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Cold-weather warfare

Cold-weather warfare, also known as arctic warfare or winter warfare, encompasses military operations affected by snow, ice, thawing conditions or cold, both on land and at sea. Cold-weather conditions occur year-round at high elevation or at high latitudes, and elsewhere materialise seasonally during the winter period. Mountain warfare often takes place in cold weather or on terrain that is affected by ice and snow, such as the Alps and the Himalayas. Historically, most such operations have been during winter in the Northern Hemisphere. Some have occurred above the Arctic Circle where snow, ice and cold may occur throughout the year. At times, cold or its aftermath—thaw—has been a decisive factor in the failure of a campaign, as with the French invasion of Russia in 1812, the Soviet invasion of Finland in 1939,[1][2] and the German invasion of the Soviet Union during World War II.

Royal Marine reservists training for winter operations

History

Northern and Eastern Europe were the venues for some well-documented winter campaigns. During World War II several actions took place above the Arctic Circle. Recent cold-weather conflicts have occurred in the Himalayas.

Pre–1800

In 1242, the Teutonic Order lost the Battle on the Ice on Lake Peipus to Novgorod. In 1520, the decisive Battle of Bogesund between Sweden and Denmark occurred on the ice of lake Åsunden.[3]

In 1643 or 1644, Prince Rupert made an abortive attack on the Parliamentarian stronghold of Aylesbury England. 500 men are reported to have frozen to death on 21 January. On 25 January a sudden thaw caused a bridge to collapse over the River Weaver, splitting Royalist cavalry forces at the Battle of Nantwich resulting in their defeat.[4]

The 1557 Siege of Katsurayama in was fought between the forces of the Japanese daimyō Takeda Shingen and Uesugi Kenshin as part of the Kawanakajima campaigns. Katsurayama castle was a strategically vital Uesugi stronghold in the contested Shinano Province and, when it was isolated from reinforcements due to late snow in early 1557, the Takeda clan used this opportunity to seize it under Baba Nobuharu, shielded from view by heavy snowfall.[5]

Sweden and Denmark fought several wars during the 16th and 17th centuries. As a great deal of Denmark consists of islands, it was usually safe from invasion, but in January 1658, most of the Danish waters froze. Charles X Gustav of Sweden led his army across the ice of the Belts to besiege Copenhagen. The war ended with the treaty of Roskilde, a treaty very favorable to the Swedish.[6]

During the Great Northern War, Swedish king Charles XII set off to invade Moscow, but was eventually defeated at the Battle of Poltava after being weakened by cold weather and scorched earth tactics. Sweden suffered more casualties during the same war as Carl Gustaf Armfeldt with 6,000 men tried to invade Trondheim. Three thousand of them died of exposure in the snow during the Carolean Death March.[7]

19th century

During the Finnish War, the Russian army unexpectedly crossed the frozen Gulf of Bothnia from Finland to Åland and, by 19 March 1809, reached the Swedish shore within 70 kilometres (43 mi) from the Swedish capital, Stockholm. This daring maneuvre decided the outcome of the war.[8]

Napoleon's invasion of Russia in 1812 resulted in retreat in the face of winter[9] with the majority of the French army succumbing to frostbite and starvation, rather than combat injuries.[10]

The Battle of Weihaiwei was a battle of the First Sino-Japanese War in the winter of 1895 in Weihai, Shandong, China between the forces of the Japan and Qing China. Through a well coordinated offensive of both naval and land forces, hampered by snow and cold, the Japanese destroyed the forts on shore and sank much of the Chinese fleet.[11]

20th century

World War I

 
Italian mountain troops in WWI

During the First World War, soldiers on the Western front involved in trench warfare were forced to deal with freezing conditions, trench foot, frostbite, and disease. The winter of 1916-17 was exceptionally cold, which caused great hardship and deaths among the soldiers. Equipment and vehicles also were not suited for the freezing conditions.[12]

At the Battle of Sarikamish, Ottoman troops were unprepared for winter fighting and suffered major losses, with 25,000 freezing to death before the battle even began.

On the Italian front, fighting bogged down in trench warfare but at mountain elevations. On White Friday, thousands of troops from both sides were killed in avalanches in the Dolomites.

World War II

 
Finnish ski troops during the 1939 Winter War

The Finnish Army used ski troops during the Winter War and the Second World War in which the numerically-superior but road-bound Soviet forces were vulnerable to attack by mobile, white-clad ski troops, approaching from untracked, frozen terrain.[13]

The Wehrmacht maintained elite mountain troops, Gebirgsjäger. They were organized in small, specialized units, which relied on pack animals. Typical weapons were light machine guns, mortars, and anti-tank guns. Control of ridge lines was paramount, using a limited number of outposts.[14] They operated on the principles of fewer arms, but more ammunition per weapon and the economical use thereof.[15]

In Operation Barbarossa in 1941, both Russian and German soldiers had to endure terrible conditions during the Russian winter. The German-Finnish joint offensive against Murmansk (Operation Silver Fox) in 1941 saw heavy fighting in the Arctic environment. Subsequently, the Petsamo-Kirkenes Operation conducted by the Soviet Army against the Wehrmacht in 1944 in northern Finland and Norway drove the Germans out of there.[16] In late 1944, Finland turned against its former cobelligerents of Nazi Germany under Soviet pressure and pressured the Germans to withdraw in the ensuing Lapland War.[17] While use of ski infantry was common in the Soviet Army, Germany formed only one division for movement on skis.[13] From June 1942 to August 1943, the United States and Canada fought the Japanese in the Aleutian Islands Campaign in the Alaska Territory.[18]

In the Arctic

 
Rime ice on a 20-inch (51 cm) signal projector on the cruiser, HMS Sheffield (C24), escorting a 1941 Arctic convoy to the Soviet Union in World War II

The following actions were fought in the Arctic by land and naval forces in World War II between 1941 and 1945 in the following theaters of operations:

Finland – The Winter War was a military conflict between the Soviet Union (USSR) and Finland. It began with a Soviet invasion of Finland on 30 November 1939, three months after the outbreak of World War II, and ended three and a half months later with the Moscow Peace Treaty on 13 March 1940.

In the Battle of Suomussalmi, Finns leveraged cold weather to disadvantage the Soviet enemy troops by targeting field kitchens and campfires for their attacks, thereby denying those troops warmth and nutrition.[19][20] The Finns rotated their troops so that they could regularly return to warm shelters to recuperate after an attack or patrol. Heavy Soviet equipment and their associated troops were restricted to roads, while Finnish ski troops had broad mobility to outflank the enemy.[20] The threat of Finnish snipers, whom the Russians called "cuckoos", further demoralized the Soviets.[19][20] The Finns mined ice routes over lakes to sink Soviet equipment.[21]

The Lapland War was fought between Finland and Germany from September 1944 to April 1945 in Finland's northernmost Lapland Province. It included:[22]

Norway – The liberation of Finnmark was a military operation, lasting from 23 October 1944 until 26 April 1945, in which Soviet and Norwegian forces wrestled away control of Finnmark, the northernmost county of Norway, from Germany. It started with a major Soviet offensive that liberated Kirkenes.[26]

Northern RussiaOperation Silver Fox was a joint German–Finnish military operation offensive during World War II. Its main goal was to cut off and ultimately capture the key Soviet port at Murmansk through attacks from Finnish and Norwegian territory.[27]

SpitsbergenOperation Gauntlet was a Combined Operations raid by Canadian troops, with British Army logistics support and Free Norwegian Forces servicemen on the Norwegian island of Spitsbergen, 600 miles (970 km) south of the North Pole, from 25 August to 3 September 1941.[28] Operation Fritham was a Norwegian military operation, based from British soil, that had the goal of securing the rich coal mines on the island of Spitsbergen (a part of Svalbard) and denying their use to Nazi Germany.[29] Operation Zitronella (Citronella) was an eight-hour German raid on Spitzbergen on 8 September 1943.[30] This marks the highest latitude at which a land battle has ever been fought. However, given the extreme conditions, the German and Allied troops were at times compelled to assist each other to survive.[31]

United States – The Aleutian Islands Campaign was a campaign conducted by both the United States and Imperial Japan from 3 June 1942 to 15 August 1943 in Attu and Kiska, part of the Aleutian Islands in Alaska during World War II.[32]

Post World War II

Comparison of Chinese and US military winter field uniforms, 1951

The Battle of Chosin Reservoir was a stark example of cold affecting military operations in the Korean War. There were many cold injuries and malfunctions of materiel, both vehicles and weapons.[33][34]

The Sino-Indian War was a Himalayan border conflict between China and India that occurred in 1962. India initiated a Forward Policy in which it placed outposts along the border in 1961. China launched simultaneous offensives in Ladakh and across the McMahon Line on 20 October 1962. Chinese troops advanced over Indian forces in both theaters. Much of the fighting took place in harsh mountain conditions, entailing large-scale combat at altitudes of over 4,000 metres (14,000 feet).[35] Many troops on both sides succumbed to the freezing cold temperatures.[36]

Argentine troops suffered from cold-wet conditions, holding positions in the 1982 Falklands War.[37]

The Siachen conflict is a military confrontation between India and Pakistan over the disputed Siachen Glacier region in Kashmir. The conflict began in 1984 with India's successful Operation Meghdoot during which it gained control over all of the Siachen Glacier.[38] A cease-fire went into effect in 2003.[39]

Historical lessons learned

 
Frostbitten hand with gangrene, suffered by a Japanese soldier in the Sino-Japanese War, winter of 1894–5

Paton offered a 2001 overview of human factors pertaining to cold in military operations. The understanding of cold injuries evolved in the 19th and 20th centuries; understanding of the causes and treatment of frostbite and trench foot improved. In the Sino-Japanese War, the Japanese learned the importance of foot care, keeping feet dry and warm with replacement socks. In World War I, doctors realized that trench foot was a prolonged exposure to cold, wet conditions on the feet, which were exacerbated by the use of tight puttees, bandage-like leg wrappings.[40]

The Soviet invasion of Finland during the Winter War showed the power of asymmetric warfare on the Finnish side, where small units were able to cut the road-bound Soviet invading troops into segments, like firewood, and vanquish each segment. The small units arrived silently on skis or with light artillery pulled by reindeer over frozen, untracked terrain, using winter conditions as an advantage. Although the Soviet Union gained territory from the Finns, it was at the cost of 200,000 fatalities against 25,000 on the Finnish side.[2]

The German invasion of the Soviet Union induced more than 250,000 cold injuries in one year. The French Army occupying the Maginot Line experienced 12,000 cold injuries. Experiences from the disastrous 1941 German advance on Moscow in winter conditions led to the 1942 Taschenbuch für den Winterkrieg ("Pocket book for Winter War"), which highlighted ideal approaches to handling winter, but acknowledged that improvisation in the field would be necessary when supplies were lacking. The Soviet troops in that period had felt-lined boots and quilted uniforms, but the Germans continued fighting in their summer uniforms.[40]

German handbook

 
German troops extricating vehicle from the November 1941 mud in the Eastern Front
 
Improvised shelter around a fir tree, adapted from the 1942 German Taschenbuch für den Winterkrieg

The Taschenbuch für den Winterkrieg manual contains sections on the influence and duration of winter, the seasons of mud and thaw, preparation for winter warfare, winter combat methods and maintaining morale, including the use of reading material, lectures, movies, and "strength through joy" exercises. Other sections cover marches, the maintenance of roads, winter bivouacs and shelter, construction of winter positions, camouflage and concealment, identification of the enemy, clothing, rations, evacuation of the wounded, care and use of weapons and equipment, signal communication, and winter mobility. The manual was designed to provide information at the officer level for indoctrination of troops via the non-commissioned officer ranks. The scope of the manual is to train troops in the following areas:[41]

  • Protection of personnel, vehicles and weapons against snow and cold
  • Training personnel to be hardened against the conditions encountered and able to improvise shelter from found materials
  • Mobility on skis, winter roads, ice crossings, and conversion of wheeled vehicles into tracked versions
  • Construction of positions and obstacles in frozen terrain
  • Combat in deep snow and severe cold

Some highlights include addressing:[41]

  • Human factors – Providing the right level of clothing to maintain agility and avoid overheating. Maintaining a slow, steady marching pace to avoid chilling down in the wind. Boosting morale with up-to-date newspapers from home and nearby areas. Providing improvised shelters and bivouacs. Hygiene, emphasizing cleanliness.
  • Mobility – Setting up and maintaining winter roads and trails. Warming up engines for reliable starting.
  • Positions and fortifications – Using logs and snow as materials to provide trenches and gun emplacements.
  • Care of equipment – Keeping equipment dry, when possible, and substituting low-temperature lubricants for oils and hydraulic fluids.

Soviet experience

The Soviet Army learned from its 1939–40 Winter War experiences and the 1941 German advance on Moscow. The high command realized that it must prepare entire divisions for winter warfare in 1942, beginning with warm uniforms, winter equipment (skis, etc.), and training for winter operations. Analysis of previous experiences resulted in a series of manuals that covered flight, engineer, and combat arms operations in winter. Issues covered included:[42]

  • Flight operations – Reduced daylight, snow drifting, cold temperatures impeded the added need for air transport.
  • Engineer operations – Engineer troops build new roadways, airfields, water crossings, and encampments with water supply. They destroy obstacles, requiring engineering equipment. Regular troops entrench tanks, construct tank obstacles, and build simple shelters.
  • Combat arms operations – Addressing the German methods of defense with automatic weapons strongholds, supplemented with mines, wires, and anti-tank obstacles. Against these, the Russians used coordinated massed fire.
 
Soviet gunner providing covering fire during the 1941 Battle of Moscow

In his 1981 paper, Fighting the Russians in Winter: Three Case Studies, Chew draws on experiences from the Allied-Soviet War in Northern Russia during the Winter of 1918–19, the destruction of the Soviet 44th Motorized Rifle Division, and Nazi–Soviet Warfare during World War II to derive winter warfare factors pertaining to military tactics, materiel and personnel:[43]

  • Tactics – Defensive positions are highly advantageous because of the ability to maintain warmth and protection, compared to attacking in extreme cold. Mobility and logistical support are often restricted by snow, requiring plowing or compacting it to accommodate wide-tracked vehicles or sleds. Infantry movement in deep snow requires skis or snowshoes to avoid exhaustion. Sound carries well over crusted snow, diminishing the element of surprise. Explosives are useful for excavating foxholes and larger shelters in frozen ground. Attacking field kitchens and encampments deprives the enemy of food and shelter. Rapid removal of the wounded from the battlefield is essential to their survival in the cold.
  • Materiel – Weapons and vehicles require special lubricants to operate at low temperatures. Mines are unreliable in winter, owing to deep snow that may cushion the fuse or form an ice bridge over the detonator.
  • Personnel – Proper winter clothing is required to maintain body heat and to avoid such cold injuries as frostbite. Troop efficiency and survival requires either making use of available shelter or providing portable shelter.

Land operations

Operational factors encompass planning for the climate and weather in which military operations are required with snow, ice, mud and cold being the primary considerations. Military tactics, materiel, combat engineering and military medicine all require specialized adaptations to the conditions encountered in cold weather. The Soviet Army was an early adopter of a protocol for winter warfare.[42]

Cold and mountainous regions

 
Cold regions that have a significant effect on military operations for one month or more each year.
  Severely cold
  Moderately cold
 
The principal mountain ranges of the world

In its 2016 "Mountain Warfare and Cold Weather Operations" manual, the US Army defines cold regions as "where cold temperatures, unique terrain, and snowfall have a significant effect on military operations for one month or more each year." It describes regions that are either severely cold or moderately cold, each comprising approximately one quarter of the Earth's land mass.[44]

  • Severely cold – Where mean annual air temperatures stay below freezing, maximum snow depths exceed 60 centimetres (24 in), and ice covers lakes and rivers for more than 180 days each year.
  • Moderately cold – Where the mean temperatures during the coldest month are below freezing.

The manual also delineates the principal mountain ranges of the world, which lie along broad belts which encircle the Pacific basin and then lead westward across Eurasia into North Africa. Secondarily, rugged chains of mountains lie along the Atlantic margins of the Americas and Europe.

 
Cooling power of wind, expressed as an equivalent chill temperature under calm conditions

Weather conditions

Temperature, wind, snow, and thaw are the primary conditions that affect the winter battlescape.

Temperature

The US Army groups cold temperatures using categories. The temperature categories are (with quoted summaries):[44]

  • Wet cold – From 39 to 20 °F (4 to −7 °C). Wet cold conditions occur when wet snow and rain often accompany wet cold conditions. This type of environment is more dangerous to troops and equipment than the colder, dry cold environments because the ground becomes slushy and muddy and clothing and equipment becomes perpetually wet and damp.
  • Dry cold – From 19 to −4 °F (−7 to −20 °C). Dry cold conditions are easier to live in than wet cold conditions. Like in wet cold conditions, proper equipment, training and leadership are critical to successful operations. Wind chill is a complicating factor in this type of cold. The dry cold environment is the easiest of the four cold weather categories to survive in because of low humidity and the ground remains frozen. As a result, people and equipment are not subject to the effects of the thawing and freezing cycle, and precipitation is generally in the form of dry snow.
  • Intense cold – From −5 to −25 °F (−21 to −32 °C). This temperature range can affect the mind as much as the body. Simple tasks take longer and require more effort than in warmer temperatures and the quality of work degrades as attention-to-detail diminishes. Clothing becomes more bulky to compensate for the cold so troops lose dexterity. Commanders consider these factors when planning operations and assigning tasks.
  • Extreme cold – From −25 to −40 °F (−32 to −40 °C). In extreme cold the challenge of survival becomes paramount as personnel withdraw into themselves. Weapons, vehicles and munitions are likely to fail in this environment.
  • Hazardous cold – From −40 °F (−40 °C) and below. Units require extensive training before operating in these temperature extremes.

The combined cooling effect of ambient temperature and wind (wind chill) is an important factor that affects troops.

Snow

 
Royal Navy Merlin Mk3 helicopter, operating in heavy snow at the Bardufoss Air Station, Norway.

For military purposes, the US Army categorizes snow as light, moderate, or heavy. Each classification affects visibility and ground movement due to accumulation and is quoted below:[44]

  • Light snow – Visibility is equal to or greater than 58 mile (1,000 m) in falling snow. A trace to one inch (2.5 cm) per hour accumulates.
  • Moderate snow – Visibility is 516 to 12 mile (500 to 800 m) in falling snow. One to three inches (2.5 to 7.6 cm) per hour accumulates.
  • Heavy snow – Visibility is less than 14 mile (400 m) in falling snow. Three inches (7.6 cm) or more inches per hour accumulates.

Snow and snowdrifts can create advantages on the battlefield by filling in ditches and vehicle tracks and flattening the terrain. It also creates hollows on the downwind side of obstacles, such as trees, buildings, and bushes, which provide observation points or firing positions. Snowdrifts may provide cover for soldiers to approach an objective.[44] Soviet Army doctrine cited 30 centimetres (12 in) as the threshold snow depth that impairs mobility for troops, cavalry and vehicles, except tanks for which the threshold was 50 centimetres (20 in).[42]

Thaw

 
Russian T-80 main battle tank maneuvering in thawing conditions

Thawing conditions can impair mobility and put soldiers at risk of trench foot by turning soil to mud; it can also weaken and break up ice cover on bodies of water. Maintaining roads becomes more difficult during spring-thaw run-off periods and requires mud removal by heavy equipment. Slushy and muddy ground causes clothing and equipment to become wet, damp and dirty.[44] Muddy conditions greatly inhibited Napoleon's ability to maneuver in Russia in the autumn of 1812[45] and also the German attempt to take Moscow in the autumn of 1941.[46]

The 1942 Taschenbuch für den Winterkrieg acknowledges that neither tracked nor wheeled vehicles can maneuver during conditions of thaw and that aircraft operations must be constrained to concrete runways. It addresses minimizing the use of roads during this period and dismantling bridges that are likely to be taken out by ice floes. It emphasizes how positions in frozen soil must be improved to avoid deterioration from thaw and the necessity of changing uniforms from ones for cold to those for wet conditions.[41]

Tactics

 
A Swedish Bandvagn 206 small unit support vehicle in Norwegian service being operated by US Marines

The dominant tactical concern in cold conditions is the ability to maneuver in vehicles or on foot. Additionally, during winter, night operations become the norm at higher latitudes with their long periods of darkness.[44] Snow enhances night vision because of high reflectivity and the visibility of combatants against the white background.[42]

Mounted movement

The German Taschenbuch für den Winterkrieg emphasizes reconnaissance to ascertain the conditions and capacity of the roads to be used. It describes snow clearing from roads and recovery of bogged-down vehicles.[41]

Soviet Army doctrine emphasized the use of sleds for transporting machine guns and mortars over snow, towed in a train by tracked tractors. It addressed the need to pre-heat tanks for use in winter and their application in advance of marching troops to take out enemy positions.[42]

Finnish military doctrine calls for small-unit movements with Anti-tank guided missiles and multiple launch rocket systems to attack foreign forces that have entered the country.[2]

US Army guidance advocates that over snow-covered terrain, vehicles may be employed to establish and maintain trails by establishing a well concealed track with the first vehicle, followed by a vehicle traveling offset from the track of the first, to flatten the trail, and subsequent vehicles widening and flattening the trail. Marked trails avoid obliteration in snowstorms or drifting conditions. In mountainous terrain, tracked vehicles, including tanks, infantry fighting vehicles, and cavalry fighting vehicles, rarely accompany dismounted infantry in the assault. Instead, they assist forces by occupying positions where they can use their firepower to isolate enemy objectives.[44]

Dismounted movement

 
Rates of march for unit movement in snow

The German Taschenbuch describes preparation and conduct of marches and advocates maintaining slow, steady progress with brief stops to avoid exposure to the wind, and the provision of warm beverages by support vehicles along the way.[41]

Soviet Army doctrine emphasized the use ski troops for dismounted operations over snow.[42]

US Army guidance explains that troops moving in a wedge-like "column" formation travel more slowly, with no one breaking the trail in undisturbed snow, than the in-line file formation. Therefore, column formation is reserved for imminent enemy contact. As slope angle increases, the amount of travel time is likely to increase substantially.[44]

Water crossings

 
Diagram for creating a tank trap on ice, adapted from the Taschenbuch für den Winterkrieg

The German Taschenbuch describes the assessment and reinforcement of ice crossings and also the opportunity to use them as tank traps by removing the ice and bridging the gap with a weak structure, disguised as reinforced ice. It offers the following guidance for crossing ice sheets: [41]

Ice thickness
cm (in)
Type of military traffic Minimum interval
m (ft)
5 (2) Infantry in file with double intervals 7 (23)
20 (8) Vehicles with gross weight of 4.5 tonnes (5 short tons) 20 (66)
30 (12) Vehicles with gross weight of 8.2 tonnes (9 short tons) 30 (98)
40 (16) 18-tonne (20-short-ton) vehicles, light tanks 40 (131)
60 (24) 41-tonne (45-short-ton) vehicles 50 (164)

Soviet Army doctrine described the assessment and reinforcement of ice crossings and suggested the use of frozen lakes and rivers as expeditionary airfields, located close to the front to take advantage of short daylight hours in winter.[42]

According to the US Army, rivers found in cold regions may be major obstacles. Subarctic rivers usually have many braided channels and swift currents. During spring and early winter, rivers may become impassable due to freezing or thawing ice flows. Once firmly frozen, rivers may offer routes for both mounted and dismounted movement. Some swampy areas do not freeze solidly during the coldest periods of winter to support troop movements. Nonetheless, it is possible to construct "ice bridges" to thicken an iced-over waterway, using pumps or some other means of flooding the ice-covered area, when temperatures are below −12 °C (10 °F) and the pre-existing natural ice is thicker than 10 centimetres (3.9 in) to support the construction activity.[44]

Snow camouflage

 
Austro-Hungarian ski patrol on Italian Front in snow camouflage, 1915–1918[47]

Armies have made use of improvised and official snow camouflage uniforms and equipment since the First World War, such as in the fighting in the Dolomite Mountains between Austria-Hungary and Italy.[48][49] Snow camouflage was used far more widely in the Second World War by the Wehrmacht, the Finnish Army, the Soviet Army and others.[50][51][52][53] Since then, snow variants of disruptively patterned camouflage for uniforms have been introduced, sometimes with digital patterns. For example, the Bundeswehr has a Schneetarn (snow) variant of its widely used Flecktarn pattern.[54]

Soviet Army doctrine emphasized the importance of camouflage over positions and the need to remove telltale signs of artillery actions, such as smoke stains or shell casings. It also cited the usefulness of decoy targets. It describes the establishment of breastworks made from snow 2 to 3 metres (7 to 10 ft) thick, ice 1.5 metres (5 ft) thick or soil and wood 0.9 metres (3 ft) thick.[42]

Materiel

 
US Army transport vehicles during the Battle of the Bulge

Snow, ice and cold temperatures affect munitions and military vehicles.

Munitions – Snow, ice, frozen ground, and low temperatures affect mine-laying operations. Burying mines in a frost layer may be difficult, requiring mines to be placed on top of the ground and then camouflaged. Snow or ice may prevent detonation, owing to freezing the firing device or isolating from pressure above. This can be mitigated with plastic laid over the top of the mine.[44]

Vehicles – Adaptations of military vehicles to winter operations include tire chains for maintaining traction of wheeled vehicles. Diesel engines start less well in cold and may require pre-heating or idling during cold periods.[44] A variety of military vehicles have been developed for over-snow travel, including the Sisu Nasu,[55] BvS 10,[56] and M29 Weasel.[57]

Military engineering

 
Cross section of a snow-covered trench for troop emplacement, adapted from the 1942 German Taschenbuch für den Winterkrieg

Military engineers design and construct transportation and troop-support facilities. In cold climates frozen ground can make digging difficult.[44] Soviet Army doctrine gave them the responsibility to establish build and maintain routes, including water crossings, build and destroy obstacles that require special equipment, construct and maintain airfields, and to build shelter for personnel. Operations that didn't require special equipment were left to other troops.[42] The Taschenbuch describes a variety of ways to employ local resources to create roads, shelters and fortifications.[41]

Engineers provide roadways, landing zones, shelter, water supply and wastewater disposal, and electrical power to encampments. Roadway and landing zones require heavy equipment, which is more fatiguing to operate in the cold and necessary to protect from freezing. Snowstorms require cleanup and spring thaw requires management of thawed soil. Landing zones require stabilization of dust and snow to avoid blinding helicopter pilots. The US Army has cold-weather adaptive kits for providing water and electrical utilities. The tactical engineer has limited options for providing a water supply; they are in order of ease of provision: drawing water from rivers or lakes, melting ice or snow, or drilling wells.[44]

Water supply and treatment is especially challenging in the cold. US Army tactical water purification systems require a winter kit operate between 32 and −25 °F (0 and −32 °C). Water storage may require heating. Water source exploitation may require angering through ice, if shaped charges are not available. The water distribution system can be subject to freezing and clogging from frazil ice. Where chemical treatment is used, it takes longer to dissolve in the treated water.[44]

Medicine

Three types of cold injury can occur in the theater, hypothermia, trench foot, and frostbite in ascending amount of exposure to cold temperatures.

Hypothermia

Hypothermia occurs when the body core temperature drops below 35 °C (95 °F). Symptoms depend on the temperature and range from shivering and mental confusion to increased risk of the heart stopping. The treatment of mild hypothermia involves warm drinks, warm clothing and physical activity. In those with moderate hypothermia heating blankets and warmed intravenous fluids are recommended. People with moderate or severe hypothermia should be moved gently. In severe hypothermia extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) or cardiopulmonary bypass may be useful. In those without a pulse cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is indicated along with the above measures. Rewarming is typically continued until a person's temperature is greater than 32 °C (90 °F). Adequate insulation from clothing is the best way to avoid hypothermia in the field.[58]

Trench foot

 
Military poster on preventing trench foot

Trench foot is a medical condition caused by prolonged exposure of the feet to damp, unsanitary, and cold conditions at temperatures as warm as 16 °C (61 °F) for as few as 13 hours. Exposure to these environmental conditions causes deterioration and destruction of the capillaries and leads to morbidity of the surrounding flesh.[59] Affected feet may become numb, affected by erythema (turning red) or cyanosis (turning blue) as a result of poor blood supply, and may begin emanating a decaying odour if the early stages of necrosis (tissue death) set in. As the condition worsens, feet may also begin to swell. Advanced trench foot often involves blisters and open sores, which lead to fungal infections. If left untreated, trench foot usually results in gangrene, which may require amputation. If trench foot is treated properly, complete recovery is normal, though it is marked by severe short-term pain when feeling returns. Trench foot affected tens of thousands of soldiers engaged in trench warfare in World War I. Keeping feet warm and dry, or at least changing into warm and dry replacement footgear, is the best way to avoid trench foot.[60]

Frostbite

Frostbite is localized damage to skin and other tissues due to freezing. At or below 0 °C (32 °F), blood vessels close to the skin start to constrict, and blood is shunted away from the extremities. The same response may also be a result of exposure to high winds. This constriction helps to preserve core body temperature. In extreme cold, or when the body is exposed to cold for long periods, this protective strategy can reduce blood flow in some areas of the body to dangerously low levels. This lack of blood leads to the eventual freezing and death of skin tissue in the affected areas. Frostbite was responsible for over one million casualties in wars in the 20th century. Adequate insulation from clothing is the best way to avoid hypothermia in the field.[60]

Training by nation

 
Unit of the Japan Ground Self-Defense Force training with an 81 mm mortar
 
Russian cadets training for Arctic conditions
 
Austrian mountain troops on snowshoes

The following nations report regular training programs in cold-weather warfare:

Equipment used in cold-weather training exercises

Naval operations

 
American sailors clearing ice from ship topsides
 
Los Angeles-class fast attack submarine USS Alexandria (SSN 757) surfacing through two feet (0.6 m) of Arctic ice
 
Russian Akula-class submarine of the Northern Fleet submarine base at Gadzhiyevo in the Murmansk Oblast

Subfreezing conditions have significant implications for naval operations. The 1988 US Navy Cold Weather Handbook for Surface Ships outlines effects on: icing on the topsides of ships, ship systems, underway replenishment, flight operations, and personnel. It also discusses preparations for cold-weather fleet operations.[77]

Topside icing on ships

Topside icing is a serious hazard to ships operating in sub-freezing temperatures. Thick layers of ice can form on decks, sides, superstructures, deck mounted machinery, antennas and combat systems. The presence of topside ice has many adverse effects, principally it:[77]

  • Increases ship displacement
  • Decreases freeboard
  • Impairs operation of deck machinery
  • Impedes personnel movement on deck
  • Restricts helicopter operations
  • Disrupts operation of radio and radars

Combat systems degradation

Icing may prevent a warship from conducting any type of offensive operations, including restraining the doors of a vertical launch systems, binding gears, shafts, hinges and pedestals. Other effects include sluggish performance of lubricants, increased failure rate of seals, plugs and O-rings, frozen magazine sprinkler systems, excessively long warm-up times for electronics or weapon system electronics, and freeze up of compressed-air-operated components.[77]

Arctic operations

Global climate change has opened the waters of the Arctic along the northern shores of Alaska, Russia and Canada. The region is rich in natural resources. Countries abutting the Arctic Ocean have shown greater military patrol activity. The Military Times reported in 2015 that Russia had reactivated ten military bases, had increased surface ship and aircraft patrols of its Northern Fleet, and had conducted missile tests in the region. The US Navy plans to have sufficient assets by 2030 to respond militarily in the Arctic. As of 2015, it conducted regular submarine patrols, but few air or surface ship operations. Russia had twelve ice breakers versus two for the US.[78] As of 2013, Canada had six ice breakers.[79] In 2016, Canada announced the building of five ice-breaking Arctic and offshore patrol ships.[80]

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Govan, Thomas P. (1946). Training for Mountain and Winter Warfare, Study No. 23. The Army Ground Forces. Historical Section- Army Ground Forces.
  • Armstrong, Richard N.; Joseph G., Welsh (2014), Winter Warfare: Red Army Orders and Experiences, Cass series on Soviet military theory and practice, Routledge, p. 208, ISBN 9781135211547, retrieved 12 December 2016

External links

  • Bundeswehr Training Video 1959 Bundeswehr Lehrfilm - "Der Einzelschütze im Hochwinter" 1959 – 1959 German Army training film, "Individual protection in deep winter" – German narration

cold, weather, warfare, arctic, warfare, redirects, here, sniper, rifle, accuracy, international, arctic, warfare, confused, with, cold, also, known, arctic, warfare, winter, warfare, encompasses, military, operations, affected, snow, thawing, conditions, cold. Arctic warfare redirects here For the sniper rifle see Accuracy International Arctic Warfare Not to be confused with Cold War Cold weather warfare also known as arctic warfare or winter warfare encompasses military operations affected by snow ice thawing conditions or cold both on land and at sea Cold weather conditions occur year round at high elevation or at high latitudes and elsewhere materialise seasonally during the winter period Mountain warfare often takes place in cold weather or on terrain that is affected by ice and snow such as the Alps and the Himalayas Historically most such operations have been during winter in the Northern Hemisphere Some have occurred above the Arctic Circle where snow ice and cold may occur throughout the year At times cold or its aftermath thaw has been a decisive factor in the failure of a campaign as with the French invasion of Russia in 1812 the Soviet invasion of Finland in 1939 1 2 and the German invasion of the Soviet Union during World War II Royal Marine reservists training for winter operations Contents 1 History 1 1 Pre 1800 1 2 19th century 1 3 20th century 1 3 1 World War I 1 3 2 World War II 1 3 3 In the Arctic 1 3 4 Post World War II 1 4 Historical lessons learned 1 4 1 German handbook 1 4 2 Soviet experience 2 Land operations 2 1 Cold and mountainous regions 2 2 Weather conditions 2 2 1 Temperature 2 2 2 Snow 2 2 3 Thaw 2 3 Tactics 2 3 1 Mounted movement 2 3 2 Dismounted movement 2 3 3 Water crossings 2 4 Snow camouflage 2 5 Materiel 2 6 Military engineering 2 7 Medicine 2 7 1 Hypothermia 2 7 2 Trench foot 2 7 3 Frostbite 3 Training by nation 4 Naval operations 4 1 Topside icing on ships 4 2 Combat systems degradation 4 3 Arctic operations 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory EditNorthern and Eastern Europe were the venues for some well documented winter campaigns During World War II several actions took place above the Arctic Circle Recent cold weather conflicts have occurred in the Himalayas Pre 1800 Edit The 1658 March Across the Belts in the Second Northern War In 1242 the Teutonic Order lost the Battle on the Ice on Lake Peipus to Novgorod In 1520 the decisive Battle of Bogesund between Sweden and Denmark occurred on the ice of lake Asunden 3 In 1643 or 1644 Prince Rupert made an abortive attack on the Parliamentarian stronghold of Aylesbury England 500 men are reported to have frozen to death on 21 January On 25 January a sudden thaw caused a bridge to collapse over the River Weaver splitting Royalist cavalry forces at the Battle of Nantwich resulting in their defeat 4 The 1557 Siege of Katsurayama in was fought between the forces of the Japanese daimyō Takeda Shingen and Uesugi Kenshin as part of the Kawanakajima campaigns Katsurayama castle was a strategically vital Uesugi stronghold in the contested Shinano Province and when it was isolated from reinforcements due to late snow in early 1557 the Takeda clan used this opportunity to seize it under Baba Nobuharu shielded from view by heavy snowfall 5 Sweden and Denmark fought several wars during the 16th and 17th centuries As a great deal of Denmark consists of islands it was usually safe from invasion but in January 1658 most of the Danish waters froze Charles X Gustav of Sweden led his army across the ice of the Belts to besiege Copenhagen The war ended with the treaty of Roskilde a treaty very favorable to the Swedish 6 During the Great Northern War Swedish king Charles XII set off to invade Moscow but was eventually defeated at the Battle of Poltava after being weakened by cold weather and scorched earth tactics Sweden suffered more casualties during the same war as Carl Gustaf Armfeldt with 6 000 men tried to invade Trondheim Three thousand of them died of exposure in the snow during the Carolean Death March 7 19th century Edit During the Finnish War the Russian army unexpectedly crossed the frozen Gulf of Bothnia from Finland to Aland and by 19 March 1809 reached the Swedish shore within 70 kilometres 43 mi from the Swedish capital Stockholm This daring maneuvre decided the outcome of the war 8 Napoleon s invasion of Russia in 1812 resulted in retreat in the face of winter 9 with the majority of the French army succumbing to frostbite and starvation rather than combat injuries 10 The Battle of Weihaiwei was a battle of the First Sino Japanese War in the winter of 1895 in Weihai Shandong China between the forces of the Japan and Qing China Through a well coordinated offensive of both naval and land forces hampered by snow and cold the Japanese destroyed the forts on shore and sank much of the Chinese fleet 11 A bivouac of Napoleon s army during retreat from Russia in 1812 Japanese troops during the 1895 Battle of Weihaiwei20th century Edit World War I Edit Italian mountain troops in WWI During the First World War soldiers on the Western front involved in trench warfare were forced to deal with freezing conditions trench foot frostbite and disease The winter of 1916 17 was exceptionally cold which caused great hardship and deaths among the soldiers Equipment and vehicles also were not suited for the freezing conditions 12 At the Battle of Sarikamish Ottoman troops were unprepared for winter fighting and suffered major losses with 25 000 freezing to death before the battle even began On the Italian front fighting bogged down in trench warfare but at mountain elevations On White Friday thousands of troops from both sides were killed in avalanches in the Dolomites World War II Edit Finnish ski troops during the 1939 Winter War The Finnish Army used ski troops during the Winter War and the Second World War in which the numerically superior but road bound Soviet forces were vulnerable to attack by mobile white clad ski troops approaching from untracked frozen terrain 13 The Wehrmacht maintained elite mountain troops Gebirgsjager They were organized in small specialized units which relied on pack animals Typical weapons were light machine guns mortars and anti tank guns Control of ridge lines was paramount using a limited number of outposts 14 They operated on the principles of fewer arms but more ammunition per weapon and the economical use thereof 15 In Operation Barbarossa in 1941 both Russian and German soldiers had to endure terrible conditions during the Russian winter The German Finnish joint offensive against Murmansk Operation Silver Fox in 1941 saw heavy fighting in the Arctic environment Subsequently the Petsamo Kirkenes Operation conducted by the Soviet Army against the Wehrmacht in 1944 in northern Finland and Norway drove the Germans out of there 16 In late 1944 Finland turned against its former cobelligerents of Nazi Germany under Soviet pressure and pressured the Germans to withdraw in the ensuing Lapland War 17 While use of ski infantry was common in the Soviet Army Germany formed only one division for movement on skis 13 From June 1942 to August 1943 the United States and Canada fought the Japanese in the Aleutian Islands Campaign in the Alaska Territory 18 In the Arctic Edit Rime ice on a 20 inch 51 cm signal projector on the cruiser HMS Sheffield C24 escorting a 1941 Arctic convoy to the Soviet Union in World War II The following actions were fought in the Arctic by land and naval forces in World War II between 1941 and 1945 in the following theaters of operations Finland The Winter War was a military conflict between the Soviet Union USSR and Finland It began with a Soviet invasion of Finland on 30 November 1939 three months after the outbreak of World War II and ended three and a half months later with the Moscow Peace Treaty on 13 March 1940 In the Battle of Suomussalmi Finns leveraged cold weather to disadvantage the Soviet enemy troops by targeting field kitchens and campfires for their attacks thereby denying those troops warmth and nutrition 19 20 The Finns rotated their troops so that they could regularly return to warm shelters to recuperate after an attack or patrol Heavy Soviet equipment and their associated troops were restricted to roads while Finnish ski troops had broad mobility to outflank the enemy 20 The threat of Finnish snipers whom the Russians called cuckoos further demoralized the Soviets 19 20 The Finns mined ice routes over lakes to sink Soviet equipment 21 The Lapland War was fought between Finland and Germany from September 1944 to April 1945 in Finland s northernmost Lapland Province It included 22 Operation Birke birch was a German operation late in World War II in Finnish Lapland to protect access to nickel 23 Operation Nordlicht northern lights was a German scorched earth retreat operation in Finland during the end of World War II 24 The Petsamo Kirkenes Offensive was a major military offensive during World War II mounted by the Soviet Army against the Wehrmacht in 1944 in northern Finland and Norway 25 Norway The liberation of Finnmark was a military operation lasting from 23 October 1944 until 26 April 1945 in which Soviet and Norwegian forces wrestled away control of Finnmark the northernmost county of Norway from Germany It started with a major Soviet offensive that liberated Kirkenes 26 Northern Russia Operation Silver Fox was a joint German Finnish military operation offensive during World War II Its main goal was to cut off and ultimately capture the key Soviet port at Murmansk through attacks from Finnish and Norwegian territory 27 Spitsbergen Operation Gauntlet was a Combined Operations raid by Canadian troops with British Army logistics support and Free Norwegian Forces servicemen on the Norwegian island of Spitsbergen 600 miles 970 km south of the North Pole from 25 August to 3 September 1941 28 Operation Fritham was a Norwegian military operation based from British soil that had the goal of securing the rich coal mines on the island of Spitsbergen a part of Svalbard and denying their use to Nazi Germany 29 Operation Zitronella Citronella was an eight hour German raid on Spitzbergen on 8 September 1943 30 This marks the highest latitude at which a land battle has ever been fought However given the extreme conditions the German and Allied troops were at times compelled to assist each other to survive 31 United States The Aleutian Islands Campaign was a campaign conducted by both the United States and Imperial Japan from 3 June 1942 to 15 August 1943 in Attu and Kiska part of the Aleutian Islands in Alaska during World War II 32 Post World War II Edit source source source source source source source source source source source source Comparison of Chinese and US military winter field uniforms 1951 The Battle of Chosin Reservoir was a stark example of cold affecting military operations in the Korean War There were many cold injuries and malfunctions of materiel both vehicles and weapons 33 34 The Sino Indian War was a Himalayan border conflict between China and India that occurred in 1962 India initiated a Forward Policy in which it placed outposts along the border in 1961 China launched simultaneous offensives in Ladakh and across the McMahon Line on 20 October 1962 Chinese troops advanced over Indian forces in both theaters Much of the fighting took place in harsh mountain conditions entailing large scale combat at altitudes of over 4 000 metres 14 000 feet 35 Many troops on both sides succumbed to the freezing cold temperatures 36 Argentine troops suffered from cold wet conditions holding positions in the 1982 Falklands War 37 The Siachen conflict is a military confrontation between India and Pakistan over the disputed Siachen Glacier region in Kashmir The conflict began in 1984 with India s successful Operation Meghdoot during which it gained control over all of the Siachen Glacier 38 A cease fire went into effect in 2003 39 Historical lessons learned Edit Frostbitten hand with gangrene suffered by a Japanese soldier in the Sino Japanese War winter of 1894 5 Paton offered a 2001 overview of human factors pertaining to cold in military operations The understanding of cold injuries evolved in the 19th and 20th centuries understanding of the causes and treatment of frostbite and trench foot improved In the Sino Japanese War the Japanese learned the importance of foot care keeping feet dry and warm with replacement socks In World War I doctors realized that trench foot was a prolonged exposure to cold wet conditions on the feet which were exacerbated by the use of tight puttees bandage like leg wrappings 40 The Soviet invasion of Finland during the Winter War showed the power of asymmetric warfare on the Finnish side where small units were able to cut the road bound Soviet invading troops into segments like firewood and vanquish each segment The small units arrived silently on skis or with light artillery pulled by reindeer over frozen untracked terrain using winter conditions as an advantage Although the Soviet Union gained territory from the Finns it was at the cost of 200 000 fatalities against 25 000 on the Finnish side 2 The German invasion of the Soviet Union induced more than 250 000 cold injuries in one year The French Army occupying the Maginot Line experienced 12 000 cold injuries Experiences from the disastrous 1941 German advance on Moscow in winter conditions led to the 1942 Taschenbuch fur den Winterkrieg Pocket book for Winter War which highlighted ideal approaches to handling winter but acknowledged that improvisation in the field would be necessary when supplies were lacking The Soviet troops in that period had felt lined boots and quilted uniforms but the Germans continued fighting in their summer uniforms 40 German handbook Edit German troops extricating vehicle from the November 1941 mud in the Eastern Front Improvised shelter around a fir tree adapted from the 1942 German Taschenbuch fur den Winterkrieg The Taschenbuch fur den Winterkrieg manual contains sections on the influence and duration of winter the seasons of mud and thaw preparation for winter warfare winter combat methods and maintaining morale including the use of reading material lectures movies and strength through joy exercises Other sections cover marches the maintenance of roads winter bivouacs and shelter construction of winter positions camouflage and concealment identification of the enemy clothing rations evacuation of the wounded care and use of weapons and equipment signal communication and winter mobility The manual was designed to provide information at the officer level for indoctrination of troops via the non commissioned officer ranks The scope of the manual is to train troops in the following areas 41 Protection of personnel vehicles and weapons against snow and cold Training personnel to be hardened against the conditions encountered and able to improvise shelter from found materials Mobility on skis winter roads ice crossings and conversion of wheeled vehicles into tracked versions Construction of positions and obstacles in frozen terrain Combat in deep snow and severe coldSome highlights include addressing 41 Human factors Providing the right level of clothing to maintain agility and avoid overheating Maintaining a slow steady marching pace to avoid chilling down in the wind Boosting morale with up to date newspapers from home and nearby areas Providing improvised shelters and bivouacs Hygiene emphasizing cleanliness Mobility Setting up and maintaining winter roads and trails Warming up engines for reliable starting Positions and fortifications Using logs and snow as materials to provide trenches and gun emplacements Care of equipment Keeping equipment dry when possible and substituting low temperature lubricants for oils and hydraulic fluids Soviet experience Edit The Soviet Army learned from its 1939 40 Winter War experiences and the 1941 German advance on Moscow The high command realized that it must prepare entire divisions for winter warfare in 1942 beginning with warm uniforms winter equipment skis etc and training for winter operations Analysis of previous experiences resulted in a series of manuals that covered flight engineer and combat arms operations in winter Issues covered included 42 Flight operations Reduced daylight snow drifting cold temperatures impeded the added need for air transport Engineer operations Engineer troops build new roadways airfields water crossings and encampments with water supply They destroy obstacles requiring engineering equipment Regular troops entrench tanks construct tank obstacles and build simple shelters Combat arms operations Addressing the German methods of defense with automatic weapons strongholds supplemented with mines wires and anti tank obstacles Against these the Russians used coordinated massed fire Soviet gunner providing covering fire during the 1941 Battle of Moscow In his 1981 paper Fighting the Russians in Winter Three Case Studies Chew draws on experiences from the Allied Soviet War in Northern Russia during the Winter of 1918 19 the destruction of the Soviet 44th Motorized Rifle Division and Nazi Soviet Warfare during World War II to derive winter warfare factors pertaining to military tactics materiel and personnel 43 Tactics Defensive positions are highly advantageous because of the ability to maintain warmth and protection compared to attacking in extreme cold Mobility and logistical support are often restricted by snow requiring plowing or compacting it to accommodate wide tracked vehicles or sleds Infantry movement in deep snow requires skis or snowshoes to avoid exhaustion Sound carries well over crusted snow diminishing the element of surprise Explosives are useful for excavating foxholes and larger shelters in frozen ground Attacking field kitchens and encampments deprives the enemy of food and shelter Rapid removal of the wounded from the battlefield is essential to their survival in the cold Materiel Weapons and vehicles require special lubricants to operate at low temperatures Mines are unreliable in winter owing to deep snow that may cushion the fuse or form an ice bridge over the detonator Personnel Proper winter clothing is required to maintain body heat and to avoid such cold injuries as frostbite Troop efficiency and survival requires either making use of available shelter or providing portable shelter Land operations EditOperational factors encompass planning for the climate and weather in which military operations are required with snow ice mud and cold being the primary considerations Military tactics materiel combat engineering and military medicine all require specialized adaptations to the conditions encountered in cold weather The Soviet Army was an early adopter of a protocol for winter warfare 42 Cold and mountainous regions Edit See also Mountain warfare Cold regions that have a significant effect on military operations for one month or more each year Severely cold Moderately cold The principal mountain ranges of the world In its 2016 Mountain Warfare and Cold Weather Operations manual the US Army defines cold regions as where cold temperatures unique terrain and snowfall have a significant effect on military operations for one month or more each year It describes regions that are either severely cold or moderately cold each comprising approximately one quarter of the Earth s land mass 44 Severely cold Where mean annual air temperatures stay below freezing maximum snow depths exceed 60 centimetres 24 in and ice covers lakes and rivers for more than 180 days each year Moderately cold Where the mean temperatures during the coldest month are below freezing The manual also delineates the principal mountain ranges of the world which lie along broad belts which encircle the Pacific basin and then lead westward across Eurasia into North Africa Secondarily rugged chains of mountains lie along the Atlantic margins of the Americas and Europe Cooling power of wind expressed as an equivalent chill temperature under calm conditions Weather conditions Edit Temperature wind snow and thaw are the primary conditions that affect the winter battlescape Temperature Edit The US Army groups cold temperatures using categories The temperature categories are with quoted summaries 44 Wet cold From 39 to 20 F 4 to 7 C Wet cold conditions occur when wet snow and rain often accompany wet cold conditions This type of environment is more dangerous to troops and equipment than the colder dry cold environments because the ground becomes slushy and muddy and clothing and equipment becomes perpetually wet and damp Dry cold From 19 to 4 F 7 to 20 C Dry cold conditions are easier to live in than wet cold conditions Like in wet cold conditions proper equipment training and leadership are critical to successful operations Wind chill is a complicating factor in this type of cold The dry cold environment is the easiest of the four cold weather categories to survive in because of low humidity and the ground remains frozen As a result people and equipment are not subject to the effects of the thawing and freezing cycle and precipitation is generally in the form of dry snow Intense cold From 5 to 25 F 21 to 32 C This temperature range can affect the mind as much as the body Simple tasks take longer and require more effort than in warmer temperatures and the quality of work degrades as attention to detail diminishes Clothing becomes more bulky to compensate for the cold so troops lose dexterity Commanders consider these factors when planning operations and assigning tasks Extreme cold From 25 to 40 F 32 to 40 C In extreme cold the challenge of survival becomes paramount as personnel withdraw into themselves Weapons vehicles and munitions are likely to fail in this environment Hazardous cold From 40 F 40 C and below Units require extensive training before operating in these temperature extremes The combined cooling effect of ambient temperature and wind wind chill is an important factor that affects troops Snow Edit Royal Navy Merlin Mk3 helicopter operating in heavy snow at the Bardufoss Air Station Norway See also Snow For military purposes the US Army categorizes snow as light moderate or heavy Each classification affects visibility and ground movement due to accumulation and is quoted below 44 Light snow Visibility is equal to or greater than 5 8 mile 1 000 m in falling snow A trace to one inch 2 5 cm per hour accumulates Moderate snow Visibility is 5 16 to 1 2 mile 500 to 800 m in falling snow One to three inches 2 5 to 7 6 cm per hour accumulates Heavy snow Visibility is less than 1 4 mile 400 m in falling snow Three inches 7 6 cm or more inches per hour accumulates Snow and snowdrifts can create advantages on the battlefield by filling in ditches and vehicle tracks and flattening the terrain It also creates hollows on the downwind side of obstacles such as trees buildings and bushes which provide observation points or firing positions Snowdrifts may provide cover for soldiers to approach an objective 44 Soviet Army doctrine cited 30 centimetres 12 in as the threshold snow depth that impairs mobility for troops cavalry and vehicles except tanks for which the threshold was 50 centimetres 20 in 42 Thaw Edit See also Rasputitsa Russian T 80 main battle tank maneuvering in thawing conditions Thawing conditions can impair mobility and put soldiers at risk of trench foot by turning soil to mud it can also weaken and break up ice cover on bodies of water Maintaining roads becomes more difficult during spring thaw run off periods and requires mud removal by heavy equipment Slushy and muddy ground causes clothing and equipment to become wet damp and dirty 44 Muddy conditions greatly inhibited Napoleon s ability to maneuver in Russia in the autumn of 1812 45 and also the German attempt to take Moscow in the autumn of 1941 46 The 1942 Taschenbuch fur den Winterkrieg acknowledges that neither tracked nor wheeled vehicles can maneuver during conditions of thaw and that aircraft operations must be constrained to concrete runways It addresses minimizing the use of roads during this period and dismantling bridges that are likely to be taken out by ice floes It emphasizes how positions in frozen soil must be improved to avoid deterioration from thaw and the necessity of changing uniforms from ones for cold to those for wet conditions 41 Tactics Edit See also Military tactics and Ski warfare A Swedish Bandvagn 206 small unit support vehicle in Norwegian service being operated by US Marines The dominant tactical concern in cold conditions is the ability to maneuver in vehicles or on foot Additionally during winter night operations become the norm at higher latitudes with their long periods of darkness 44 Snow enhances night vision because of high reflectivity and the visibility of combatants against the white background 42 Mounted movement Edit The German Taschenbuch fur den Winterkrieg emphasizes reconnaissance to ascertain the conditions and capacity of the roads to be used It describes snow clearing from roads and recovery of bogged down vehicles 41 Soviet Army doctrine emphasized the use of sleds for transporting machine guns and mortars over snow towed in a train by tracked tractors It addressed the need to pre heat tanks for use in winter and their application in advance of marching troops to take out enemy positions 42 Finnish military doctrine calls for small unit movements with Anti tank guided missiles and multiple launch rocket systems to attack foreign forces that have entered the country 2 US Army guidance advocates that over snow covered terrain vehicles may be employed to establish and maintain trails by establishing a well concealed track with the first vehicle followed by a vehicle traveling offset from the track of the first to flatten the trail and subsequent vehicles widening and flattening the trail Marked trails avoid obliteration in snowstorms or drifting conditions In mountainous terrain tracked vehicles including tanks infantry fighting vehicles and cavalry fighting vehicles rarely accompany dismounted infantry in the assault Instead they assist forces by occupying positions where they can use their firepower to isolate enemy objectives 44 Dismounted movement Edit Rates of march for unit movement in snow The German Taschenbuch describes preparation and conduct of marches and advocates maintaining slow steady progress with brief stops to avoid exposure to the wind and the provision of warm beverages by support vehicles along the way 41 Soviet Army doctrine emphasized the use ski troops for dismounted operations over snow 42 US Army guidance explains that troops moving in a wedge like column formation travel more slowly with no one breaking the trail in undisturbed snow than the in line file formation Therefore column formation is reserved for imminent enemy contact As slope angle increases the amount of travel time is likely to increase substantially 44 Water crossings Edit Diagram for creating a tank trap on ice adapted from the Taschenbuch fur den Winterkrieg The German Taschenbuch describes the assessment and reinforcement of ice crossings and also the opportunity to use them as tank traps by removing the ice and bridging the gap with a weak structure disguised as reinforced ice It offers the following guidance for crossing ice sheets 41 Ice thicknesscm in Type of military traffic Minimum intervalm ft 5 2 Infantry in file with double intervals 7 23 20 8 Vehicles with gross weight of 4 5 tonnes 5 short tons 20 66 30 12 Vehicles with gross weight of 8 2 tonnes 9 short tons 30 98 40 16 18 tonne 20 short ton vehicles light tanks 40 131 60 24 41 tonne 45 short ton vehicles 50 164 Soviet Army doctrine described the assessment and reinforcement of ice crossings and suggested the use of frozen lakes and rivers as expeditionary airfields located close to the front to take advantage of short daylight hours in winter 42 According to the US Army rivers found in cold regions may be major obstacles Subarctic rivers usually have many braided channels and swift currents During spring and early winter rivers may become impassable due to freezing or thawing ice flows Once firmly frozen rivers may offer routes for both mounted and dismounted movement Some swampy areas do not freeze solidly during the coldest periods of winter to support troop movements Nonetheless it is possible to construct ice bridges to thicken an iced over waterway using pumps or some other means of flooding the ice covered area when temperatures are below 12 C 10 F and the pre existing natural ice is thicker than 10 centimetres 3 9 in to support the construction activity 44 Snow camouflage Edit Main article Snow camouflage Austro Hungarian ski patrol on Italian Front in snow camouflage 1915 1918 47 Armies have made use of improvised and official snow camouflage uniforms and equipment since the First World War such as in the fighting in the Dolomite Mountains between Austria Hungary and Italy 48 49 Snow camouflage was used far more widely in the Second World War by the Wehrmacht the Finnish Army the Soviet Army and others 50 51 52 53 Since then snow variants of disruptively patterned camouflage for uniforms have been introduced sometimes with digital patterns For example the Bundeswehr has a Schneetarn snow variant of its widely used Flecktarn pattern 54 Soviet Army doctrine emphasized the importance of camouflage over positions and the need to remove telltale signs of artillery actions such as smoke stains or shell casings It also cited the usefulness of decoy targets It describes the establishment of breastworks made from snow 2 to 3 metres 7 to 10 ft thick ice 1 5 metres 5 ft thick or soil and wood 0 9 metres 3 ft thick 42 Materiel Edit See also Materiel US Army transport vehicles during the Battle of the Bulge Snow ice and cold temperatures affect munitions and military vehicles Munitions Snow ice frozen ground and low temperatures affect mine laying operations Burying mines in a frost layer may be difficult requiring mines to be placed on top of the ground and then camouflaged Snow or ice may prevent detonation owing to freezing the firing device or isolating from pressure above This can be mitigated with plastic laid over the top of the mine 44 Vehicles Adaptations of military vehicles to winter operations include tire chains for maintaining traction of wheeled vehicles Diesel engines start less well in cold and may require pre heating or idling during cold periods 44 A variety of military vehicles have been developed for over snow travel including the Sisu Nasu 55 BvS 10 56 and M29 Weasel 57 Military engineering Edit See also Combat engineering Military Engineering and Military engineering vehicle Cross section of a snow covered trench for troop emplacement adapted from the 1942 German Taschenbuch fur den Winterkrieg Military engineers design and construct transportation and troop support facilities In cold climates frozen ground can make digging difficult 44 Soviet Army doctrine gave them the responsibility to establish build and maintain routes including water crossings build and destroy obstacles that require special equipment construct and maintain airfields and to build shelter for personnel Operations that didn t require special equipment were left to other troops 42 The Taschenbuch describes a variety of ways to employ local resources to create roads shelters and fortifications 41 Engineers provide roadways landing zones shelter water supply and wastewater disposal and electrical power to encampments Roadway and landing zones require heavy equipment which is more fatiguing to operate in the cold and necessary to protect from freezing Snowstorms require cleanup and spring thaw requires management of thawed soil Landing zones require stabilization of dust and snow to avoid blinding helicopter pilots The US Army has cold weather adaptive kits for providing water and electrical utilities The tactical engineer has limited options for providing a water supply they are in order of ease of provision drawing water from rivers or lakes melting ice or snow or drilling wells 44 Water supply and treatment is especially challenging in the cold US Army tactical water purification systems require a winter kit operate between 32 and 25 F 0 and 32 C Water storage may require heating Water source exploitation may require angering through ice if shaped charges are not available The water distribution system can be subject to freezing and clogging from frazil ice Where chemical treatment is used it takes longer to dissolve in the treated water 44 Medicine Edit See also Military medicine Three types of cold injury can occur in the theater hypothermia trench foot and frostbite in ascending amount of exposure to cold temperatures Hypothermia Edit Hypothermia occurs when the body core temperature drops below 35 C 95 F Symptoms depend on the temperature and range from shivering and mental confusion to increased risk of the heart stopping The treatment of mild hypothermia involves warm drinks warm clothing and physical activity In those with moderate hypothermia heating blankets and warmed intravenous fluids are recommended People with moderate or severe hypothermia should be moved gently In severe hypothermia extracorporeal membrane oxygenation ECMO or cardiopulmonary bypass may be useful In those without a pulse cardiopulmonary resuscitation CPR is indicated along with the above measures Rewarming is typically continued until a person s temperature is greater than 32 C 90 F Adequate insulation from clothing is the best way to avoid hypothermia in the field 58 Trench foot Edit Military poster on preventing trench foot Trench foot is a medical condition caused by prolonged exposure of the feet to damp unsanitary and cold conditions at temperatures as warm as 16 C 61 F for as few as 13 hours Exposure to these environmental conditions causes deterioration and destruction of the capillaries and leads to morbidity of the surrounding flesh 59 Affected feet may become numb affected by erythema turning red or cyanosis turning blue as a result of poor blood supply and may begin emanating a decaying odour if the early stages of necrosis tissue death set in As the condition worsens feet may also begin to swell Advanced trench foot often involves blisters and open sores which lead to fungal infections If left untreated trench foot usually results in gangrene which may require amputation If trench foot is treated properly complete recovery is normal though it is marked by severe short term pain when feeling returns Trench foot affected tens of thousands of soldiers engaged in trench warfare in World War I Keeping feet warm and dry or at least changing into warm and dry replacement footgear is the best way to avoid trench foot 60 Frostbite Edit Frostbite is localized damage to skin and other tissues due to freezing At or below 0 C 32 F blood vessels close to the skin start to constrict and blood is shunted away from the extremities The same response may also be a result of exposure to high winds This constriction helps to preserve core body temperature In extreme cold or when the body is exposed to cold for long periods this protective strategy can reduce blood flow in some areas of the body to dangerously low levels This lack of blood leads to the eventual freezing and death of skin tissue in the affected areas Frostbite was responsible for over one million casualties in wars in the 20th century Adequate insulation from clothing is the best way to avoid hypothermia in the field 60 Training by nation Edit Unit of the Japan Ground Self Defense Force training with an 81 mm mortar Russian cadets training for Arctic conditions Austrian mountain troops on snowshoes See also Military education and training The following nations report regular training programs in cold weather warfare Canada In 2008 the Canadian Forces established the Nanisivik Naval Facility a winter warfare training center above the arctic circle in Resolute Nunavut 61 for annual exercises 62 China The People s Liberation Army trains annually in regions subject to harsh winter conditions Lightly armed border patrol units are mounted on horseback or snowmobiles and are expected to provide early detection of incursion 63 Finland The Finnish Defence Forces train every conscript for skiing and Arctic warfare regardless of the branch approximately 25 000 soldiers per year 64 Finland also trains US Army students in Arctic warfare 65 Germany The Bundeswehr maintains its mountain troops in Bavaria After the 2001 disbandment of the 1st Mountain Division mountain troops were reorganized as the Gebirgsjagerbrigade 23 with a strength of 5 000 Troops 66 India The Indian Army trains 100 officers and 400 non commissioned officers and junior commissioned officers annually at its High Altitude Warfare School Its graduates are assigned to the Siachen Glacier border garrison 67 Iran Members of the 65th Airborne Special Forces Brigade train for warfare on snow at their winter camp in Emamzadeh Hashem Iran 68 Italy The Alpini are the Italian Army s specialist mountain infantry Established in 1872 they are the oldest active mountain infantry in the world Japan In the Japan Ground Self Defense Force the Cold Weather Combat Training Unit 冬季戦技教育隊 Tōki Sengi Kyōiku tai is mandated for research and training for cold weather warfare The Winter Ranger Course 冬季遊撃課程 Tōki Yugeki katei the advanced post graduate ranger training for cold weather warfare is established by this unit 69 Norway Hosts an annual multi national winter exercise Cold Response course In 2016 the participants came from Belgium Canada Denmark Finland Germany Latvia the Netherlands Poland Spain Sweden the United States the United Kingdom and Norway 70 Russian Federation Russia trains combined forces in winter annually In 2013 it held four winter readiness exercises under shorter than usual notice according to Wilk A February exercise with seven thousand soldiers several hundred fighting vehicles and 48 aircraft and helicopters and three March exercises one using seven thousand soldiers 250 fighting vehicles 50 artillery units 20 aircraft and helicopters as well as 36 warships 71 Training occurs at the Far Eastern Higher Combined Arms Command School in Blagoveshchensk in the Amur Oblast of eastern Russia The school covers mountain and Arctic warfare 72 and qualifies officers as Commanders of Motorized Rifle Platoons Arctic 73 United Kingdom Royal Navy sailors and Royal Marines train in Norway above the Arctic Circle 74 The Royal Marines Mountain Leader Training Cadre is the UK premier cold weather troop detachment 75 United States The US military maintains cold weather and mountain warfare training centers at the Army Northern Warfare Training Center at Fort Wainwright Fairbanks Alaska the Army Mountain Warfare School at Camp Ethan Allen Jericho Vermont the Special Forces Command Mountaineering Warfare Training Detachment at Fort Carson Colorado Springs Colorado the US Air Force Arctic Survival School at Eielson AFB Alaska 76 and the Marine Corps Mountain Warfare Training Center in Bridgeport California 44 Equipment used in cold weather training exercises Norwegian Leopard 1A1 tanks participating in a 1982 NATO exercise Humvees with BGM 71 TOW anti tank weapons systems in Norway during Operation Cold Winter 87 The 202nd Air Defence Brigade in the Western Military District in Russia loading S 300V surface to air missiles SAMs in 2012 Air assault by Japanese ski troops in winter camouflageNaval operations Edit American sailors clearing ice from ship topsides See also Navy Operations Arctic Patrol Ship Project Northern Fleet and ICEX US Navy Mission in Arctic Los Angeles class fast attack submarine USS Alexandria SSN 757 surfacing through two feet 0 6 m of Arctic ice Russian Akula class submarine of the Northern Fleet submarine base at Gadzhiyevo in the Murmansk Oblast Subfreezing conditions have significant implications for naval operations The 1988 US Navy Cold Weather Handbook for Surface Ships outlines effects on icing on the topsides of ships ship systems underway replenishment flight operations and personnel It also discusses preparations for cold weather fleet operations 77 Topside icing on ships Edit Topside icing is a serious hazard to ships operating in sub freezing temperatures Thick layers of ice can form on decks sides superstructures deck mounted machinery antennas and combat systems The presence of topside ice has many adverse effects principally it 77 Increases ship displacement Decreases freeboard Impairs operation of deck machinery Impedes personnel movement on deck Restricts helicopter operations Disrupts operation of radio and radarsCombat systems degradation Edit Icing may prevent a warship from conducting any type of offensive operations including restraining the doors of a vertical launch systems binding gears shafts hinges and pedestals Other effects include sluggish performance of lubricants increased failure rate of seals plugs and O rings frozen magazine sprinkler systems excessively long warm up times for electronics or weapon system electronics and freeze up of compressed air operated components 77 Arctic operations Edit Global climate change has opened the waters of the Arctic along the northern shores of Alaska Russia and Canada The region is rich in natural resources Countries abutting the Arctic Ocean have shown greater military patrol activity The Military Times reported in 2015 that Russia had reactivated ten military bases had increased surface ship and aircraft patrols of its Northern Fleet and had conducted missile tests in the region The US Navy plans to have sufficient assets by 2030 to respond militarily in the Arctic As of 2015 it conducted regular submarine patrols but few air or surface ship operations Russia had twelve ice breakers versus two for the US 78 As of 2013 Canada had six ice breakers 79 In 2016 Canada announced the building of five ice breaking Arctic and offshore patrol ships 80 See also EditWarfareDesert warfare Mountain warfare Russian Northern Fleet Ski warfare List of mountain warfare forces ClimateRussian Winter Annual Dry Season Offensive ArcticICEX US Navy Mission in Arctic Arctic cooperation and politics Natural resources of the ArcticReferences Edit White Death New Orleans National WWII Museum Retrieved 13 August 2019 a b c Rehman Iskander 20 July 2016 Lessons from the Winter War Frozen Grit and Finland s Fabian Defense War on the Rocks Retrieved 2 May 2020 Nicolle David 1996 Lake Peipus 1242 Battle of the Ice Osprey Publishing p 41 ISBN 9781855325531 Young Peter Holmes Richard 1974 The English Civil War A Military History of the Three Civil Wars 1642 1651 Methuen Publishing pp 175 6 ISBN 978 0 413 29440 1 Turnbull Stephen 2003 Kawanakajima 155364 Samurai Power Struggle Reynolds Wayne Oxford Osprey Pub pp 14 ISBN 978 1 84603 652 1 OCLC 476231761 Lindqvist Herman 1992 Historien om Sverige in Danish Stockholm Norstedt ISBN 978 91 1 932112 1 OCLC 28079124 Oakley Stewart P 2005 War and Peace in the Baltic 1560 1790 Routledge Mattila Tapani 1983 Meri maamme turvana Sea safeguarding our country in Finnish Jyvaskyla K J Gummerus Osakeyhtio ISBN 951 99487 0 8 Professor Saul David 9 February 2012 Napoleon s failure For the want of a winter horseshoe BBC News magazine Archived from the original on 24 July 2020 Retrieved 9 February 2012 The Wordsworth pocket encyclopedia Wordsworth Editions 1994 p 17 ISBN 978 1 85326 301 9 OCLC 59840596 Evans David C 15 January 2015 Kaigun strategy tactics and technology in the Imperial Japanese Navy 1887 1941 Peattie Mark R 1930 First Naval Institute Press paperback ed Annapolis Md p 46 ISBN 978 1 61251 425 3 OCLC 897464699 Voices of the First World War Winter 1916 Imperial War Museum Retrieved 18 January 2022 a b Clemmesen Michael H Faulkner Marcus eds 2013 Northern European Overture to War 1939 1941 From Memel to Barbarossa Brill p 76 ISBN 978 90 04 24908 0 Staff July 1943 Combat in High Mountains Snow and Extreme Cold Intelligence Bulletin 2 7 Retrieved 7 May 2020 Staff March 1944 Some Notes on German Mountain Warfare Intelligence Bulletin 2 7 Retrieved 7 May 2020 Gebhardt James F September 1989 The Petsamo Kirkenes Operation Soviet Breakthrough and Pursuit in the Arctic October 1944 PDF Leavenworth Papers 17 4 via Army Press Ahto Sampo 1980 Aseveljet vastakkain Lapin sota 1944 1945 Brothers in Arms Opposing Each Other Lapland War 1944 1945 in Finnish Helsinki Kirjayhtyma ISBN 978 951 26 1726 5 Hays Otis 2004 Alaska s Hidden Wars Secret Campaigns on the North Pacific Rim University of Alaska Press ISBN 1 889963 64 X a b Rovsing Jesper Weper Torsten 22 March 2010 Talvisota Puolustussota 40 pakkasasteessa historianet fi in Finnish Retrieved 4 January 2020 a b c Chew Allen F 1971 The White Death The Epic of the Soviet Finnish Winter War Headquarters U S Marine Corps Trotter William R 1943 1991 A frozen hell the Russo Finnish winter war of 1939 1940 Chapel Hill N C Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill ISBN 978 1 56512 692 3 OCLC 847527726 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Nenye Vesa Munter Peter Wirtanen Toni Birks Chris 2016 Finland at War the Continuation and Lapland Wars 1941 45 Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1472815262 Lunde Henrik O 2011 Finland s War of Choice The Troubled German Finnish Alliance in World War II Newbury Casemate Publishers ISBN 978 1 61200 037 4 Carruthers Bob 2012 Hitler s Forgotten Armies Combat in Norway and Finland Warwickshire Coda Books Ltd ISBN 9781781580981 James F Gebhardt The Petsamo Kirkenes Operation Soviet Breakthrough and Pursuit in the Arctic October 1944 pp 75 83 Finnmark Celebrates Liberation from Nazi Occupation with the Help of Russians The Nordic Page 20 October 2014 Retrieved 5 April 2019 Mann Chris M Jorgensen Christer 2002 Hitler s Arctic War Hersham UK Ian Allan ISBN 0 7110 2899 0 Schuster Carl O Weather War U S Army Aberdeen Test Center Archived from the original on 20 October 2008 Retrieved 18 September 2008 Andre Verdenskrig pa Svalbard svalbardmuseum no in Norwegian Svalbard Museum 24 July 2011 Archived from the original on 24 July 2011 Retrieved 5 April 2019 Torkildsen Torbjorn 1998 Svalbard vart nordligste Norge Svalbard Our Northernmost Norway in Norwegian 3rd ed Oslo Aschehoug in cooperation with Det norske svalbardselskap ISBN 82 03 22224 2 Retrieved 15 October 2016 Keegan John 1993 A History of Warfare Alfred A Knopf Inc pp 69 ISBN 0 394 58801 0 Battle of the Aleutian Islands History Channel 10 May 2019 Retrieved 2 May 2020 Duncan James Carl June 2013 Adventures of a Tennessean AuthorHouse p 145 ISBN 978 1 4817 4157 6 Tilstra Russell C 13 March 2014 The Battle Rifle Development and Use Since World War II McFarland p 28 ISBN 978 1 4766 1564 6 Calvin James Barnard April 1984 The China India Border War Marine Corps Command and Staff College Archived from the original on 11 November 2011 Retrieved 15 October 2011 Subramanian L N November December 2000 The Battle of Chushul Bharat Rakshak Monitor archived from the original on 9 February 2001 Goodsell James Nelson 25 June 1982 Argentine troops tell why war lost Christian Science Monitor ISSN 0882 7729 Retrieved 2 May 2020 Wirsing Robert 13 December 1991 Pakistan s security under Zia 1977 1988 the policy imperatives of a peripheral Asian state Palgrave Macmillan 1991 ISBN 9780312060671 Pervez Musharraf 2006 In the Line of Fire A Memoir Free Press ISBN 0 7432 8344 9 pp 68 69 a b Paton Bruce C 2001 10 Cold Casualties and Conquests The Effects of Cold on Warfare Textbooks of Military Medicine Medical Aspects of Harsh Environments Vol 1 Washington TMM Publications pp 313 49 a b c d e f g Handbook on Winter Warfare PDF Washington DC Military Intelligence Division U S War Department 1943 a b c d e f g h i Armstrong Richard N Joseph G Welsh 2014 Winter Warfare Red Army Orders and Experiences Case series on Soviet military theory and practice Routledge p 208 ISBN 9781135211547 retrieved 12 December 2016 Chew Allen F December 1981 Fighting the Russians in Winter Three Case Studies PDF Leavenworth Papers Fort Leavenworth Kansas Combat Studies Institute U S Army Command and General Staff College 5 ISSN 0195 3451 Archived from the original PDF on 14 February 2017 Retrieved 10 December 2016 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Headquarters April 2016 Mountain Warfare and Cold Weather Operations PDF US Army Retrieved 11 December 2016 M Adolphe Thiers 1864 History of the Consulate and the Empire of France under Napoleon Vol IV Translated by D Forbes Campbell H W Herbert Philadelphia J B Lippincott amp Co p 243 whilst it was almost impossible to drag the gun carriages through the half frozen mud regarding 20 November 1812 Overy Richard 1997 Leningrad and Moscow Russia s War Penguin UK published 1999 ISBN 9780141925127 Retrieved 21 August 2019 The Austro Hungarian Army on the Italian Front 1915 1918 Imperial War Museum Retrieved 13 April 2017 Bull Stephen 2004 Encyclopedia of Military Technology and Innovation Greenwood p 53 ISBN 978 1 57356 557 8 Englund Peter 2011 The Beauty And The Sorrow An intimate history of the First World War Profile Books p 211 ISBN 978 1 84765 430 4 Brayley Martin J 2009 Camouflage uniforms international combat dress 1940 2010 Ramsbury Crowood pp 37 and passim ISBN 978 1 84797 137 1 Peterson D 2001 Waffen SS Camouflage Uniforms and Post war Derivatives Crowood p 64 ISBN 978 1 86126 474 9 Rottman Gordon L 2013 World War II Tactical Camouflage Techniques Bloomsbury pp 31 33 ISBN 978 1 78096 275 7 Carruthers Bob 2013 28 January 1943 Wehrmacht Combat Reports The Russian Front Pen and Sword pp 62 64 ISBN 978 1 4738 4534 3 Zach Sebastian Schneetarn Bundeswehr German Army Retrieved 28 February 2017 Hofmann George F 1997 PB United States Army United States Armor Association p 49 Versatile Vikings 37 million upgrade completed Gov UK Ministry of Defence and Defence Equipment and Support 29 April 2016 Retrieved 11 December 2016 OSS Briefing Film The Weasel Real Military Flix Archived from the original on 9 February 2009 Retrieved 9 February 2009 Brown Douglas J A Brugger Hermann Boyd Jeff Paal Peter 15 November 2012 Accidental Hypothermia New England Journal of Medicine Massachusetts Medical Society 367 20 1930 1938 doi 10 1056 nejmra1114208 ISSN 0028 4793 PMID 23150960 Coughlin Michael J Saltzman Charles L Mann Roger A 2013 Mann s Surgery of the Foot and Ankle 9 ed Elsevier Health Science p 2336 ISBN 9781455748617 retrieved 11 December 2016 a b Schwartz Richard B 2008 Tactical Emergency Medicine LWW medical book collection Lippincott Williams amp Wilkins p 319 ISBN 9780781773324 Retrieved 11 December 2016 Staff 23 June 2008 Military s Arctic training facility opens in Resolute CBC News Retrieved 11 December 2016 The Canadian Press 23 June 2008 Winter warfare course shows military still struggling in Arctic CBC News Retrieved 11 December 2016 Blasko Dennis J 2013 The Chinese Army Today Tradition and Transformation for the 21st Century Asian Security Studies Routledge p 312 ISBN 9781136519970 Retrieved 12 December 2016 Liikuntakoulutuksen kasikirja in Finnish Finnish Defence Forces 2015 p 288 ISBN 978 951 25 2708 3 Retrieved 31 October 2017 Staff 15 January 2016 US soldiers practice Arctic warfare in Lapland Finnish Broadcasting Company Retrieved 31 October 2017 Sperre der Reiter Alpe verschoben PNP de in German 4 April 2020 Retrieved 4 May 2020 India Foreign Policy amp Government Guide Volume 1346 of World Foreign Policy and Government Library Vol 1 International Business Publications 2001 p 400 ISBN 9780739782989 Retrieved 12 December 2016 Which forces IRGC deployed in Syria Islamic World Update 30 April 2016 Retrieved 14 December 2016 The winter training camp is in Emamzadeh Hashem in which there is a ski resort dedicated to the brigade used for training snow warfare Tani Saburō 1988 Rangers The Strongest Combatants of the Ground Self Defense Force in Japanese Fusosha Publishing pp 154 186 ISBN 978 4594002350 Cold Response 2016 forsvaret no Norwegian Armed Forces 2016 Retrieved 11 December 2016 Cold Response is the Norwegian Armed Forces main winter exercise It is held every other year and our partners are invited to participate Wilk Andrzej 26 June 2013 Russian army justifies its reforms PDF OSW Commentary Warsaw Centre for Eastern Studies 109 retrieved 11 December 2016 Dalnevostochnoe vysshee obshevojskovoe komandnoe uchilishe imeni Marshala Sovetskogo Soyuza K K Rokossovskogo Far Eastern Higher Combined Arms Command School named after Marshal of the Soviet Union KK Rokossovsky in Russian Ministry of Defence Retrieved 27 January 2020 Edinstvennyj na Dalnem Vostoke ledovyj poligon postroen dlya obucheniya budushih komandirov arkticheskih podrazdelenij The only ice range in the Far East built to train future commanders of the Arctic units in Russian Ministry of Defence 22 December 2015 Retrieved 27 January 2020 komandiry motostrelkovyh vzvodov arkticheskih Cold Weather Training Royal Navy Retrieved 11 December 2016 Scheppler Bill 15 December 2002 British Royal Marines Amphibious Division of the United Kingdom s Royal Navy The Rosen Publishing Group Inc pp 29 31 ISBN 9780823938063 Rojas Yash 1 December 2011 Cool School teaches arctic survival U S Air Force News Retrieved 29 March 2018 a b c Barr Robert K May 1988 US Navy Cold Weather Handbook for Surface Ships PDF Washington DC Government Printing Office archived PDF from the original on 20 December 2016 retrieved 13 December 2016 Bacon Lance M 11 February 2015 Navy prepares for Arctic operations as ice thins militarytimes com Military times Retrieved 13 December 2016 U S Coast Guard s 2013 Review of Major Icebreakers of the World USNI org US Naval Institute 24 July 2013 Retrieved 22 March 2017 Arctic Offshore Patrol Ships Royal Canadian Navy Retrieved 31 October 2016 Further reading EditGovan Thomas P 1946 Training for Mountain and Winter Warfare Study No 23 The Army Ground Forces Historical Section Army Ground Forces Armstrong Richard N Joseph G Welsh 2014 Winter Warfare Red Army Orders and Experiences Cass series on Soviet military theory and practice Routledge p 208 ISBN 9781135211547 retrieved 12 December 2016External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cold weather warfare Bundeswehr Training Video 1959 Bundeswehr Lehrfilm Der Einzelschutze im Hochwinter 1959 1959 German Army training film Individual protection in deep winter German narration Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cold weather warfare amp oldid 1141765834, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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