Terrain dictates options. Options dictate decisions. Decisions create patterns. Barriers reduce freedom of movement. Vegetation, slope, water, and ground conditions force people to adjust. They do not move where they want. They move where terrain allows them to. That creates predictable behavior.
Movement follows the easier line. Lines compress into crossings. Crossings become decision points. That is where observation gains value. Recon is not about scanning ground without structure. It is about understanding the ground first.
If you try to watch everything, you dilute your observation.
Time, attention, and exposure are limited. Prioritize. Identify the likely line. Locate where terrain forces a choice. Observe the point, not the whole area.
A good OP is not placed by guesswork. It is placed by terrain. Distance, concealment, and angle allow you to control observation without exposing the position unnecessarily. You do not search blindly. You focus first on the terrain that is most likely to produce movement. Terrain tells you where to watch.
1 thought on “Tactical Observation & Reconnassance 101”
1 thought on “Tactical Observation & Reconnassance 101”
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