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World War II Combat Reconnaissance Tactics

(Elite 156)

The purposes and means of reconnaissance

'Reconnaissance' is the activity of reconnoitring to collect information through surveillance and


examination of an area or specific site, or of enemy forces and their activities. The focus of
intelligence and reconnaissance varied greatly depending on the level of command: the lower the
echelon, the more detailed and precise the information had to be, and the smaller its scope and
area of interest (although higher command echelons did sometimes need detailed intelligence on
specifics).

At theatre level, the commander was concerned with the overall numbers of the enemy's forces,
and with his capability to produce and transport materiel, weapons and equipment to the combat
zone. At army group and field army levels, commanders were concerned with the enemy's long-
term objectives, his abilities to shape the battlefield by shifting his forces, the number of available
divisions, and the logistics to support them. The corps commander was looking at how many
regiments and supporting assets the enemy could field, and what forces were available to reinforce
his defence or exploit a successful offensive. Division commanders focused on the number of
battalions, artillery pieces and tanks facing them, on road networks, and the size and nature of
bodies of water. A regimental/brigade commander was interested in what was on the next hill, if
bridges could support his tanks, and if there were obstacles that could slow his advance.

A battalion commander was really only interested in the enemy forces he was immediately engaged
with, whether the fields were too muddy for off-road movement, and how long he had before the
morning fog burned off to expose his moving troops. The company commander was concerned
about snipers in the woods ahead of him, if his mortars could penetrate the roof of pillboxes, if his
men could wade the streams, and if his patrols would leave tell-tale tracks through dew-covered
grass.

While reconnaissance is usually imagined as carried out by patrols on the ground, it can also be
conducted by examining maps and aerial photographs, by electronic interception of radio traffic, by
long-range surveillance using optical devices, by aerial reconnaissance, and by observations from
watercraft. Reconnaissance by ground or aircraft radar was then in its infancy, but saw some use
late in World War II. Information was even collected by sound detection and ranging, especially
when detecting artillery but also from the sounds made by armoured vehicles, truck traffic and
other enemy activity.

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