Interesting comment about the French Army.

Now that they are 'all volunteer' I thought maybe that would change.

Back when they were conscripting they would almost always send the French Foreign Legion into situations like Afghanistan.
Something about conscript service being restricted to europe or metropolitan France or something like that.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

On Tue, Jul 28, 2020 at 8:57 PM Rupert Boleyn <xxxxxx@gmail.com> wrote:


On 29Jul2020 0358, xxxxxx@gmail.com wrote:
> Didn't know you kept the 'Lance' Corporal (also Lance Sergeant or not?).
No Lance Sergeants.
>
> Our Master Corporals are above Corporals where I believe the Lance
> Corporal is below.
It is.
>
> Our CWO2s get to wear officer-ish gear (not quite identical) but I
> don't ever recall anyone saying they got 'Sir'd' but honestly I don't
> think I've seen one up close (privates hide form such encounters...
> lol) and so it may be they are.
"Sir", but you don't salute them. Not if you value your hide, anyway.
> Our MasterCorporals were leading our sections with a Corporal helping
> out (section 2ic). The Platoon Lt. and the Platoon Sgt. handled the
> platoon (the Sgt was 2ic and usually stayed with the weap det (heavy
> weapons section)).
That's much the same as us, but we had Corporals as section commanders
and Lance Corporals as section 2IC. In theory, anyway. It wasn't
uncommon for a senior LCpl to be a section commander.

> And then there was the 'national rules of engagement' (or
> non-engagement mostly). Germans, French and Nederlanders were fairly
> casualty averse (due to the big political blowback back home) so they
> got the easier sectors but did not leave the firebases much when
> contact was made with the foes and they didn't pursue. The Canucks,
> US, and Brits would pursue. This got the stay-at-homes the
> tongue-in-cheek name "FOBbits" (Forward Operating Base hobbits
> basically - stay home and comfy and get breakfast, second breakfast,
> elevensies, etc...).
Rules of engagement are famously written by politicians 'back home' and
Brass who never leave their air conditioned rear-area bases, and for
their lack of contact with the reality on the ground.

--
Rupert Boleyn <xxxxxx@gmail.com>

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