Royal Acrean Marine Corps: Difference between revisions

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|battles          = [[Kunhegyes Conflict]] <br> [[Ruvelkan Civil War]] <br> [[Great Eracuran War]] <br> [[Liberation War (Gylias)|Liberation War]] <br> [[Refusal War]] <br> [[Zemplen War]] <br> [[Midsummer War]]
|battles          = [[Kunhegyes Conflict]] <br> [[Ruvelkan Civil War]] <br> [[Great Eracuran War]] <br> [[Liberation War (Gylias)|Liberation War]] <br> [[Refusal War]] <br> [[Zemplen War]] <br> [[Midsummer War]]
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|commander1      = Mikael Skjæran
|commander1      =  
|commander1_label = Chief of Defence
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Revision as of 11:57, 12 June 2022

Royal Acrean Marine Corps
Marinejegerkåren
Corps de Chasseurs à Marine
ACRMarines.png
Active21 March 1905 - Present (Royal Marine Corps)
Country Acrea
TypeMarines
Size162,523 active duty personnel
15,348 reserve personnel
177,871 total
Part ofAcrean Armed Forces
HeadquartersTrier
EngagementsKunhegyes Conflict
Ruvelkan Civil War
Great Eracuran War
Liberation War
Refusal War
Zemplen War
Midsummer War

The Royal Acrean Marine Corps is the elite expeditionary infantry corps of the Acrean Armed Forces. Despite its classification as a naval infantry, the RAMC is formally organised under the Acrean Army and shares its overall budget. The RAMC was established in 1905 as a component of the army dedicated to littoral and amphibious operations, and combined both army regiments and existing naval infantry regiments. Prior to the formal establishment of the corps, Acrean marines consisted of several regiments of naval infantry under the Navy first established in 1775, and were employed as seaborne security and for conducting coastal raids. The RAMC is often considered the impetus for the development of combined joint operations between Acrea's various branches, well before the concept became a defined component of Acrean defence strategy and doctrine, as a result of the close cooperation between the army and navy needed to properly employ marines. Today, the RAMC is responsible for conducting combined arms expeditionary and amphibious operations. Organised as an army in miniature, the RAMC possesses its own organic infantry, armour, artillery, special operations, and aviation forces which coordinate with naval sealift and air force assets in order to conduct its mission as an expeditionary and rapid deployment force. As the primary expeditionary land force of the Acrean military, it is oriented towards being rapidly deployable by both air and sea; a seaborne marine regiment is capable of deploying a combined force including aircraft, armour, and logistics anywhere in Tyran within 72 hours, providing the Acrean military with the ability to rapidly respond to crises around the region without having to rely on existing Acrean military facilities. The RAMC is unique in possessing its own fixed-wing combat aircraft separate of the RAAF. In combination with its engineering and construction units, this allows combat aircraft to be deployed from temporary or ad hoc airfields such as highway strips. Secondary to its expeditionary and rapid deployment roles, the RAMC also serves to help bolster Acrea's land forces in the event of a major conflict, and has been deployed in force alongside the Army in every major conflict Acrea has been involved in.

Doctrine

The RAMC's doctrine is informed by much of its shared history and culture with the Army; the RAMC bases its culture in martial traditions which emphasise discipline and decisive action, placing great importance upon the relative autonomy of tactical-level commanders to prosecute maneuvers in order to attain objectives how they best see fit, called mission-type-tactics. The Acrean form of mission-type tactics, Uppdragsåtgärd, was first codified by Acrean General Ludvig Syrén in 1870. Uppdragsåtgärd emphasises five base tenets: 1. Tydlig avsikt (clear intent), 2. Skiktadkommando (layered command), 3. Hastighet och manøver (speed and maneuver), 4. Riktad åtgärd (targeted action), and 5. Försiktig aggressivitet (cautious aggression). The first tenet, Tydlig avsikt, states that subordinate commanders must clearly understand the intent of their orders, which must be given as succinctly as possible. This is to ensure that in conducting an order, that subordinate commanders can not only conduct it in the most effective way possible, but so they not proceed in such a way that their actions undermine the intent of an order, even if achieving the ostensible objective laid out. The second tenet, Skiktadkommando, is literally translated as "layered command". This references the necessity for subordinate commanders to be trained to think and act independently, as well as be able to perform at at least one level of command above their own. Hastighet och manøver refers to the conduct of actions. It stipulates that maneuver must be conducted "in a speedy fashion", in order to disrupt and overwhelm enemy's decision-making cycle, rendering them unable to respond in a cohesive and effective manner. Riktad åtgärd refers to focusing operations against identified critical points of the enemy's decision-making chain, whether it be by disrupting communication or destroying the assets necessary to carry out particular actions; the desired end result is to paralyse the enemy's ability to act. The last tenet, Försiktig aggressivitet, refers to due diligence in the aggressive employment of forces typically practiced by Acrean commanders at both tactical and operational levels. The tenet recognises that although aggressive, violent, and rapid action could provide a decisive action, the autonomy and flexibility available to tactical Acrean commanders means that decisions which are tactically sound in affecting the enemy may present vulnerabilities after the fact. One oft-cited example from the Great Eracuran War is Operation Kedja, the invasion of Svinia, during which an extremely effective and rapid Acrean armoured advance across eastern Svinia's open plains outpaced follow-up infantry and stretched Acrean lines along long, thin, vulnerable corridors. Attacks against the corridors resulted in several tactical Acrean defeats as rear troops were engaged by Svinian forces, and encirclement was only prevented by the inability of Svinian forces to mount a coordinated counterattack and the timely arrival of follow-up Acrean motorised infantry.

Organisation

Personnel

Rank Structure

Equipment