A flying column, in military organization, is a small, independent land forces unit capable of rapid mobility and usually composed of all arms. It is often an ad hoc unit, formed during the course of operations.
The term is usually, though not necessarily, applied to forces less than the strength of a brigade. As mobility is its raison d'être, a flying column is accompanied by the barest minimum of equipment. It generally uses suitable fast transport; historically, horses were used, although units utilizing trucks and helicopters may be regarded as more recent equivalents.
Boer kommando in 17th–20th century South Africa, may be regarded as form of flying column (unlike commandos in the more recent sense). The mobile columns employed against Boer forces, by British Empire forces in the South African War of 1899–1902, were usually of the strength of two battalions of infantry, a battery of artillery, and a squadron of cavalry, almost exactly half that of a mixed brigade.
During the Anglo-Iraqi War of 1941, British forces employed flying columns code-named Kingcol and Gocol. Kingcol advanced into Iraq from Jordan and Palestine.
Flying columns have also been used in guerrilla warfare, notably the mobile armed units of the Irish Republican Army during the Irish War of Independence 1919–21.
See also
References
- Jim Maher (1988). The Flying Column - West Kilkenny 1916-1921. Geography Publications.
"Flying column". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). 1911.
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