If you are set up properly the assault group will be advancing over open ground, uphill across razor wire so they are not coming too quickly to shoot down. As they must be in the open to advance you can bring mortar or artillery fire to bear and pretty much any attack will be neutralized.
Does this sound too easy? Too simple? If it is easy, is it easy because you set up the position properly well before the attack kicked off. Your radios all worked well. You had your men in safe positions and your mortars in the middle of your base were ranged in on likely points of attack. Your wire was spread thickly across the killing ground and your guns covered it all. Train hard fight easy.
ANTI-AMBUSH DRILLS: PATROLS AND CONVOYS
A correctly executed ambush should be just that – execution. Everyone in the killing zone should be dead within 2 or 3 seconds. We will see in the next section how to set up an ambush properly and achieve that effect on the enemy, but here I want to go through the Standard Operating Procedures first of all to avoid being caught in an ambush and then for when you are ambushed yourself.
Given the ambush you are caught in is not set up properly then react correctly and you will have a good chance of survival – and you may even nail the ambushers. If the ambush is set up well then the SOPs give you something to think about for a few seconds...
Don’t get over excited about being ambushed; I have been ambushed scores of times and never has an ambush been set up or carried out properly. Obviously, as I am sat here rattling my gums.
The basic principles of getting a supply convoy safely from Point A to Point B haven’t fundamentally changed in 40 years. A supply convoy in Yemen during the counter-insurgency campaign in 1964. (Photo courtesy Colour Sergeant Trevor ‘Sadie’ Sadler, 1st Battalion ‘The Vikings’ Royal Anglian Regiment)
Anti-ambush drills are for when you have been unable to avoid being ambushed: the ambush has been sprung and people are shooting at you. They work when the ambush is either poorly organized or the intention is more to harass your people and make you run around than kill you all. This latter is often the case when insurgents don’t have the manpower or hardware to put on a proper show. Anti-ambush reaction drills do not work well when the ambush is set up right. Nothing does.
A British SF patrol in Jackals, Afghanistan 2010. (Photo courtesy Tom Blakey)
Avoidance is better than reaction
Whatever your strength and assets the best defence against an ambush is not to be caught in one because, generally, an ambush is sprung at the choice of the ambusher. This means the ambush is only triggered when the target force is either weak enough to kill or unable to chase down the group applying the harassing fire. You will always be at a disadvantage when ambushed. Your first consideration then is to organize your forces and movement to avoid an ambush. If your anti-ambush patrols catch an enemy force preparing an ambush for you then they are effectively assaulting them or ambushing them first. This is much better.
Always put a steady man on the back vehicle: former Para, Sergeant Roy Mobsby, PMC vehicle patrol in Iraq. (Photo courtesy Roy Mobsby)
Given you don’t come across the ambush before it is sprung then how you respond depends to a great extent on your forces and the type of ambush. I have tried to cover all the alternatives below to make this clear and get it to stick in your mind.
An ambush against your foot patrol
A close-range ambush is more serious as the choice to run away should have been eliminated in the planning by mining or covering the escape with effective fire. The only way to go is straight at the enemy. A determined charge, perhaps after setting up a fire team on your flank, will cause most ambushers to lose their nerve and run. Certainly this is better than the alternative – stay where you are in the area chosen by the enemy as the easiest killing ground.
REMEMBER:
The best anti-ambush drill by far is to avoid being caught in one.
An ambush against your vehicle patrol
Pretty much the same applies as for foot patrols with one or two significant differences:
Vehicle patrols tend to carry heavier weapons than foot patrols and be armoured to some extent. This means that an ambush will almost always be triggered by a mine or IED and then, rather than make the effort to kill you, the ambushers will very often fire with RPGs or heavy machine guns from a distance in the hope of penetrating your armour and increasing the casualties without too much risk. An RPG has a range of 1,100m and a .50cal machine gun double that so very often a small ambush party will stop you with a bomb and then fire at you with a heavy machine gun from over a kilometre away up a seriously steep hill. The best way to avoid a vehicle ambush other than the use of drones is anti-IED measures.