Long Range Reconnaissance Patrols ( LRRP )
Long-range reconnaissance patrols, or
LRRPs (pronounced "Lurps"), are small, heavily armed long-range reconnaissance teams that patrol deep in enemy-held territory.
n
December 1965, the
1st Brigade,
101st Airborne Division, formed a
LRRP platoon, and by
April 1966, the
1st Infantry Division,
25th Infantry Division and
173rd Airborne Brigade formed LRRP units as well. On 8 July 1966,
General William Westmoreland authorized the formation of a (LRRP) unit in each infantry brigade or division in
Vietnam. By
1967 formal LRRP companies were organized, most having three platoons, each with five six-man teams equipped with
VHF/FM AN/PRC-25 radios. LRRP training was notoriously rigorous and team leaders were often graduates of the
U.S. Army's 5th
Special Forces Recondo
School in
Nha Trang, Vietnam.
Since satellite communications were a thing of the future, one of the most daring long-range penetration operations of the war was launched by members of the
1st Air Cavalry Division's, long-range reconnaissance patrol, against the
North Vietnamese Army when they seized "
Signal Hill" the name attributed to the peak of
Dong Re Lao Mountain, a densely forested 4,879-foot mountain, midway in
A Shau Valley, so its
1st and 3rd Brigades, who would be fighting behind a wall of mountains, could communicate with
Camp Evans near the coast or with approaching aircraft.
July
1968. Two
1st Cavalry Division LRP teams,
Quang Tri, Vietnam.
The US Marine Corps also performed long-range reconnaissance missions typically assigned to
Marine Recon, especially
Force Recon at the corps-level (i.e.,
Marine Expeditionary Force (
MEF)) level, as opposed to the
Battalion Recon units answering to battalion commanders. Marine Recon teams typically were twice as large as
Army LRRPs and were more heavily armed, however, sacrificing a degree of stealth. In addition, the
Marines did not employ indigenous
Montagnards as front and rear scouts as Army LRRPs and Special Forces teams did which proved invaluable in confusing the enemy if contact was made. The tactical employment of LRRPs was later evaluated to be generally used far too dangerously by commanders, who were pleased by the kill ratios of LRRPs teams (reported as high as 400 enemy troops for every LRRP killed). Writes one commentator: "During the course of the war Lurps conducted around 23,
000 long-range patrols, of this amount two-thirds resulted in enemy sightings." LRRPs also accounted for approximately 10,000 enemy
KIA through ambushes, air strikes, and artillery.
In February
1969, all
US Army LRRP units were folded into the newly formed
75th Infantry Regiment (
Ranger), a predecessor of the
75th Ranger Regiment, bringing back operational Ranger units for the first time since the
Korean War. The Army had disbanded Ranger units after
Korea, but kept
Ranger School, on the premise that spreading Ranger School graduates throughout the Army would improve overall performance. The initial Ranger companies formed in 1969 were: "
A" V Corps Rangers,
Fort Hood, Texas; "
B" VII Corps Rangers,
Fort Lewis, Washington; "
C" I Field Forces, Vietnam; "
D" II Field Forces, Vietnam; "E"
9th Infantry Division, Vietnam; F 25th Infantry Division, Vietnam; "G"
23rd Infantry Division, Vietnam; "H" 1st Cavalry Division, Vietnam; "I" 1st Infantry Division, Vietnam; "K"
4th Infantry Division, Vietnam; "L" 101st Airborne Division, Vietnam; "M"
199th Light Infantry Brigade, Vietnam; "N" 173rd Airborne Brigade, Vietnam; "O"
3rd Brigade,
82nd Airborne Division, Vietnam; "P" 1st Brigade,
5th Infantry Division (
Mechanized), Vietnam; "D/151"
Indiana National Guard; and "F/425 "
Michigan National Guard.
The legacy of LRRP units also continues on in the U.S. Army's
Long Range Surveillance (both detachments and companies) and
Reconnaissance, Surveillance, and Target Acquisition squadrons.