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jcustis
07-29-2008, 04:10 PM
Spartan0302 advised me that the subject text had recently been released by the Combined Arms Center. Is this available as a hardcopy, and could anyone in the know score me a couple of copies?

Tom Odom
07-29-2008, 05:04 PM
The title is "Scouts Out! The Development of Reconnaisssance Units in Modern Armies (http://www-cgsc.army.mil/carl/download/csipubs/scouts_out.pdf)



The Combat Studies Institute is pleased to present Scouts Out! The development of Reconnaissance Units in Modern Armies by CSI historian John J. McGrath. Scouts Out is a wide-ranging historical survey of the theory, doctrine, organization, and employment of reconnaissance units since the era of mechanization in the early 20th century.
Reconnaissance and counterreconnaissance are battlefield missions as old as military history itself and missions for which many armies have created specialized units to perform. In most cases, these units were trained, equipped, and used differently from the majority of an army’s fighting units. Horse cavalry performed these missions for centuries, for it had speed and mobility far in excess of main battle units. Once the horse was replaced by mechanization, however, the mobility advantage once enjoyed by the horse cavalry disappeared. Since the early 20th century, the search for the proper mix of equipment, the proper organization, and the proper employment of reconnaissance units has bedeviled armies around the world. This survey uses a diverse variety of historical cases to illustrate the enduring issues that surround the equipping, organizing, and employment of reconnaissance units.
It seems that these specialized units are either too heavily or too lightly equipped and too narrowly specialized or too conventionally organized. Prewar reconnaissance doctrines tend to undergo significant change once fighting begins, leading to postconflict analysis that reconnaissance units were “misused” in one way or another. McGrath ends his study with an intriguing conclusion about the role that specialized reconnaissance units should have in the future that may surprise many readers.
Scouts Out is a thought-provoking historical study that we believe will contribute to the Army’s current and future transformation efforts. If this study of the past stimulates thought among today’s professionals, it will have achieved its purpose. CSI—The Past Is Prologue!

you can download it at the link.