoor for weeks on end in all types of Rhodesian terrain while living
off the land.”

Historically, Americans have been able to create fine light infantry. During the American
Revolution, sharp-shooting physically fit frontier riflemen made the best light infantry. A
letter from a gentleman in Philadelphia may have over-stated the case a bit when he
wrote: “What would a regular army of considerable strength in the forest of America do
with one thousand of these men, who want nothing to preserve their health and courage
but water from the spring, with a little parched corn, with what they can easily procure
in hunting; and who, wrapped in their blankets, in the damp of night, would choose the
shade of a tree for their covering, and the earth for their bed."
Poetic license aside, these frontier riflemen were indeed very mobile light infantry.
Colonel Daniel Morgan raised a company of riflemen in Virginia and marched them 600
miles to Boston in three weeks. Captain Michael Cresap brought in his company from the
Ohio territory, covering 550 miles in only 22 days.

During the War of Northern Aggression, the already poorly-equipped Confederate soldier
sometimes stripped away the few comforts he had to march much more swiftly than his
opponent.

"The coatee issued in the early days of the war had already given place to a short-
waisted and single-breasted jacket. Overcoats were soon discarded. ... Nor did the
knapsack long survive. ... But the men still clung to their blankets and waterproof sheets,
worn in a roll over their their left shoulder."
These were the indomitable infantrymen of General Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson, whose
uncanny mobility earned them the nickname “foot cavalry”. During the Shenandoah
Campaign, in addition to numerous skirmishes and fights, these men also managed to
cover some 670 miles in barely over a month and a half.

The way technology had changed between 1862 and 1952 it would hardly seem plausible
that the same bedroll Stonewall Jackson’s men wore could still be viable. It could.

Veteran, historian, and author Ralph Zumbro, before he went over to the dark side and
became a tanker, tells of the Korean War-vintage 45-pound basic infantry load, and the
Horseshoe Roll he carried consisting of: Shelter half, tent pegs, tent pole sections, either
a sleeping bag or two wool blankets, one extra set of fatigues. One hank of tent rope,
ground cloth or air mattress…We could and did modify this into a Civil War style patrol
roll on occasion and they were all different. Mine was usually a shelter half, blanket,
patrol munchies (nuts & dried fruit), one or two wet rations (wetpack, canned C-rat, and
ONE would run me for 24 hours, and still will) medkit, socks, skivvies, toothbrush &
powder, foot-powder, weapon kit, toilet paper..??? That's about it. Need to take modern
troops and send the buggers out with that load...Get them used to travelling light. There's
nothing there that needs to be dropped…I'd better clarify that roll a bit. It wasn't a short
fat sleeping bag in the small of the back. We rolled the shelter half
LENGTHWISE...Blankets too, into a LONG sausage, and then slung it over the left
shoulder with the ends tied together over the right hip. Stayed out of the way of
everything, been around since forever....Drops easy.
With this load, it was understood that the infantry could march twenty miles per day and
still be ready for an assault at the end of the march.

The Marine Corps Raiders of WWII were also superb light infantry. They were trained
and commanded by Colonel Evans Carlson, who had spent years in China learning
guerrilla warfare from Mao’s Communists when they got around to fighting the Japanese.
The Raiders' many feats included the famed Long Patrol on Guadalcanal, a month-long
150-mile reconnaissance in force behind Japanese lines. As one enlisted Raider told it,
the patrol was indeed no rose garden.

“A bit about our diet. The first several days I subsisted on D rations, an unappetizing
chocolate bar fortified with God knows what. This was replaced with the diet of the
Chinese 8th Route Army, rice raisins and salt pork. A wise choice under the humid,
tropical conditions. It was dry, light in weight and of high caloric value and it withstood
the heat and humidity. At the end of day one would build a small fire, I still have the
small tightly sealable cylinder containing matches. The liner was removed from my
helmet and in the metal portion the salt pork was rendered, then the rice was added,
cooked in river water and kicked up with a hand full of raisins. We had the blackest
helmets in the entire Corps…Although never verified, fellow Raiders dined on a
mongoose and an unfortunate cat. Water was always available from the many rivers and
streams. As learned from our Solomon Islanders, a very clean drink could be obtained,
by hacking into a segment of a large bamboo plant. No one gained weight on the Long
Patrol.”

Another enlisted Raider detailed the minimal gear he carried. “My pack was a gas mask
case which held my food, matches, a good supply of dry socks and a bottle of tincture of
merthiolate.”

Fast forward to 1983 and the invasion of Grenada. The Army Rangers combat jumped
with an average load carried per man of 167 pounds! Here’s how one of the men
participating described it: "We attacked to secure the air head. We were like slow moving
turtles. My rucksack weighed 120 pounds. I would get up and rush for 10 yards, throw
myself down and couldn't get up. I'd rest for 10 to 15 minutes, struggle to get up, go 10
yards, and collapse. After a few rushes, I was physically unable to move, and I am in
great shape. Finally, after I got to the assembly area, I shucked my rucksack and was
able to fight, but I was totally drained."

Afghanistan, 2003: We had extreme difficulty moving with all our weight. If our
movement would have been to relieve a unit in contact or a time sensitive mission we
would not have been able to move in a timely manner. It took us 8 hours to move 5 clicks.
With just the [Interceptor hard body armor] vest and [Enhanced Tactical Load Bearing
Vest or the MOLLE vest] lbv we were easily carrying 80 lbs. Throw on the ruck and
you’re sucking.

Even Natick Soldier Center, always known for sugar-coating the hell out of anything that
could be considered remotely unflattering to the Army, had to say something: “Most felt
they went in too heavy. Soldier load was from 75-110 lbs. Many felt they had too much
weight to move efficiently in that terrain at that altitude.”

Additionally, most of the major powers equipped their grunts with web gear designed for
mechanized infantry. They weren’t supposed to operate very far, or for very long, from
the armored personnel carriers or infantry fighting vehicles which transported them into
the big battles that would take place upon the plains of Central Europe. Mech infantry
gear came back to bite the British in the butt in the Falklands and especially the Russians
in the mountains of Afghanistan.

So the Perfumed Princes of the Pentagon and their pet engineers, physicists, witch
doctors, and lawyers, none of whom had ever slept a single night in the field, designed
the latest greatest super-secret chocho-fudgie grunt gear. From the sounds of it, they
probably would have done better by locking a squad of real grunts in a room with a
couple of cases of beer and letting them come up with the new field gear. The Pentagon
wonks spent millions and yet before deployment, the grunts have to go out and purchase
their own boots, socks, gloves, weapon lights, GPS’s, pistol magazines, linked machine
gun ammo carriers, etc. from civilian sporting goods stores.

The latest, greatest waste of defense money was the new MOLLE (MOdular Lightweight
Load-carrying Equipment), with a load bearing vest the men loathe and a pack with a
plastic frame that breaks if you look at it wrong. I personally have not tried these vests,
but the real evaluators, the grunts, would seem to be less than complimentary. I know my
stepson in the 82nd, with two tours in Iraq, had very little good to say about them.
These guys don't seem impressed either.

The Army in Afghanistan; First Sergeant: "All personnel involved hated the
lbv[MOLLE load bearing vest]; it’s so constricting when you wear it with the vest
[ballistic body armor], then when you put a ruck on it cuts off even more circulation."

The Marines in Afghanistan; Major: "We're discovering that the MOLLE is not
holding up under pressure. Most of Battalion 3/6 doesn't even wear the vest; they hate
the vest. They attach the canteens and all of the magazine pouches and everything
directly to the flak jacket, because the vest is just added weight…Now you can't shed the
gear and just wear the flak, and that's important when you're crawling around…"

The Marines in Iraq, First Sergeant: "MOLLIE (pack) LBV (load bearing vest) is NOT
GOOD [original author’s emphasis]. We put all of our gear on the flak jacket."

The Army in Iraq, Specialist: "The MOLLE ruck is awful. It’s a torture device that you
can put stuff in. I bought my own ALICE ruck but was eventually forced to use the issued
MOLLE ruck instead."

So now our grunts are not only grossly over-burdened weight wise, but the insane
tonnage is also uncomfortable. As a result, our infantry soldiers can barely move. While
the Taliban enemy runs circles around our “light” infantry such as the Rangers, 10th
Mountain, and Marines at 4-7 miles per hour, our guys, at least in the mountains, are
crawling along at one mile per hour or less. It’s awful hard to “close with and destroy”
the enemy if you can’t catch him.
Welcome to the heaviest “light” infantry in the history of warfare.

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