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Combat engineering

Combat engineering: Encyclopedia - Combat engineering

Combat engineering is the practice of using the knowledge, tools and techniques of engineering in combat. A combat engineer is a military specialist in using the tools and techniques of engineering under combat conditions, who may perform any of a variety of tasks. Such tasks typically include bridge and road construction, laying landmines, or detecting and clearing hazards. Generally, the combat engineer's tasks involve facilitating movement of friendly and allied forces while impeding enemy movement. Usually, a combat engineer is al ...

Including:

Combat engineering, Combat engineering - History, Combat engineering - Israel, Combat engineering - Role, Combat engineering - Specific combat engineering corps, Combat engineering - Terminology, Combat engineering - Tools, Combat engineering - United Kingdom, Combat engineering - United States

Combat engineering: Encyclopedia - Combat engineering



Combat engineering

Combat engineering is the practice of using the knowledge, tools and techniques of engineering in combat. A combat engineer is a military specialist in using the tools and techniques of engineering under combat conditions, who may perform any of a variety of tasks. Such tasks typically include bridge and road construction, laying landmines, or detecting and clearing hazards. Generally, the combat engineer's tasks involve facilitating movement of friendly and allied forces while impeding enemy movement. Usually, a combat engineer is also trained as an infantry rifleman and has general combat-engineering training as well as special expertise.

Combat engineering - Terminology

A general combat engineer is often called a "Sapper" (the word itself is derived from the French and British armies). In some armies the term Sapper is a professional term and indicates a specific military rank and level of training.

For example:

  • Sapper (abbreviated "Spr.") is both the Royal Engineers' and the Royal Canadian Engineers' equivalent of Private.
  • This is also the case within the Royal Australian Engineers, where referring to a Sapper as a Private is considered an insult and can result in disciplinary charges being laid.
  • In the Israeli Defence Forces, Sapper 07 ( פלס 07 ) is a professional-rank denoting a combat engineer who has graduated basic general engineering training.

Also to note is that the term combat engineer is different from field engineer in the United States Army. The latter usually denotes a mechanic of the Ordnance Corps who is skilled in field maintenance of equipment, weapons and armored fighting vehicles. In the British Army's Royal Engineers, however, the terms are synonymous, with a Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers tradesman being designated a mechanic or technician.

A Military engineer is an engineer specializing in military applications such as construction, fortification design, weapons design and more. The difference between a military engineer and a combat engineer is that a combat engineer usually operates during battle and under fire, while a military engineer is mostly not directly involved in the fighting. A military engineer is also usually a commissioned officer, whereas a combat engineer can hold any rank.

In the British and Australian armies, an assault pioneer is an infantry soldier with some combat engineering training. As well as clearing obstacles during the assault and light engineering duties, until recently assault pioneers were responsible for the operation of flamethrowers.

Combat engineering - Role

  • Mobility
    • Clearing terrain obstacles
    • Overcoming trenches and ditches
    • Opening routes for armored fighting vehicles
    • Constructing roads and bridges
    • Clearing landmine fields
  • Explosive material handling
    • Clearing landmine fields
    • Planting landmines
    • EOD and bomb disposal
    • Detonating booby traps and clearing areas of explosives
    • Accurate demolitions
  • Defence
    • Building fortifications
    • Building outposts
    • Building fences
  • Counter mobility
    • Planting landmines
    • Digging trenches and ditches
    • Demolishing roads and bridges
  • Assault
    • Opening routes during assault
    • Demolishing enemy structures (using bulldozers or explosive charges).
  • Defence against NBC weapon threats
    • Disposal of Chemical weapons
    • Disposal of Biological weapons
    • Disposal of Radiological weapons

Combat engineering - Tools

  • Combat engineering vehicles
    • Sapper carriers
    • Modified tanks
    • Bridgelaying tank
    • M728 Combat Engineer Vehicle
  • Engineering vehicles
    • Armoured bulldozers (such as the IDF Caterpillar D9)
    • bulldozers, front loaders, excavators, cranes, tractors etc
  • Reconnaissance vehicles
  • Minelayer
  • Mine breaching devices
    • Dozer blade
    • Mine rollers
  • EOD robots
  • Explosives, mines and bombs
  • Field-deployable bridges (ex: French EFA)

Combat engineering - History

In ancient times, combat engineers were responsible for siege warfare and building field fortifications, temporary camps and roads. The most notable engineers of ancient times were the Romans, who constructed huge siege-machines (catapults, battering rams and siege towers) and were responsible for constructing fortified wooden camps and paved roads for their legions. Many of these Roman roads are still in use two thousand years later.

In the Middle Ages combat engineers focused on siege warfare. They planned castles and fortresses. When laying siege, they planned and oversaw efforts to penetrate castle defences. When castles served a military purpose, one of the tasks of the sappers was to weaken the bases of walls to enable them to be breached before means of thwarting these activities were devised. Broadly speaking, sappers were experts at demolishing or otherwise overcoming or bypassing fortification systems.

When cannon first appeared, combat engineers were responsible for maintaining them while planning counter-artillery fortifications.

For more information about combat engineering before the modern era, see: Military engineer.

During the 20th century, combat engineers gained vast knowledge and experience in explosives. They are tasked with planting bombs, landmines and dynamite. Moreover, they are the only units with the clearance to detonate enemy explosive charges and the handling of unexploded ordinance. They are in charge of the Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) department and train specialists to defuse bombs.

Modern combat engineering still retains the Roman role of building field fortifications, road paving and the breaching of terrain obstacles. A notable combat engineer task was, for example, the breaching of the Suez Canal during the Yom Kippur War.

Combat engineering - Specific combat engineering corps

Combat engineering - United States

Main article: United States Army Corps of Engineers.

In the United States Army, the four tasks of combat engineer units are mobility, countermobility, survivability, and general engineering.

  • Mobility: improving your own force's ability to move around the battlefield. Combat engineers typically support this role through reduction of enemy obstacles which include point and row minefields, anti-tank ditches, wire obstacles, concrete and metal anti-vehicle barriers and wall and door breaching in urban terrain. Mechanized combat engineer units also have armored vehicles capable of laying short bridges for limited gap-crossing.
  • Countermobility: building obstacles to prevent the enemy from moving around the battlefield. Destroying bridges, blocking roads, cratering airstrips, digging trenches, etc. Can also include planting landmines and booby traps when authorized and directed to do so.
  • Survivability: building structures which enable one's own soldiers to survive on the battlefield. Examples include trenches, bunkers, shelters, and armored vehicle fighting positions.
  • General Engineering: general engineering sustains military forces in the theater through the performance of facility construction and repair, and through acquisition, maintenance, and disposal of real property.

Plastic explosives are heavily used in combat engineering.

MOTTO: The motto of the American Engineers, "ESSAYONS," is French for "Let us try."

Explosive Ordnance Disposal EOD units in the U.S. Army are manned by ordnance personnel.

See also the United States Navy's Seabees.

Combat engineering - Israel

Main article: Israeli Engineering Corps.

In the Israeli Defence Forces the combat engineers are organized under the Israel Engineering Corps (Hebrew: חיל ההנדסה הקרבית). In addition to IEC sappers, each infantry brigade has an engineer company trained with basic engineering and EOD skills. IEC sappers are often attached to other units (such as armored divisions or infantry) in order to help them breach obstacles and handle explosive threats. The IEC operates advance engineering tools such as Caterpillar D9 armored bulldozer, IDF Puma armored CEV, EOD robots and electromagnetic mine-detectors. Their main role is enabling Israeli forces to advance (breach the enemy's obstacles), stop the enemy's movement, handle explosive and perform construction and destruction under fire. The Israeli engineering corpes alsp responsible for counter-NBC warfare (i.e. defending troops against unconventional weapon and clean infected areas). The IEC has a special unit, called Yahalom (in Hebrew it means "Diamond" but also abbervation of "Engineering Unit for Special Operations") which handles EOD, commando, engineering recon, advance robotics, tunnel warfare, maritime breaching, counter-NBC and other classified tasks.

MOTTO: "Rishonim Tamid ראשונים תמיד", Hebrew for "Always first".

Combat engineering - United Kingdom

See: Royal Engineers.

Categories: Ground warfare | Engineering | Military occupations | Military engineers

Other related archives

20th century, Biological weapons, British, British Army's, CEV, Caterpillar D9, Chemical weapons, Combat engineering vehicles, Defence, Diamond, EOD, Engineering, Engineering vehicles, Explosive, Explosive Ordnance Disposal, French, Ground warfare, Hebrew, IDF Caterpillar D9, Israel, Israel Engineering Corps, Israeli Defence Forces, Israeli Engineering Corps, M728 Combat Engineer Vehicle, Middle Ages, Military engineer, Military engineers, Military occupations, Mobility, NBC, NBC weapon, Ordnance Corps, Plastic explosives, Radiological weapons, Reconnaissance, Roman roads, Romans, Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers, Royal Engineers, Sapper, Seabees, Suez Canal, United Kingdom, United States, United States Army, United States Army Corps of Engineers, United States Navy, Yahalom, Yom Kippur War, armored fighting vehicles, artillery, battering rams, bomb disposal, booby traps, bridge, bridges, bulldozers, cannon, castles, catapults, combat, commando, commissioned officer, construction, cranes, demolitions, dynamite, electromagnetic, enemy, engineering, excavators, explosives, field engineer, flamethrowers, fortification, fortifications, front loaders, landmine, landmines, legions, mechanic, military rank, outposts, rifleman, road, roads, robotics, siege towers, siege warfare, soldiers, tanks, tractors, trenches, unconventional weapon



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Combat engineering", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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