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== '''[[The Miernik Dossier]]''' ==
== '''[[Special reconnaissance]]''' ==
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{{Image|The Miernik Dossier Cover.jpg|left|150px|The cover of a 2007 Overlook Duckworth edition.}}
'''Special Reconnaissance''' (SR) is conducted by small units of highly trained military personnel, usually from Special Operations Forces (SOF) who avoid combat with, and detection by, the enemy. SR is recognized as a key Special Operations capability at the level of the US Secretary of Defense<ref name=1996DefenseRpt>{{citation
| url = http://www.dod.mil/execsec/adr96/chapt_22.html
| author = William J. Perry
| title = 1996 Annual Defense Report, Chapter 22, Special Operations Forces
| accessdate = 2007-11-11
}}</ref>: <blockquote>"Special Reconnaissance is the conduct of environmental reconnaissance, target acquisition, area assessment, post-strike assessment, emplacement and recovery of sensors, or support of Human Intelligence ([[HUMINT]]) and Signals Intelligence ([[SIGINT]]) operations."</blockquote>


'''The Miernik Dossier''', published by [[the Saturday Review Press]] in 1973, was the first of seven novels by the American novelist [[Charles McCarry]] featuring an American intelligence agent named [[Paul Christopher]].  Set in 1959 in Europe and Africa during the days of the [[Cold War]], it is narrated in the form of reports, overheard conversations, and various documents from a multitude of sources of different nationalities, supposedly giving the reader an authentic picture of what an actual intelligence operation might be like.  McCarry had previously been an undercover operative for the [[Central Intelligence Agency]] for nine years, and the book was hailed for its apparent authenticity and realistic depiction of [[tradecraft]].  It received excellent reviews, and instantly established McCarry's reputation as one of the foremost American novelists of espionage.
Military units that carry out SR missions include [[United States Army Special Forces]], Marine [[Force Reconnaissance]] and [[United States Navy SEALs]]; UK [[Special Air Service]], [[Special Boat Service]] and [[Special Reconnaissance Regiment]]; Israeli [[Sayeret Matkal]] and other "reconnaissance units", Russian and former Soviet [[Spetsnaz]] and Razvedchiki;  [[Australian Special Air Service Regiment]]; and a variety of other units.  


Sometimes, the SR mission is carried out by other than special operations professionals, such as the Australian Coastwatchers of the Second World War. Coastwatchers usually received military commissions in the hope it might protect them if captured, but, fundamentally, they were long-time residents of Pacific islands, able to survive there and report on Japanese operations.


''[[The Miernik Dossier|.... (read more)]]''
 
''[[Special reconnaissance|.... (read more)]]''


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! style="text-align: center;" | &nbsp;[[The Miernik Dossier#Notes|notes]]
! style="text-align: center;" | &nbsp;[[Special reconnaissance#References|notes]]
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Revision as of 06:24, 27 April 2013

Special reconnaissance


Special Reconnaissance (SR) is conducted by small units of highly trained military personnel, usually from Special Operations Forces (SOF) who avoid combat with, and detection by, the enemy. SR is recognized as a key Special Operations capability at the level of the US Secretary of Defense[1]:

"Special Reconnaissance is the conduct of environmental reconnaissance, target acquisition, area assessment, post-strike assessment, emplacement and recovery of sensors, or support of Human Intelligence (HUMINT) and Signals Intelligence (SIGINT) operations."

Military units that carry out SR missions include United States Army Special Forces, Marine Force Reconnaissance and United States Navy SEALs; UK Special Air Service, Special Boat Service and Special Reconnaissance Regiment; Israeli Sayeret Matkal and other "reconnaissance units", Russian and former Soviet Spetsnaz and Razvedchiki; Australian Special Air Service Regiment; and a variety of other units.

Sometimes, the SR mission is carried out by other than special operations professionals, such as the Australian Coastwatchers of the Second World War. Coastwatchers usually received military commissions in the hope it might protect them if captured, but, fundamentally, they were long-time residents of Pacific islands, able to survive there and report on Japanese operations.


.... (read more)