Wow, everybody is crawling out of the woodwork today.
This position was always reserved for the most switched on and senior members of the Sqn. Its too bad really, we had a great support troop in the PEIR in the mid 80's. Senior guys with the actual course. Then we had a great one in the Strats too....we were outcasts and we loved it.
Yeah, but that was (correct me if I'm wrong) mostly due to all the *other* jobs Assault troop did; the Pioneer-esque tasks like abatis, mine clearing/mine laying, ford and bridge improvement, etc etc. Those are all special, "oddball" skills that need a lot of extra training to build up.
But in the world we have now, it takes long enough to train a "regular" Recce soldier. The guys coming out of Basic & CAP don't have any recce skills to speak of, and DP1 just gives them driving, radios, and some AFV. You don't have a real recce trooper until DP2, and realistically, it still takes some time in the troops to fill in the gaps and get enough practical experience to where you have a properly salted troop.
Similar deal with the officer side. A 2Lt has training on how to conduct dismounted recce patrols, how to conduct section attacks and section defenses, and depending on his course staff, he may have gotten his feet moist on platoon-level tactics. (My BOT/BOAT did section attacks for a week, and later in the week, guys who had done their section attacks were being tasked as platoon commanders and getting a low-key introduction to fighting a platoon as a platoon - flanking attacks and so on. This wasn't part of the course; I think it was more a way to alleviate some of the boredom of Yet Another Section Attack - but hey, it worked. Between that and the Great Invasion of the Madeline Islands, I actually had a bit of a schmick on how to conduct a platoon attack as a 2Lt)
If you have a BOT/BOAT or CAP-R or whatever the hell they call it these days qualified 2Lt, a switched-on WO or Sgt to help mentor him and keep things from running amok, a couple of master jacks, and maybe a couple of soon-to-go-on-PLQ Cpls, the wad of Privates, plus an ML or two, you have the makings of an effective Assault Troop that serves to provide decent, fun training for all involved (save maybe the poor WO who gets shafted as nanny)
Is that the equivalent of the Strats' Support Troop? Hell no. But it can play a useful part in the greater scheme of things, if there are enough people to man it.
Here in the Windsors, we just don't have the people. No available WO, no spare Sgts, no spare MCpls. Even if you gave me 20-odd Ptes right now as the core of 44, we'd be able to fill the troop leader spot and that's about it.
I'd like to see us do what we did in PEI, where 43 ran a Basic course, and then once the students graduated the course as a whole (students and instructors) stood up as a troop. That worked really, really well, as it eased everybody into the recce job gradually (the students did QL3 the same summer as the troop leader did Phase 3/Phase 4) and they'd had a year of working together to build unit cohesion. 43 PEIR in 1996 was a tight-kit group, used to working together, and we really pulled ourselves up by our bootstraps.
I'd love to see that happen with the Windsors, but there isn't a spare WO, Sgt, and a pair of Jacks to stand up even a 5-car troop.
If we had the extra leadership bodies, I'm certain that we could stand up Assault Troop too. But they just ain't there.
DG