Physical training: How to have a unit run to maximize its combat effectiveness

We've had mucho
discussion lately of running, so I was struck by RVN SF VET's commentary,
which comes at this from the approach not of the individual but of a unit
seeking to maximize its combat effectiveness. It is worth considering the
difference.
By a RVN SF VET
Best
Defense combat fitness correspondent
I was out on the dock last night
talking with a Marine from the 1960's. I was surprised to learn how smart his
ANGLICO leaders were "in the day." He told me that they ran in
formation in full combat gear! BUT, they switched to a march at the half-mile
to regain cohesion and then began to run again. They ran very long distances.
They were doing a variation of the fartlek while using it to regroup and keep
together.
The mission was to get to the end
with every Marine -- NO ONE WAS LEFT BEHIND. (Essentially, the Marine Corps
mantra.) So, if a Marine was starting to flag, another Marine took his rifle.
If that wasn't enough, another Marine took his pack. If he was still in
trouble, two Marines would get on either side of him, grab his belt, and propel
him to the finish. If necessary, I think that they would have carried him. No
fall-outs!
Of course, it was not acceptable
for this to happen to the same man repeatedly, "but anyone can have a bad
day." This is a very different type of long unit run. This is a completely
different philosophy. This was a combat philosophy.
They were told that they had to
arrive with maximum combat power. They needed that rifleman. That's the way it
should be. How could they have been so smart?
They wore the wrong shoes and
carried a lot of weight, but they did the run as intelligently as possible. How
do we forget these things?
RVN SF VET was in the shit before you were in your diapers.
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