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No.

44-86

44-87 44-90 44-101 44-112

44-115 44-116

44-117

44-145

44-146

44-147 44-201

Antiaircraft Artillery missile battery, Nike-Ajax.
Headquarters and headquarters

brigade, continental.

44-275

44-276

44-277 44-315 44-316

44-317 44-335 44-336

44-337

44-415

Antiaircraft Artillery battery, 75mm gun, continental.
Antiaircraft Artillery battalion, 120mm gun, ConUS.

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Airborne Antiaircraft Artillery battalion, automatic weapons.
Headquarters and headquarters battery, Airborne Antiaircraft Artil-
lery battalion, automatic weapons.

Airborne Antiaircraft Artillery battery, automatic weapons.
Antiaircraft Artillery battalion, 90mm gun, continental.
Headquarters and headquarters battery, Antiaircraft Artillery bat-
lion, 90mm gun, continental.

Antiaircraft Artillery battery, 90mm gun, continental.
Antiaircraft Artillery battalion, 75mm gun, continental.

Headquarters and headquarters battery, Antiaircraft Artillery bat-
talion, 75mm gun, continental.

Headquarters and headquarters battery, Antiaircraft Artillery bat-
talion, 120mm gun, ConUS.

Antiaircraft Artillery battery, 120mm gun, ConUS.

Air defense Artillery missile battalion, Nike-Ajax, continental.
Headquarters and headquarters battery, air defense Artillery missile
battalion, Nike-Ajax, ConUS.

Air defense Artillery missile battery, Nike-Ajax, ConUS.
Air defense Artillery missile battery, dual-controlled, Nike-Ajax,
continental.

Air defense Artillery missile battalion, Nike-Hercules.
Headquarters and headquarters battery, air defense Artillery missile
battalion, Nike-Hercules.

Air defense Artillery missile universal battery, Nike, ConUS.
Air defense Artillery missile battalion, Nike-Hercules, ConUS.
Headquarters and headquarters battery, air defense Artillery missile
battalion, Nike-Hercules, ConUS.

Air defense Artillery missile battery, Nike-Hercules, ConUS.

PUBLIC INFORMATION

Public information field service organization.
Field press censorship organization.

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Title

Headquarters and headquarters battery, air defense Artillery auto-
matic weapons battalion, self-propelled.

Air defense Artillery automatic weapons battery, self-propelled.
Antiaircraft Artillery battery, electronic warfare, continental.
Headquarters and headquarters battery, Antiaircraft Artillery
brigade, mobile.

Headquarters and headquarters battery, Antiaircraft Artillery group,
continental.

Antiaircraft Artillery battalion, 120mm gun, semimobile.
Headquarters and headquarters battery, Antiaircraft Artillery bat-
talion, 120mm gun, semimobile.

Antiaircraft Artillery battery, 120mm gun, semimobile.
Antiaircraft Artillery missile battalion, Nike-Ajax.
Headquarters and headquarters battery, Antiaircraft Artillery missile
battalion, Nike-Ajax.

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1 Feb 56

1 Feb 56

battery, Antiaircraft

45-500 45-510

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2 Feb 56

16 Jul 56

CORPS

52-1 52-2

Headquarters, special troops, Army.

Headquarters and headquarters detachment, air reconnaissance
support battalion.

Headquarters, corps or Airborne corps.

16 Jul 56

9 Aug 57

27 Mar 56

Headquarters company, corps or Airborne corps.

21 Dec 55 21 Dec 55

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Transportation harbor craft company, amphibious support brigade.
Headquarters and headquarters company, Transportation highway
transport command.

16 Jan 56 14 Dec 55

55-12

Headquarters and headquarters company, Transportation truck
group.

31 Mar 55

55-16

Headquarters and headquarters company, Transportation truck bat-
talion, army or communications zone.

1 Apr 55

No.

55-17 55-18

55-19

55-27

55-28

55-38

55-56

55-57

55-68

55-75

Transportation light helicopter company.
Transportation heavy boat company.
Infantry division Transportation battalion.

Title

Transportation light truck company.

Transportation medium truck company.

Transportation car company, army or communications zone or air-
borne transportation car company, airborne corps.
Transportation cargo carrier company (tracked).
Transportation heavy truck company.
Transportation sled company.

Headquarters and headquarters detachment, Transportation helicop-
ter battalion, army (tentative).

Date

23 Sep 57

4 Oct 57

19 Jan 56

14 Jun 56

12 Nov 56 7 Feb 57

8 Apr 55

12 Mar 56

55-76

55-77

Truck Transportation company, infantry division Transportation
battalion.

Headquarters and headquarters company, infantry division Trans-
portation battalion.

20 Dec 56

8 Apr 55 20 Dec 56 20 Dec 56

55-78 55-87 55-109

Armored carrier company, infantry division Transportation bat-
talion.

20 Dec 56

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Transportation aerial tramway company.
Transportation medium helicopter company.

Headquarters and headquarters company, Transportation terminal
command C.

Headquarters and headquarters detachment, Transportation termi-
nal battalion.

Headquarters and headquarters company, Transportation termi-
nal command B.

Headquarters and headquarters company, Transportation termi-
nal command A.

Transportation amphibious truck company.
Transportation staging area company.

Transportation floating craft depot maintenance company.
General headquarters, Transportation railway service.

Headquarters and headquarters company, Transportation railway
group.

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55-217

55-225

Transportation electric power transmission company.
Transportation railway operating battalion.

17 Mar 55

1 Apr 55

55-226

Headquarters and headquarters company, Transportation railway
operating battalion.

1 Apr 55

55-227 55-228 55-229

Railway engineering company, Transportation railway operating
battalion.

1 Apr 55

Railway equipment company, Transportation railway operating
battalion.

10 Feb 55

Train operating company, Transportation railway operating bat-
talion.

1 Apr 55

55-235

Transportation railway shop battalion.

17 Mar 55

55-236

Headquarters and headquarters company, Transportation railway
shop battalion.

17 Mar 55

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Headquarters and headquarters detachment, Transportation Army
aircraft maintenance battalion.

Transportation Army aircraft maintenance company.

Transportation Army aircraft heavy maintenance and supply com

8 Apr 55

8 Apr 55

8 Apr 55

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Headquarters, headquarters and service company, Transportation
boat maintenance battalion.

18 Apr 55

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Headquarters and headquarters company, Airborne division com-
mand and control battalion.

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10 Aug 56 19 Dec 55

5 Oct 55

10 Aug 56

10 Aug 56

23 Sep 55

5 Oct 55

10 Aug 56

DIVISIONS AND HIGHER COMBAT UNITS 3

Under this head come the division (three types), the corps, the field army, the army group, and task forces.

DIVISIONS. A division, as the term is used today, is the smallest type of Army unit which includes elements of infantry, artillery, armor, and service troops as part of its permanent organization, is commanded by a general officer, and is capable of sustained combat operations when it receives the normal logistical support from higher headquarters.

Some historians credit France with first employing such units, in the later years of the 18th century. Napoleon made extensive use of divisional formations. According to some records, however, it was in the 19th century that they began to appear in peacetime European armies. Prussia adopted the divisional organization after the Napoleonic wars. In this country, the division as a permanent type of tactical unit assumed its present significance with the passage of the National Defense Act of 8 June 1916, by which Regular Army units were assigned to brigades and divisions.

Our Army has three types, the infantry, airborne, and armored divisions. Infantry Division. The infantry division is organized on the pentagonal concept, based on four main principles: ready adaptability to the requirements of the atomic battlefield; pooling at higher echelon of equipment and units not habitually required within subordinate units; recognition of the increased span of control possible through modern signal communications; and adaptability to the integration of new and better materiel as it is developed. Its largest combat units are its battle groups, of which there are five per division. They are supplemented by an armor battalion, an armored cavalry squadron, divisional artillery, and other troops. The strength of the division is 820 officers, 64 warrant officers, and 12,864 enlisted men; total 13,748.

The infantry division's primary mission is to destroy or repel the enemy. It accomplishes this mission by aggres

sive application of combat power at the critical place and time. Combat power consists primarily of a judicious combination of troop units (battle groups, armor battalions, and armored cavalry squadrons) and fires (atomic and/or nonatomic fires) delivered by mortar, artillery, and/or rocket means.

In the offense, its attack is characterized by atomic and nonatomic fires; the swift movement of selected troop units; and a violent assault on the enemy, to destroy him at once if possible, otherwise by the rapid exploitation of initial successes. It is usually carried out by either enveloping or penetrating the enemy force. Envelopment may be used when an enemy flank has been located, or when there are gaps between enemy units; our mobile troop units can then attack around the flank or through the gaps, secure objectives (usually terrain areas) deep in the enemy's rear, and capture or destroy him. Penetration is usually resorted to when the situation does not favor envelopment. It is directed at the enemy's main position, which it seeks to rupture. Enemy resistance is isolated and neutralized, in the area selected for attack, by atomic and/or nonatomic fire; this is followed immediately by the rapid movement of troops into and through the area, to roll back the shoulders of the penetration. The momentum of the attack is sustained by moving fresh troops through the ruptured enemy defenses. As with envelopment, the aim is to capture or destroy the enemy by seizing objectives in his rear.

When employed on the defense, the division generally repels the enemy's assault by atomic and/or nonatomic fires (artillery and/or rocket), maneuver of troop units, and close combat. It usually locates its battle groups along the forward edge of the battle area and in depth throughout the division sector. To gain this depth, battle groups in the rear are located in blocking positions, or are held mobile and dispersed in assembly areas; these groups, together with the armor bat

3 For the war records of individual divisions, corps, etc., see chapter 28.

talion and armored cavalry squadron, are employed (a) to block, or destroy by counterattack, the enemy in any sector where he may have penetrated or enveloped our unit positions, and (b) to destroy any enemy elements which may have gotten to our rear areas by air transport or infiltration. Emphasis is placed on the destruction of the enemy in those sectors, and on that terrain, which are most favorable to the defender. Usually, just before our troops close with the enemy, he is subjected to atomic and/or nonatomic fire by artillery and/or rockets.

In exploiting the effects of fire power it is essential that troops move fast. In atomic warfare, a division is widely dispersed under normal conditions. It is concentrated for the minimum time needed to bring to bear its whole combat power and secure its objective. Thereafter it is again rapidly dispersed, to reduce its vulnerability to atomic attack.

Forty-three infantry divisions were organized during World War I. Sixtyseven were active at the peak of mobilization for World War II. Eight (including the 1st Cavalry Division) were employed in Korea in the period 195053.

The Airborne Division. The airborne division is designed to effect "vertical envelopment" by airborne assault, using parachutes, Air Force troop carrier assault landing aircraft, and/or Army aviation.

Our first airborne divisions, the 82d and 101st, were organized on 15 August 1942. By the end of World War II the Army had five such divisions overseas, one of them in the Asiatic-Pacific theater and the other four in the Mediterranean-European theater.

Since that war the airborne division's capabilities have been greatly increased by better transport aircraft and heavier parachute drop equipment. The World War II division's chief means of transport was an Air Force version of the Douglas DC-3, a 1937 model commercial airline workhorse with a speed of only 150 miles per hour. Its cargo capacity seldom exceeded 5,000 to 6,000 pounds for a 300-mile radius, and its cargo doors were so small that parachute

delivery was restricted to man-sized items of 500 pounds or less. The division could not deliver by parachute a single vehicle, or any type of artillery except the small 75mm pack howitzer. By contrast, the present division, using the Air Force's latest 350-mile-perhour transport aircraft and the Army's latest heavy drop techniques, can deliver by parachute, within a 2,000-mile radius, heavy items of equipment up to and over 25,000 pounds; for example, 762mm Honest John rocket launchers, 155mm howitzers, bulldozers, 5-ton trucks, and 90mm self-propelled, tracked Scorpion antitank guns. This combination of modern Air Force transports and Army heavy drop equipment was highly successful in a number of operations conducted in Korea by the 187th Airborne Combat Team.

The airborne division, like the infantry division, has five battle groups as its largest combat components. It differs from the infantry division as follows

(1) Its battle groups have five rifle companies each, instead of four as in the infantry division.

(2) It has no organic tanks, armored 155mm personnel carriers, or

8-inch howitzers.

or

(3) It has less than half as many 34-ton and larger trucks.

(4) It has four 762mm rocket launchers, as against two in the infantry division.

(5) It has a support group, organized on a functional and streamlined basis, which is responsible for the logistic operations of the division. (6) Its equipment is lighter and more rugged and austere. All of its combat elements, with equipment, can be carried in Air Force medium transport aircraft (C-119, C-123, C130). In contrast, much of the combat equipment of the infantry division must be carried in heavy C-124 aircraft (a total of several hundred are needed to move all such equipment of the division in one lift); and its tanks and tank recovery vehicles are not air-transportable even in the heaviest Air Force transport aircraft, the C-133. (7) It has fewer personnel: 657 of

ficers, 76 warrant officers, and 10,

753 enlisted persons, a total of 11,486.

Usually the division is boldly delivered by air, directly on or near its objective, to achieve surprise. The following missions are considered particularly well suited for airborne divisions; airborne raids deep in the enemy's rear, to destroy or neutralize an objective and then withdraw; strategic or tactical airborne operations, with or without the friendly use of nuclear weapons, to seize hostile territory that is otherwise inaccessible because of major geographical barriers or because seizure is beyond the capabilities of other forces; assisting friendly ground forces over major rivers or other barriers by seizing and holding critical objectives; reinforcing friendly forces that have become isolated.

Once on the ground, the airborne division's tactics are essentially those of the infantry division.

Our present airborne divisions are composed entirely of personnel who have volunteered for parachute duty. This has resulted in an extremely high esprit de corps.

Armored Division. This is the Army's basic large armored unit. The first armored divisions were organized in 1940. By the middle of 1943 there were 16 of them. All were employed in combat in the European theater in World War II. None was used in the Korean War.

As compared with the infantry division

(1) The armored division has four armored battalions and four armored infantry battlions, whereas the infantry division has one armor battalion, and its five infantry elements are organized into battle groups. (2) Its engineer battalion has four engineer companies and a bridge company, as compared with the infantry division engineer battalion, which has five engineer companies.

(3) It has a quartermaster battalion instead of a quartermaster company.

(4) The infantry division has a transportation battalion which provides trucks and armored personnel car

riers sufficient to transport the combat elements of two battle groups. Each armored infantry battalion of the armored division has organic armored personnel carriers to transport all combat elements.

(5) It has three 105mm self-propelled field artillery battalions instead of the one 105mm towed field artillery battalion of the infantry division.

(6) The armored cavalry squadron, signal battalion, medical battalion, ordnance battalion, aviation company, administration company, and division trains of the two divisions have a like function and a similar organization. The field artillery composite battalions of the two are similarly organized.

(7) The armored division is somewhat the larger of the two, with 921 officers, 90 warrant officers, and 13,606 enlisted persons; total 14,617. The armored division is characterized by

A high degree of tactical mobility, either on roads or cross country. All elements are mounted on tracklaying or wheeled vehicles or in Army aircraft.

An integrated weapons system composed of armor-protected large-caliber tank guns, machineguns, and mortars.

Inherent protection afforded by the armor, which enables this heavy firepower to be advanced through fireswept areas or areas contaminated with chemical, biological, or radiological agents, or the induced radiation resulting from nuclear explosions.

Immediately responsive, mobile nuclear delivery means which can be rapidly brought to bear on area targets or heavy-caliber nonatomic fires as required.

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