Force Recon--
By Land, Sea, and Air
by
Lt. Gen. Herman Nickerson Jr., USMC*
Marine Corps Gazette, February 1959
Force Recon--By Land, Sea, and Air, written by, then, Brig. Gen. Herman
Nickerson, Jr., February 1959, and published in the Marine Corps Gazette,
defines the new company's mission, main tasks, and capabilities. Using an
amphibious operation ("Strongback") conducted in the Philippines in 1958,
General Nickerson explains, in depth, the concept of how the Force Recon
Company performs the task of gaining "timely" information to assist the
commander in arriving at decisions and in executing it's other vital roles
in the landings.
"The job: Reduce the Uncertainty." So wrote Brig. Gen. J. M. Masters Sr.
in the June 1958 Gazette. "Uncertainty is an ugly three-headed spook,
which will haunt the commander. . . . The spook's three heads? The enemy,
the weather, and the terrain. . . ."
To this statement of the intelligence officer's job we could add a job
description: use available tools skillfully to strip
*Credited as "The God-Father of Long-Range Reconnaissance," Lt. Gen.
General Nickerson assumed command of III MAF in March 1969. Immediately
realizing the need for reconnaissance information beyond that provided
division commanders by their respective recon battalions, he put theory to
form when he tasked 1st Force Recon Company to conduct deep patrol
operations for the MAF in June, followed by the reconstituted 3d Force
Reconnaissance Company in October of that year.--Ed.
the veils from the three-headed spook and provide the commander with the
information he needs to make a sound decision. One of the commander's best
tools, in my opinion, is the force recon company. By well-conceived
employment of this organization, many of the uncertainties can be reduced.
Only when the commander has the best available information on the enemy,
weather, and terrain can he confidently order "Launch helicopters!" and
"Land the landing force!"
Perhaps the greatest difference of opinion on modern amphibious tactics
and techniques arises from: first, the debate as to whether or not nuclear
munitions will be used; and second, the size and degree of unit
separation. No matter what size the separation unit is that lands by
helicopter in the amphibious assault, we can all agree that the highest
order of intelligence is required for this unit to "stay loose," hit hard,
then saddle up and move out rapidly--avoiding, all the while, the
unproductive moment of nuclear-weapon target-size concentration. How,
then, shall we succeed in unveiling the spook?
Within force troops, in both FMFLant and FMFPac, we have the key to unlock
a part of the Houdini apparatus--the force reconnaissance company. The
proper utilization of these highly skilled "eyeballs" and "eardrums" is
the skeleton key to success in modern amphibious warfare.
The general missions of these companies are to support
a landing force by: first, conducting a pre-assault and post-assault
amphibious and parachute reconnaissance; and second, conducting
pre-assault and post-assault parachute and other pathfinding missions.
A force reconnaissance company is a part of the task organization of the
landing force and is employed to extend the ground reconnaissance
capability of that force beyond the coverage afforded by the organic
reconnaissance battalion of Marine divisions. As noted in the mission,
this is accomplished by pre-assault terrestrial reconnaissance using
amphibious and parachute means. To conduct post-assault deep
reconnaissance, helicopter lift and parachuting are used. The company
employs helicopters to establish and displace deep observation posts for
battlefield surveillance. The reconnaissance-surveillance portion of the
force reconnaissance company's mission must be closely monitored by the
landing force G-2 to insure that all efforts are integrated into the
overall intelligence collection plan. Only by obtaining and using all
available information can the intelligence officer fit together the
assorted pieces of the jigsaw puzzle and present the commander with a
clear picture.
In addition, the force reconnaissance company is employed to provide
parachute pathfinder services in the approach and retirement lanes and
helicopter landing zones, in amphibious and subsequent land operations.
Pathfinder teams provide pre-assault navigational assistance to
helicopters in approach to and along approach-retirement lanes.
Pathfinder teams provide terminal guidance to the helicopter assault waves
in the landing zones, in either day or night operations. Final pre-H-hour
reports of enemy activity, obstacles, weather, and radiological
contamination in the landing zones and near vicinity are made by these
pathfinder teams. Pathfinders are capable of limited obstacle clearance,
should this work be necessary, and they provide emergency communication
support and assembly aid to the helicopter-landed troops.
The main tasks of a force reconnaissance company, then, are: First, to
perform pre-D-day reconnaissance as required by the overall intelligence
collection plan, using parachute and amphibious means; second, to provide
pathfinder services. In order to do these jobs, the company is
functionally organized to plan and execute--with the support of tactical
and transport fixed-winged aircraft, helicopters, and naval vessels--the
following tactical missions: perform pre-D-day amphibious reconnaissance
of any landing beaches required by the landing plan; establish
coastwatcher stations or inland observation posts after D-day, if
required; execute pre-D-day parachute reconnaissance of helicopter landing
zones--of the approach and retirement lanes thereto--and of other key inland
installations of interest to the Marine expeditionary force; conduct
post-D-day reconnaissance, by helicopter or parachute, of critical areas
beyond the range of division reconnaissance means; and finally, render
necessary parachute or pathfinder support to assault waves.
These varied tasks are accomplished by fourteen officers and 147 enlisted,
organized into a company headquarters of four officers and thirty-three
enlisted; a parachute reconnaissance platoon of three officers and
twenty-three enlisted; and an amphibious reconnaissance platoon of two
officers and twenty-three enlisted. A major (0302) is in command. Twelve
officers and ninety-seven enlisted Marines are on parachute jump status.
In 1966, the Marine Corps introduced a bold, new concept to the battlefield. Little did the designers of that concept realize that it would change the way wars are fought, and the Corps, from that day forward.
One of the most influential strategies of the Vietnam War, the Stingray Patrol comprised seven to ten marines in small teams, inserted by chopper deep in enemy territory. Surrounded on all sides by North Vietnamese Army troops and Viet Cong guerillas, these small, high-effective teams brought death and destruction to the enemy without ever going head-to-head in a gunfight with them.
Like today’s Special Forces, Navy SEALs, Army Rangers, and Marine Force Recon units that operate behind enemy lines using laser pointers and satellite communications, these Stingray Patrols helped target the enemy for artillery and air strikes . . . with devastating accuracy and effect.
Force Recon Marine and team leader Bruce “Doc” Norton participated in many Stingray missions and, now, through interviews, eyewitness accounts, and declassified documents, he takes the reader behind enemy lines, telling the full story of Stingray’s origins and operations.
Stingray is the definitive history of these units and missions.
Major Bruce H. “Doc” Norton, USMC (Ret.) has been a combat veteran, a career Marine Infantry Officer, a military museum director, and an adjunct military history professor, and is an award-winning author of numerous books on and about the United States Marines. Doc has a son, Bruce H. Norton II, and a daughter, Elizabeth A. Norton, who reside in Charleston, South Carolina.
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