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When less is more: A soliders load

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An interesting interaction with @Goritoes in another thread motivated me to talk about this. Firstly, polite warning, this will be a long post so you may want to take your time to digest it.

For some reason a few people on this forum and elsewhere to be honest seem to think more is better, and whilst there is an argument to be had to "being risk averse" the current model of scalability and high mobility adopted by Pakistan Army works just fine and is battle testes - so why re-invent the wheel so to speak?

In this post I will aim to put forward my argument for "less is more", a bibliopgraphy of sources to compile this post will be posted in the footnotes should anyone be bored to engage in further reading. :lol:

Lets start by addressing the elephant in the room: The Tacticool "Operator" vs the professional Pakistani front line solider. Now for some reason when people think of what a "professional solider" looks like thier expectation is instantly:
e4a.jpg


Whereas the reality is much more minalmistic:
d1831f94-5f05-43be-8bf0-e01ea8c82081_w1080_h608_s.jpg


Even with this trimmed down heavily scalable approach the average load a Pakistani solider carries is as follows:


  • Body armour: Weight 11kg (e) with plates
  • SMG 4.3 kg [loaded weight]
  • Loaded magazine @0.85kg x 2 = 1.7kg
  • Helmet weight 1.25kg

That is an estimated 18.25kg of kit. Based on the above model and given that the average Pakistani male is 66Kg in weight, the average solider carries 27% of their bodyweight in equipment AT ALL TIMES.

This brings us to the interesting question of "a soliders load". Soliders have always struggled with the weight of carrying their weapons and equipment. Roman Legionnaires on the march carried 80-pound loads on long spiked stakes slung across their shoulders. Byzantine infantrymen found themselves with similar loads. Their ration carts and pack horses trailed behind them but did little to relieve their individual loads. During the American Revolution, from Boston to Saratoga. British soldiers fought their loads in addition to the American colonists.

In the Normandy invasion of 1944, when American infantrymen with 80-pound rucksacks dropped from their landing craft into the rough surf off Omaha Beach, many of them never made it to the beach. Many soldiers fell into deep holes while wading in, and their already heavy equipment absorbed so much more weight in water that they could not get up. Others managed to crawl as far as the shoreline where they collapsed. There, overcome with exhaustion, many of them drowned.

In his book Titled "The Soldier's Load and The Mobility of A Nation"
Brigadier General Samuel Lyman Atwood Marshall argued No logistical system is sound unless its first principle is enlightened conservation of the power of the individual fighter.[1]

In his paper in 1987 then Captain and Lt. Gen. William C. Mayville stated "Soldiers who march into battle carrying heavy loads do not usually perform well in combat. Their loads drain them of their strength, reduce their mobility, and slow their minds."[2]

In an interesting study carried out by the British Army using "Hybrid Formation Training" exercises during Operation HERRICK[Afghanistan], showed that soliders overburdned with kit not only fatigued quicker, but their accuracy greater deminished based on the amount of equipment they carried:

1672396431330.png

Source[3]

In his book Urgent Fury - The Battle for Grenada Mark Adkin in interview with an anonymous yet decorated solider who recounts: We attacked to secure the airhead. We were like slow moving turtles. My ruck weighed 120 pounds … There were all those guys sitting on the side of the road with IV tubes in them. There's no way the guys could [have gone on]. [4]
Professional soldiers and military historians over the past 30 years have addressed this issue at great length. In The Soldier's Load and the Mobility of a Nation, S.L.A. Marshall cites three fallacious beliefs that lead to overloading.

The first of these fallacies is that large amounts of ammunition on a soldier's back gives him greater confidence in battle. Marshall contends that combat has never supported this myth, that soldiers will fight to the last round when necessary.

The second fallacy is that shortages in ammunition cause "tactical disarrangements" and that such shortages are therefore to be avoided. But Marshall cites the defense of Bastogne during the Battle of the Bulge in which soldiers willingly shared their limited supplies to survive eight days of encirclement.

The third fallacy holds that a soldier must be equipped for every possible contingency. Marshall blames staff officers for promoting this notion and argues that such thinking smothers and exhausts soldiers before they ever reach the battlefield. Certainly, the soldiers "sitting on the side of the road" in Grenada would have agreed.

In his book The Mobility of One Man - Brigadier General Samuel Lyman Atwood Marshall gave an example of the European Theater duringWWII, druing which he wrote "the basic individual ammunition load for the paratrooper was eighty rounds for his carbine or MI, and two hand grenades. When the paratrooper jumped into Normandy on June 6, 1944, he also carried these things: 1 rifle and carrier part, 1 English mine, 6 packages of K-ration, 1 impregnated jump suit, 1 complete uniform, 1 steel helmet and liner, 1 knitted cap, 1 change of underwear, 2 changes of sox, 1 entrenching tool, 1 gas mask, 1 first-aid pack, 1 spoon, 2 gas pro tective covers, 1 field bag with suspenders, 1 packet of sulfa tablets, 1 escape kit, and a set of toilet articles.

Despite all that weight, the most salient characteristic in operations by these forces was without doubt the high mobility of all ranks. That was because most of them used common sense. They jumped heavy but they moved light. Once on the ground, most of them ditched every piece of equipment they considered unnecessary. They did this without order, and often before they had engaged any of the enemy or joined up with any of their comrades. It was a reflex to a course of training which had stressed that the main thing was to keep going"[5]


Among other studies on the subject, in 1962 the United States Army Combat Development Agency collected and analyzed statistics from World War II and Korea relating to the soldier's fighting load. The study concluded that the soldier's load had a direct effect on his performance in combat, that his mobility was "degraded to an unacceptable degree by his prescribed load." [6]

The agency further concluded that infantrymen, who represented 80 percent of all battle casualties in those wars, should be given special equipment and clothing to meet their unique combat requirements. The study recommended that the maximum fighting load be restricted to 40 pounds or 18Kg and that "officers at all echelons receive a thorough education and indoctrination in the problem of overloading the infantry combat soldier."

The introduction of helicopters and transport vehicles for example, are major logistical steps towards reducing the solider's load. But other tecnnological developments such as NVGs, encrypted radios, Laser Designators and the sort put back the weight these logistical systems remove.

Another major issue becomes CASEVAC, in the British Army review Number 173 - Autumn 2018, one outcome from HFT(Hybrid Formation Training) exercises was to study how to improve CASEVAC in their sections (buddy rescue) some of which were carrying in excess of 80kg of load.

The result was a change in formation of sections to deliberately "off load" on section with the capacity to "stretcher carry" one or more casualty on foot for 2km: [Notice the magical 18kg re-appearing in the graph below]
1672398176111.png


Similarly the US. Army Infantry School now recommends a maximum load of 30 to 40 percent of a soldier's body weight.
Training light should involve risk, just as fighting light involves risk. The solution to lighter loads is risk analysis, in which a commander makes an accurate tactical assessment and calculates what is really needed for each mission.A soldier's minimum essential load includes his uniform, assigned weapon, and load carrying equipment.. These items are usually identified in a unit's standing operating procedures (SOP).
Risk-Assessment-Matrix-in-Qualitative-Risk-Analysis.jpg

Admittedly, risk analysis will not bring the proper balance of load and agility to certain types of infantrymen simply because of the equipment that goes with their jobs.

The solution to this particular problem requires imaginative thinking on the part of commanders. It requires that portions of these soldiers' loads be distributed to other members of the unit—water, meals, and sleeping equipment, for example. These adjustments themselves are risk assessments, but failing to make them threatens the survivability of the men who must carry these heavy items.

Strong legs and a good back are a soldier's most precious resources. They are the key to his success and survival on the battlefield. But putting a heavy load on those legs and that back robs him of his mobility and agility. It steals his strength and denies him the ability to think quickly.

Thank you for reading.


@Signalian @PanzerKiel
[1] The Soldier's Load and the Mobility of a Nation - S.L.A Marshall - Reprinted 1980
[2] A Soldier's Load (1987) - Captain William C. Mayville, Vol. 77, No. 1, Infantry, Jan-Feb 1987
[3] https://www.army.mod.uk/umbraco/Surface/Download/Get/11615
[4] Mark Adkin, Urgent Fury - The Battle for Grenada - The Truth Behind the Largest U.S. Military Operation since Vietnam Hardcover – 19 Oct. 1989
[5] The Mobility of One Man - S.L.A Marshall - Reprinted 1980
[6]The 1962 Howze Board and Army Combat Developments - J.A. Stockfish https://www.rand.org/content/dam/rand/pubs/monograph_reports/2007/MR435.pdf
 
Keeping it simple and to the point :police:

Any military formation is equipped on the basis of its ROLE and then the TASK its needs to undertake. Lets take MIB for example.

MIB's role is to support Armor as Mobile infantry but its deployed as foot infantry in combat, since it dismounts and then fires when on foot, not from M-113 APC. So the ROLE and TASK become different here. MIB's were deployed in KPK COIN Operations as in the role of foot infantry, which means their weapon carrying ability also changes, instead of relying on back up of 12.7 HMGs/ACK ACK of M-113 and support from direct fire power of 125mm cannons of MBTs, they were now only reliant on light arms (G-3/Type-56/MP5/RPG/Mortar/Bazuka) and some heavy weapons like maybe ATGM and artillery support of 105mm, 122 mm or 155mm which is not comparable to constant direct fire of MBTs 125mm cannons.

Im glad you brought up the subject of Logistics which is the main backbone of any offensive that Army undertakes but is overlooked, as people like the sights of Tanks, IFVs, Artillery but no one wants to see the common looking trucks scurrying here and there. An armored offensive of an armored Division will ground to a halt if its not re-supplied, re-fueled, and reinforced with in due time. The tanks will be sitting ducks. and a whole infantry battalion will be assigned to security duty of Tanks and an AD regiment will be deputed to protect the stationary tanks from air attacks. Easy target for enemy MLRS.

While logistics of the sorts on LOC was discussed by me and Ulla (incepion-06) since that is an evergreen battlefield and supplies for soldiers need to be replenished every now and then. The posts in far flung areas cannot survive without constant supply and thank God for mules of RVFC. The robotic dog and robotic horse has been made by Boston Dynamics to help US soldier with supplies. There also a back up which helped US soldier lift weight, a mechanical arm type thing. Many types of technologies are under research.

Me and Ulla discussed use of ATVs on LOC but the thick vegetation doesn't allow that, which means ATGM, RR, mortar etc need to be carried by soldiers or mules or trucks or helicopters across the terrain or to be deployed on peaks captured by Army, along with different rounds of ammo.

So the soldier deployed on LOC will need to wear heavy clothing against weather, then carry personal weapon, and ammunition, harness for back back, along with body armor and helmet and DMS. And now he is expected to become a mountain climber and advance at enemy position under LMG fire - Love the feeling of going from 80 Kg body weight to 95+ Kgs under weather condition where breathing becomes a whole new scene. I would say I love this workout everyday for a month to get my six-pack:laugh:

and the above is for a common infantry soldier, wait till we come to ATGM team, bazuka team etc.

So we have looked at role, task, logistics and terrain. Now would the soldier wear the same amount of luggage in hot desert condition ? He will get dehydrated very soon and he needs to be on the move through truck or APC, unless its a dug up position. So terrain is another important factor for soldier gear which can change due to terrain.

On medical side, its not just fatigue or exhaustion which affects agility along with humidity and air pressure for breathing and sweating, but the injury factor. An injured soldier, a wounded soldier becomes a burden straightaway. Not only does the team lose another gun, but he needs to be transported to friendly lines for medical treatment if first aid isn't enough. Where will his equipment go ? discarded or carried on ? If needs to be sent back with soldier then that's another issue for medical teams.

so Now after going from 80 Kgs to 95+ Kgs will the soldier,
… still be ready to fight immediately after a 15 km march?
… maintain blood flow to the arms?
… climb a mountain in LOC without injury?
… avoid the risk of rucksack palsy after a 6 month deployment in KPK Coin Ops or LOC?
… allow a soldier to stand from sitting unassisted?
… carry out operations in high heat, high humidity conditions?
… when travelling at 'x' km/hr over a y◦ gradient for z minutes?

But then how should a soldier's load out get defined ?
Soldiers also carry equipment given to them by their section members, by the platoon and sometimes company assets. Commander’s instruction may also add operationally-specific equipment. Each soldier will almost always carry some ‘jack-rations’ with them, especially for longer patrols. Some will add comfort items like umbrellas and gas bottles also.

This is why "assisted technology" is important like transport of different types, motor, rotary or fixed wing.

A SF team inserted into enemy area knows how much loadout it needs to carry for a 2-hour Ops or a 10-hour Ops. A CTD members has Jeeps and pickups available so can arrive fresh at the scene and wear load out 5-10 minutes before embarking. An infantry soldier on LOC or KPK mountains, if not assisted by transport then has to either choose or be ordered by Platoon commander what needs to be carried for the task:
1. Patrol involving walking
2. Sentry duty
3. Offensive on enemy position
4. Recon and surveillance insertion
5. sniping position for long duration
6. Mortar pit duty of firing and reloading
7. ATGM or RR Gun duty

So from above, 1,3,5 need more body armor and ammunition. 2,4 are almost similar duties though sentry stands while recon teams keep moving so this is where loadout changes. Also Sentry has defensive position available while recon/surveillance team needs to find cover now and then.

For availability of logistics, bigger formation has more jeeps, trucks, resources available. Battalion has more trucks than an independent company. Corps HQ has rotary assets available while Brigade HQ may not.

Don't expect much input from Panzerkeil, woh hamari posts mein keeray nikaalnay k liye forum visit karnay ata hay :rofl:
 
Keeping it simple and to the point :police:

Any military formation is equipped on the basis of its ROLE and then the TASK its needs to undertake. Lets take MIB for example.

MIB's role is to support Armor as Mobile infantry but its deployed as foot infantry in combat, since it dismounts and then fires when on foot, not from M-113 APC. So the ROLE and TASK become different here. MIB's were deployed in KPK COIN Operations as in the role of foot infantry, which means their weapon carrying ability also changes, instead of relying on back up of 12.7 HMGs/ACK ACK of M-113 and support from direct fire power of 125mm cannons of MBTs, they were now only reliant on light arms (G-3/Type-56/MP5/RPG/Mortar/Bazuka) and some heavy weapons like maybe ATGM and artillery support of 105mm, 122 mm or 155mm which is not comparable to constant direct fire of MBTs 125mm cannons.

Im glad you brought up the subject of Logistics which is the main backbone of any offensive that Army undertakes but is overlooked, as people like the sights of Tanks, IFVs, Artillery but no one wants to see the common looking trucks scurrying here and there. An armored offensive of an armored Division will ground to a halt if its not re-supplied, re-fueled, and reinforced with in due time. The tanks will be sitting ducks. and a whole infantry battalion will be assigned to security duty of Tanks and an AD regiment will be deputed to protect the stationary tanks from air attacks. Easy target for enemy MLRS.

While logistics of the sorts on LOC was discussed by me and Ulla (incepion-06) since that is an evergreen battlefield and supplies for soldiers need to be replenished every now and then. The posts in far flung areas cannot survive without constant supply and thank God for mules of RVFC. The robotic dog and robotic horse has been made by Boston Dynamics to help US soldier with supplies. There also a back up which helped US soldier lift weight, a mechanical arm type thing. Many types of technologies are under research.

Me and Ulla discussed use of ATVs on LOC but the thick vegetation doesn't allow that, which means ATGM, RR, mortar etc need to be carried by soldiers or mules or trucks or helicopters across the terrain or to be deployed on peaks captured by Army, along with different rounds of ammo.

So the soldier deployed on LOC will need to wear heavy clothing against weather, then carry personal weapon, and ammunition, harness for back back, along with body armor and helmet and DMS. And now he is expected to become a mountain climber and advance at enemy position under LMG fire - Love the feeling of going from 80 Kg body weight to 95+ Kgs under weather condition where breathing becomes a whole new scene. I would say I love this workout everyday for a month to get my six-pack:laugh:

and the above is for a common infantry soldier, wait till we come to ATGM team, bazuka team etc.

So we have looked at role, task, logistics and terrain. Now would the soldier wear the same amount of luggage in hot desert condition ? He will get dehydrated very soon and he needs to be on the move through truck or APC, unless its a dug up position. So terrain is another important factor for soldier gear which can change due to terrain.

On medical side, its not just fatigue or exhaustion which affects agility along with humidity and air pressure for breathing and sweating, but the injury factor. An injured soldier, a wounded soldier becomes a burden straightaway. Not only does the team lose another gun, but he needs to be transported to friendly lines for medical treatment if first aid isn't enough. Where will his equipment go ? discarded or carried on ? If needs to be sent back with soldier then that's another issue for medical teams.

so Now after going from 80 Kgs to 95+ Kgs will the soldier,
… still be ready to fight immediately after a 15 km march?
… maintain blood flow to the arms?
… climb a mountain in LOC without injury?
… avoid the risk of rucksack palsy after a 6 month deployment in KPK Coin Ops or LOC?
… allow a soldier to stand from sitting unassisted?
… carry out operations in high heat, high humidity conditions?
… when travelling at 'x' km/hr over a y◦ gradient for z minutes?

But then how should a soldier's load out get defined ?
Soldiers also carry equipment given to them by their section members, by the platoon and sometimes company assets. Commander’s instruction may also add operationally-specific equipment. Each soldier will almost always carry some ‘jack-rations’ with them, especially for longer patrols. Some will add comfort items like umbrellas and gas bottles also.

This is why "assisted technology" is important like transport of different types, motor, rotary or fixed wing.

A SF team inserted into enemy area knows how much loadout it needs to carry for a 2-hour Ops or a 10-hour Ops. A CTD members has Jeeps and pickups available so can arrive fresh at the scene and wear load out 5-10 minutes before embarking. An infantry soldier on LOC or KPK mountains, if not assisted by transport then has to either choose or be ordered by Platoon commander what needs to be carried for the task:
1. Patrol involving walking
2. Sentry duty
3. Offensive on enemy position
4. Recon and surveillance insertion
5. sniping position for long duration
6. Mortar pit duty of firing and reloading
7. ATGM or RR Gun duty

So from above, 1,3,5 need more body armor and ammunition. 2,4 are almost similar duties though sentry stands while recon teams keep moving so this is where loadout changes. Also Sentry has defensive position available while recon/surveillance team needs to find cover now and then.

For availability of logistics, bigger formation has more jeeps, trucks, resources available. Battalion has more trucks than an independent company. Corps HQ has rotary assets available while Brigade HQ may not.

Don't expect much input from Panzerkeil, woh hamari posts mein keeray nikaalnay k liye forum visit karnay ata hay :rofl:
Much obliged for a very detailed reply. 🙂
 
This is why its important to invest in tech so soldiers can have lighter loads.

If the weight of body armour could be reduced through using ceramics or alloys, that could extra equipment or make soldiers lighter.
 
We need innovative solutions.

Controlled chemical and biological warfare weapons.

Maybe amass an arsenal of drones strictly for internal insurgency related tasks - would this be affordable?

There should probably be contingency plans made for the worst case civil war kind of scenario.
 
We need innovative solutions.

Controlled chemical and biological warfare weapons.

Maybe amass an arsenal of drones strictly for internal insurgency related tasks - would this be affordable?
Drone swarming costs $$$ countries that can pull it off would be China and the US.

We should however consider integration of UCAVs and CUAVs in Forward Observer and AP/AT roles. That is definitely a move in the right direction.
 
Ok soldiers on patrol/sweep/offensive on foot need to kit light, but for our boys facing sustained and multi pronged attacks on their static posts on Afghan border,can something heavy like a MG-3 be converted into a highly trainable turret like configuration that is bullet proof and mounted high on vantage points to quickly suppress/defeat sudden attacks???
 
Ok soldiers on patrol/sweep/offensive on foot need to kit light, but for our boys facing sustained and multi pronged attacks on their static posts on Afghan border,can something heavy like a MG-3 be converted into a highly trainable turret like configuration that is bullet proof and mounted high on vantage points to quickly suppress/defeat sudden attacks???
LMG updates are long over due.
 
Has any analysis come out of the Ukraine war, to see the various configurations of soldier’s equipment is playing out on both sides.

Would you also say our primary adversary, the Indians, operate in a similar manner to the Russians? And if so, could extrapolate from Ukrainian experience (within our resources), how best to equip and support our troops?
 
Has any analysis come out of the Ukraine war, to see the various configurations of soldier’s equipment is playing out on both sides.

Would you also say our primary adversary, the Indians, operate in a similar manner to the Russians? And if so, could extrapolate from Ukrainian experience (within our resources), how best to equip and support our troops?
Ukraine is a rather strange war. The Russian Army proved to be incompetent, Indian Army largely is far more professional and well organised.

For instance there is no NCO structure in the Russian Army whilst the Indian Army similar to Pakistan has a NCO structure.

Russian military leadership failed to capitalise on initial gains, failed in A2/AD once air dominance was achieved, their largely conscript army was of poor morale and refused to fight, literally abandoning expensive machines in farmers fields.

Comparing India to Russia would be an error on our part. One should never underestimate their enemy.
 
Drone swarming costs $$$ countries that can pull it off would be China and the US.

We should however consider integration of UCAVs and CUAVs in Forward Observer and AP/AT roles. That is definitely a move in the right direction.
There should be mandatory service in Pakistan, even if not in the whole of Pakistan then at least in AJK and Punjab.

Those areas are too urbanised and people are getting lazy and soft. They need to be battle hardened so they're useful.

AJK is of course at risk of invasion from India so having them be ready is good.
 
An interesting interaction with @Goritoes in another thread motivated me to talk about this. Firstly, polite warning, this will be a long post so you may want to take your time to digest it.

For some reason a few people on this forum and elsewhere to be honest seem to think more is better, and whilst there is an argument to be had to "being risk averse" the current model of scalability and high mobility adopted by Pakistan Army works just fine and is battle testes - so why re-invent the wheel so to speak?

In this post I will aim to put forward my argument for "less is more", a bibliopgraphy of sources to compile this post will be posted in the footnotes should anyone be bored to engage in further reading. :lol:

Lets start by addressing the elephant in the room: The Tacticool "Operator" vs the professional Pakistani front line solider. Now for some reason when people think of what a "professional solider" looks like thier expectation is instantly:
e4a.jpg


Whereas the reality is much more minalmistic:
d1831f94-5f05-43be-8bf0-e01ea8c82081_w1080_h608_s.jpg


Even with this trimmed down heavily scalable approach the average load a Pakistani solider carries is as follows:


  • Body armour: Weight 11kg (e) with plates
  • SMG 4.3 kg [loaded weight]
  • Loaded magazine @0.85kg x 2 = 1.7kg
  • Helmet weight 1.25kg

That is an estimated 18.25kg of kit. Based on the above model and given that the average Pakistani male is 66Kg in weight, the average solider carries 27% of their bodyweight in equipment AT ALL TIMES.

This brings us to the interesting question of "a soliders load". Soliders have always struggled with the weight of carrying their weapons and equipment. Roman Legionnaires on the march carried 80-pound loads on long spiked stakes slung across their shoulders. Byzantine infantrymen found themselves with similar loads. Their ration carts and pack horses trailed behind them but did little to relieve their individual loads. During the American Revolution, from Boston to Saratoga. British soldiers fought their loads in addition to the American colonists.

In the Normandy invasion of 1944, when American infantrymen with 80-pound rucksacks dropped from their landing craft into the rough surf off Omaha Beach, many of them never made it to the beach. Many soldiers fell into deep holes while wading in, and their already heavy equipment absorbed so much more weight in water that they could not get up. Others managed to crawl as far as the shoreline where they collapsed. There, overcome with exhaustion, many of them drowned.

In his book Titled "The Soldier's Load and The Mobility of A Nation"
Brigadier General Samuel Lyman Atwood Marshall argued No logistical system is sound unless its first principle is enlightened conservation of the power of the individual fighter.[1]

In his paper in 1987 then Captain and Lt. Gen. William C. Mayville stated "Soldiers who march into battle carrying heavy loads do not usually perform well in combat. Their loads drain them of their strength, reduce their mobility, and slow their minds."[2]

In an interesting study carried out by the British Army using "Hybrid Formation Training" exercises during Operation HERRICK[Afghanistan], showed that soliders overburdned with kit not only fatigued quicker, but their accuracy greater deminished based on the amount of equipment they carried:

View attachment 908432
Source[3]

In his book Urgent Fury - The Battle for Grenada Mark Adkin in interview with an anonymous yet decorated solider who recounts: We attacked to secure the airhead. We were like slow moving turtles. My ruck weighed 120 pounds … There were all those guys sitting on the side of the road with IV tubes in them. There's no way the guys could [have gone on]. [4]
Professional soldiers and military historians over the past 30 years have addressed this issue at great length. In The Soldier's Load and the Mobility of a Nation, S.L.A. Marshall cites three fallacious beliefs that lead to overloading.

The first of these fallacies is that large amounts of ammunition on a soldier's back gives him greater confidence in battle. Marshall contends that combat has never supported this myth, that soldiers will fight to the last round when necessary.

The second fallacy is that shortages in ammunition cause "tactical disarrangements" and that such shortages are therefore to be avoided. But Marshall cites the defense of Bastogne during the Battle of the Bulge in which soldiers willingly shared their limited supplies to survive eight days of encirclement.

The third fallacy holds that a soldier must be equipped for every possible contingency. Marshall blames staff officers for promoting this notion and argues that such thinking smothers and exhausts soldiers before they ever reach the battlefield. Certainly, the soldiers "sitting on the side of the road" in Grenada would have agreed.

In his book The Mobility of One Man - Brigadier General Samuel Lyman Atwood Marshall gave an example of the European Theater duringWWII, druing which he wrote "the basic individual ammunition load for the paratrooper was eighty rounds for his carbine or MI, and two hand grenades. When the paratrooper jumped into Normandy on June 6, 1944, he also carried these things: 1 rifle and carrier part, 1 English mine, 6 packages of K-ration, 1 impregnated jump suit, 1 complete uniform, 1 steel helmet and liner, 1 knitted cap, 1 change of underwear, 2 changes of sox, 1 entrenching tool, 1 gas mask, 1 first-aid pack, 1 spoon, 2 gas pro tective covers, 1 field bag with suspenders, 1 packet of sulfa tablets, 1 escape kit, and a set of toilet articles.

Despite all that weight, the most salient characteristic in operations by these forces was without doubt the high mobility of all ranks. That was because most of them used common sense. They jumped heavy but they moved light. Once on the ground, most of them ditched every piece of equipment they considered unnecessary. They did this without order, and often before they had engaged any of the enemy or joined up with any of their comrades. It was a reflex to a course of training which had stressed that the main thing was to keep going"[5]


Among other studies on the subject, in 1962 the United States Army Combat Development Agency collected and analyzed statistics from World War II and Korea relating to the soldier's fighting load. The study concluded that the soldier's load had a direct effect on his performance in combat, that his mobility was "degraded to an unacceptable degree by his prescribed load." [6]

The agency further concluded that infantrymen, who represented 80 percent of all battle casualties in those wars, should be given special equipment and clothing to meet their unique combat requirements. The study recommended that the maximum fighting load be restricted to 40 pounds or 18Kg and that "officers at all echelons receive a thorough education and indoctrination in the problem of overloading the infantry combat soldier."

The introduction of helicopters and transport vehicles for example, are major logistical steps towards reducing the solider's load. But other tecnnological developments such as NVGs, encrypted radios, Laser Designators and the sort put back the weight these logistical systems remove.

Another major issue becomes CASEVAC, in the British Army review Number 173 - Autumn 2018, one outcome from HFT(Hybrid Formation Training) exercises was to study how to improve CASEVAC in their sections (buddy rescue) some of which were carrying in excess of 80kg of load.

The result was a change in formation of sections to deliberately "off load" on section with the capacity to "stretcher carry" one or more casualty on foot for 2km: [Notice the magical 18kg re-appearing in the graph below]
View attachment 908435

Similarly the US. Army Infantry School now recommends a maximum load of 30 to 40 percent of a soldier's body weight.
Training light should involve risk, just as fighting light involves risk. The solution to lighter loads is risk analysis, in which a commander makes an accurate tactical assessment and calculates what is really needed for each mission.A soldier's minimum essential load includes his uniform, assigned weapon, and load carrying equipment.. These items are usually identified in a unit's standing operating procedures (SOP).
Risk-Assessment-Matrix-in-Qualitative-Risk-Analysis.jpg

Admittedly, risk analysis will not bring the proper balance of load and agility to certain types of infantrymen simply because of the equipment that goes with their jobs.

The solution to this particular problem requires imaginative thinking on the part of commanders. It requires that portions of these soldiers' loads be distributed to other members of the unit—water, meals, and sleeping equipment, for example. These adjustments themselves are risk assessments, but failing to make them threatens the survivability of the men who must carry these heavy items.

Strong legs and a good back are a soldier's most precious resources. They are the key to his success and survival on the battlefield. But putting a heavy load on those legs and that back robs him of his mobility and agility. It steals his strength and denies him the ability to think quickly.

Thank you for reading.


@Signalian @PanzerKiel
[1] The Soldier's Load and the Mobility of a Nation - S.L.A Marshall - Reprinted 1980
[2] A Soldier's Load (1987) - Captain William C. Mayville, Vol. 77, No. 1, Infantry, Jan-Feb 1987
[3] https://www.army.mod.uk/umbraco/Surface/Download/Get/11615
[4] Mark Adkin, Urgent Fury - The Battle for Grenada - The Truth Behind the Largest U.S. Military Operation since Vietnam Hardcover – 19 Oct. 1989
[5] The Mobility of One Man - S.L.A Marshall - Reprinted 1980
[6]The 1962 Howze Board and Army Combat Developments - J.A. Stockfish https://www.rand.org/content/dam/rand/pubs/monograph_reports/2007/MR435.pdf
Actual Gear I used in 2005 when I was deployed to Operation Enduring Freedom.

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IFAK kit (Medic used it on me when I was wounded in Afghanistan)
M4 Rifle (Can't take it to my civilian life lol)
PVS-14NVG (Well, I can buy it off the government but then why would I need a $2400 NVG for? Not a peeping tom...)
SAPI Plate (Don't need them as well, can get them anywhere tho)

I would wear them and model it for you, but I have put on 20 pounds since 2005 and these no longer fits me, I can probably wear the UCP pants but both the helmet and and the UCP top and IBA are now too small. :argh: For the record, I am 6 ft 1 (185 cm) and 92 kg. And dont know if you can see the shirt, I was with the Airborne when I wear that, and so I was listed as a light infantry.

And that's it' that's the gear I wear in war for a whole year (that with my M4 and M203 and my PVS-14) and that is probably be enough for a low intensity conflict. If I was in Ukraine (well, I was) and fighting the Russian, I would probably want more stuff, like adding a Burgen and a few more pouch. But for Afghanistan, that's enough.

The thing about Tacticool is, most of the people go for that is people who were never in battle. The gear I hump with is about 30lbs (MICH-2000 + IBA/2 SAPI + Rifle + Spare mag) and that is the minimal loadout and that is enough for any operation, but even then, added that 30lb on me, that would mean I now weight around 110kg, that's hard to walk, not to mention run. And you will most definitely needed mobility in war. Which mean getting stuff that you don't need or use is a big no-no in the field. But it looks cool, people would argue, so did a pair of Rayban. You don't wear rayban in war......

The thing is, whenever I go, my Humvee is no more than 100 ft from me, if I need anything, like rations and breaching tool, I will just get it from the Humvee, so you don't really hump with all those. In Ranger School tho, we were taught to pack "Long Range" pack, that is mostly for LRRP type recon mission, you pack for 3 days ration with double ammo, because resupply would be a problem for you during those recon run (It's still possible for Air Drop but that's another story) And that long range pack (or Ranger Load/Ranger Pack) is around 50lbs (or ~30Kg) that some seriosu load. You have stuff that you don't need but may need or stuff that you usually just store in your transport. (like a breaching shot gun for example) A Ranger Pack would have both mechanical breaching and explosive breaching tool, ropes, VS17 panel and extra socks and rations, grenade and ammo etc.

Special Force have another set of pack, that's based on mission, but what I heard is SF pack can goes up to 70-80lbs. But then you will have something that you definitely don't need like radio set (you use MBITER instead in regular army) Trauma Kit (Which is something a paramedic would carry) and other explosive stuff.

In short, just hump with what you need, that make you less miserable..
 
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