UNCONVENTIONAL   WARFARE LESSONS FROM THE SELOUS SCOUTS
By Leroy Thompson
      To understand the Selous Scouts’ methods, one must  first understand the Selous Scouts’ mission. The Scouts evolved to  varying extents from the Tracker Combat Unit of the Rhodesian Army, the  CIO (Central Intelligence Organization), and the Special Branch of the  BSAP (British South Africa Police). When Major Ron Reid Daly was given  the mission of forming the Scouts, Rhodesia’s borders were becoming less  and less secure, as ZANLA and ZIPRA terrorists infiltrated in greater  and greater numbers. Though the cover mission for the Selous Scouts  remained the tracking of terrorists, in reality the unit was a  pseudo-terrorist unit, using turned terrorists and Black soldiers from  the Rhodesian African Rifles, as well as White soldiers in black face  make-up from the Rhodesian SAS, Rhodesian Light Infantry and other  units. These pseudo groups would infiltrate terrorist areas of  operation, passing themselves off as terrorists and attempting to  subvert the terrorist infrastructure.

In many ways, the Selous Scouts learned from US counter- insurgency  successes in Vietnam, drawing on the examples of the Phoenix Program,  the Kit Carson Scouts and the Road Runner Teams. Even more did they  resemble the successful pseudo teams which had been active earlier in  Kenya. Constantly adding turned terrorists, the Scouts kept abreast of  current terrorist terminology, identification procedures, and  operations; often they were better informed about terrorist procedures  than the terrorists themselves.
    As the Selous Scouts evolved, they undertook  other missions such as cross-border raids, assassinations, snatches,  raids on terrorist HQs in Botswana or elsewhere, long-range  reconnaissance, and various other types of special operations. One early  raid typical of this kind of Scouts’ mission was the snatch of a key  ZIPRA official from Francistown, Botswana, in March 1974. These direct  action operations resembled in many ways the MAC V/SOG operations in  Vietnam. The number of Vietnam veterans in the Rhodesian security  forces, in fact, had a substantial influence on the conduct of the war  and on slang that was used. Terrorists, for example, were often  called ‘gooks’.     The Scouts lured terrorists into ambushes, from  which few terrorists normally walked away; captured terrorists and then  turned them to serve in one of the Scout pseudo groups; or turned them  over to the BSAP for interrogation. The Scouts were very successful in  gathering intelligence, at least in part from captured diaries and  letters. This is an important element of counter*insurgency operations.  Due to the fragmented nature of their operations, guerrillas rarely have  ready access to communications equipment. As a result, they may rely on  written communication, leaving much open to capture. Few guerrillas are  sophisticated enough to use ciphers, either, so often captured  communications are ‘in the clear’. Many politically inspired guerrillas  are actually encouraged to keep diaries documenting their political  development, and these also frequently include valuable intelligence  information. Third World insurgents are generally much less security  conscious than organized military forces about documents; hence,  captured written material can be an excellent intelligence source,  especially for order of battle data.
The Selous Scouts’ training and operational doctrine inculcated  audacity. At various times, for example, White Selous Scouts posed as  the ‘prisoners’ of Black Selous Scout ‘terrorists’, and were escorted  into terrorist strongholds, where White prisoners were highly prized. At  the appropriate moment, the Selous Scouts turned their weapons on the  terrorists, wreaking havoc from within. The classic example of audacity  was the Selous Scouts raid on the large ZANLA terrorist camp at  Nyadzonya Pungwe in August 1976. Using Unimogs and Ferrets painted in  FRELIMO camouflage, eighty-four Selous Scouts penetrated Mozambique and  drove directly into a large terrorist camp. Thousands of terrorists were  in camp preparing for morning formations, when the Scouts opened up  with 20mm cannons, .50 MGs, 12.7mm MGs, 7.62mm MGs and rifles. Estimates  of the number of terrorists killed run as high as 1,000, all for five  slightly wounded Selous Scouts. As the Scouts retreated to Rhodesia they  blew up the Pungwe Bridge behind them, frustrating pursuit.
Audacity does not, of course, mean foolhardiness, but the importance of 
audacious small unit offensives has been proved again and again in counter*insurgency operations by  the SAS in Malaya, Borneo and Oman; by Special Forces in Vietnam; and  by Selous Scouts in Rhodesia. Reportedly, some of the Soviets’ best  successes against Afghan guerrillas were achieved by small Spetsnaz  units carrying out similar operations. Because guerrillas tend to think  of themselves as the aggressors who take the war to the capitalist fat  cats, they are often themselves extremely complacent in their ‘safe’  areas. By showing the terrorists that they were never safe from the  ‘Skuz’apo’ (as the terrorists called the Selous Scouts) the Scouts had a  psychologically debilitating effect quite out of proportion to their  numbers. It was not uncommon, for example, for two groups of terrorists  to begin shooting at each other out of fear that the other group was the  Selous Scouts.
Various lessons can be learned from this aspect of Selous Scouts  operations. First, calculated audacity will often allow a small  counter-insurgency force to inflict casualties quite out of proportion  to the numbers of men involved. Secondly, terrorists, who rely heavily  on fear as a weapon, can themselves be rendered psychologically impotent  through fear when 
they become the prey of an enemy who appears, hits hard, and then vanishes; who, in effect, turns their own weapons against them.
 Selous Scouts relied heavily on  unconventional selection and training procedures. Unconventional, but  they worked and turned out some of the finest counter-insurgency  warriors of all time. Selous Scouts couldn’t count on ready resupply,  for example, so early on the fledgling Selous Scout had to learn to take  his food how and when it came. During initial selection the Selous  Scout was given one ration pack, but not told what to do with it. As the  next days passed, that transpired to be the only food that would be  provided. Some Scouts foraged around the training area to supplement  that initial ration. Before long, an instructor shot a monkey and hung  it in the middle of camp, where during the next few days of training it  became riper and riper, its smell soon pervading the camp. Finally,  after days of rigorous training the now ravenous trainee Selous Scouts  were treated to the sight of the maggot-infested carcass being cooked to  provide their first meal in days. Most managed to get it down, in the  process learning that if one is hungry enough, protein can be provided  from tainted meat, or even maggots. They also learned that even tainted  meat is edible if thoroughly boiled, though it should not be reheated a  second time. The obvious lesson here is that those being
    Selous Scouts relied heavily on  unconventional selection and training procedures. Unconventional, but  they worked and turned out some of the finest counter-insurgency  warriors of all time. Selous Scouts couldn’t count on ready resupply,  for example, so early on the fledgling Selous Scout had to learn to take  his food how and when it came. During initial selection the Selous  Scout was given one ration pack, but not told what to do with it. As the  next days passed, that transpired to be the only food that would be  provided. Some Scouts foraged around the training area to supplement  that initial ration. Before long, an instructor shot a monkey and hung  it in the middle of camp, where during the next few days of training it  became riper and riper, its smell soon pervading the camp. Finally,  after days of rigorous training the now ravenous trainee Selous Scouts  were treated to the sight of the maggot-infested carcass being cooked to  provide their first meal in days. Most managed to get it down, in the  process learning that if one is hungry enough, protein can be provided  from tainted meat, or even maggots. They also learned that even tainted  meat is edible if thoroughly boiled, though it should not be reheated a  second time. The obvious lesson here is that those being trained to survive under harsh conditions must be trained harshly. 
Selous Scouts weapons training was intense and practical. Because they  operated as terrorists, the Scouts were normally armed with Eastern Bloc  weapons. The AK-47, RPD light machine gun and SVD sniper’s rifle were  all widely used. Since the Scouts often concealed pistols about their  persons, a substantial amount of handgun training was included. CZ75s  and Beretta 951s were popular, as were Makarovs due to their Warsaw Pact  origins.
Among the very practical training techniques used to make the Scouts  proficient with their weapons was an extremely effective counter-ambush  drill. Scouts were trained, when under fire from ambush, immediately to  direct short bursts of fire at all likely places of concealment for  ambushers within their arc of fire. The effectiveness of this maneuver  could only be appreciated after seeing a well-drilled stick of Selous  Scouts quickly sterilize 360 degrees of an ambush site. Fire discipline  was important in this drill, but the Scouts had it. One Selous Scouts  training officer also developed the technique of using mannequin targets  dressed in terrorist attire and for ‘no shoots’-security forces  uniforms. These mannequins incorporated a system of balloons (for head  and torso), arranged so that a critical hit would cause the target to  fall, while a non-critical hit had to be followed up to drop the target.  The lesson to be remembered here is that military personnel likely to  use their weapons in quick reaction ambush/anti-ambush situations must  be trained to shoot in such circumstances. Obvious? Not to high-ranking  officers in a lot of armies.
Many Selous Scouts operations were actually what might be called  ‘sting’ operations. The use of European Selous Scouts ‘kidnapped’ by  Black Selous Scouts ‘terrorists’ to infiltrate terrorist camps has  already been mentioned. The Scouts carried out other classic stings,  such as snatching high-ranking ZIPRA officers in Botswana by posing as  Botswana Defense Force soldiers there to arrest them. To be accepted by  terrorist groups the Scouts often staged fake attacks on farms, or fake  hits on Special Branch informers to establish their credentials. So  convincing were they that some Selous Scouts pseudo groups became  legendary among the terrorists for their ferocity against Rhodesia. On  the individual level, Selous Scouts were not above running cons such as  convincing a terrorist that a command-detonated claymore mine was a  radio, and sending him into a nest of terrorists to radio a message.  Only pieces got through! 
Some of the really  classic Selous Scouts’ cons must remain shrouded in secrecy, but even  after Robert Mugabe assumed power and after the Selous Scouts were  supposedly disbanded, a secret Scouts base continued to operate, from  which much equipment and many weapons were evacuated to South Africa.  Once again, the lesson to be learned from the Selous Scouts’  sting operations is that sometimes audacity is both more deadly to the  enemy, and safer for the operators, than caution in unconventional  warfare.
Under Chris Shollenberg, a former Rhodesian SAS officer, a  reconnaissance troop was formed as part of the Selous Scouts. This recon  unit proved what has been the case in virtually every war in history:  small, highly-skilled recon units are among the most efficient and  cost-effective intelligence tools in existence. After lying hidden near  large terrorist camps for days, the Selous Scouts recon troops operated  ahead of Selous Scouts raiding columns, or called in air strikes. The  lesson here is simple: no matter how effective electronic intelligence  devices become, LRRPs remain an extremely important element in modern  warfare, especially counter-insurgency warfare.
Another important element of the Selous Scouts experience which is less  obvious is the necessity for a degree of egalitarianism in small elite  units. Despite the underlying racism of Rhodesia at that time, the  Scouts were a racially mixed unit, each member of which had to rely on  the others, and were aggressively non-racist. Black Scouts were  naturally aware of their differences in color and culture, as were White  Scouts, but neither was treated as superior or inferior. Because of the  nature of Scouts operations, all members of the units had to trust each  other implicitly, especially when the added element of turned  terrorists amongst the Scouts was added. Therefore there could be no  hints of racism within the Scouts. Anyone displaying such an attitude  did not become or did not stay a Selous Scout.
One method of achieving the closeness and egalitarianism necessary for  the Selous Scouts to function was requiring every aspirant Scout to  learn the regimental songs during the final portion of the selection  course. Sung a cappella, these functioned in lieu of a Selous Scouts  band, but also, since the songs were traditional African songs 
— often terrorist songs at that, the words altered to fit the Selous Scouts 
- they formed a bond between Black and White.
The Selous Scouts system worked. The closeness of the members of the  unit -even the tamed terrorists was tested many times but rarely found  wanting. In April 1975 a turned terrorist betrayed a pseudo group,  resulting in the deaths of seven of them. This event is most noteworthy  because it was so unusual. The closeness of the Selous Scouts continued  even after the end of the war, when the White Scouts realized the danger  their Black comrades in arms would face in Zimbabwe. When the White  Selous Scouts went to South Africa they took many of the Black Scouts  and their families along with them, and fought to have them incorporated  into No. 5 Recce Commando by their sides.
The lesson to be learned here is one that successful special operations  units find obvious, but conventional military commanders can never  grasp. Small, close-knit elite units function best when run in an  egalitarian manner. David Stirling made this a precept of the SAS when  he formed it, and it remains a key element in SAS successes today. There  is a chain of command in good special operations units, but no one  works hard at wielding power. Nevertheless, things get done and done  right. That’s why the selection course is so important.
Another important lesson to be learned from the Selous Scouts  experience can be applied to police or military covert operations. So  successfully did the Selous Scouts pass themselves off as terrorists  that they were frequently in more danger from Rhodesian security forces  than from real terrorists. As a result, when a Selous Scouts pseudo team  was working an area it was ‘frozen’ and declared off limits to any  other security forces operations. This same lesson can be applied to  police undercover operations or military covert, false flag, ‘sheep dip’  or deception missions.
    Unfortunately, the greatest lesson to be  learned from the Selous Scouts is that no matter how competent and  effective a military unit is, political considerations can render it  impotent. As Rhodesia became Zimbabwe, the Selous Scouts, though never  defeated on the battlefield, were defeated at the bargaining table. The  con men of the Selous Scouts were, in fact, conned out of existence by  the British, the Americans, the UN and Robert Mugabe. Of course,  throughout the history of counter-insurgency warfare, the failure to  establish political goals has rendered military operations ineffective. (END)
***Source***  This article was obtained from the book: DIRTY WARS- elite forces vs.  the guerrillas. By Leroy Thompson. Printed 1988.