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Troop List
Talking about all of the various units that go into a Corps reminded me that I have a copy of a "doctrine" listing. This is the US Army Command & General Staff College Reference Book 101-1. This uses the Division 86 TO&E, but it is useful for showing all of the "tail" that supports the "teeth". Needless to say, these are are not real units, the names have been changed to protect the innocent!
I Corps Troop List HQ & HQ Company, Corps. HHC, COSCOM HHC 10th Spt Grp HHC 11th Spt Grp 2175th Spt Cen, Rr Area Op 2176th Spt Cen, Rr Area Op 2421st DPU (COSCOM) 2001st MMC Co (COSCOM) 4104th Trans MMC (COSCOM) 25th Armored Division 21st Infantry Division [optional] 52nd Infantry Division (Mechanized) 54th Infantry Division (Mechanized) 312th Armored Brigade 201st Armored Cavalry Regiment 207th Air Cavalry Combay Brigade 1-215 Cav Sqn (Air) 120th Attack Helicopter Bn COMBAT SUPPORT UNITS HHB, I Corps Arty Btry A, 191st FA (target acquisition) HHB, 61st FA Group 1-651 FA [155mm towed] 1-652 FA [155mm towed] 2-606 FA [203mm SP] 2-607 FA [2-3mm SP] HHB, 62nd FA Grp 2-631 FA [155mm SP] 2-632 FA [155mm SP] 2-608 FA [203mm SP] 2-661 FA [203mm SP] HHB, 63rd FA Grp 2-633 FA [155mm SP] 2-634 FA [155mm SP] 2-609 FA [203mm SP] 2-662 FA [MLRS] HHB, 64th FA Grp 2-663 FA [203mm SP] 2-664 FA [203mm SP] 1-205 FA [Lance] 1-305 FA [Lance] AIR DEFENSE ARTILLERY HHB, 401st ADA Brigade 1-430 ADA [Chap/Vulc] 1-431 ADA [Chap/Vulc] 2-461 ADA [IHAWK] 2-462 ADA [IHAWK] 1-451 ADA [Patriot] AVIATION HHC 102nd Avn Grp 133rd Avn Co (Corps) 296th MI Co (Aerial Survl) 151st Avn ATC Unit 173rd Hv Hel Co 121st Attack Hel Bn 110th Combat Aviation Bn 111 Combat Aviation Bn 130th Medium Helicopter Bn CHEMICAL 333rd-337th Cml Det (NBCE) 356th-359th Cml Det (NBC Agt Sampling & Analy) 400th-405th Cml Det (Cbt Spt) 460th-466th Cml Det (Decon) 450th-456th Cml Det (Decon) ENGINEER HHC 51st Engineer Combat Brigade HHC 61st-62nd Engineer Combat Groups 500th-511th Engineer Combat Bn (Corps) 550th-551st Eng Cbt Bn (Hvy) 5000th Eng Topo Co (Corps) 5006th-5007th Eng Dump Truck Co 5035th-5036th Eng Pnl Bridge Co 5045th Eng Asslt Bridge Co 5076th Eng Mdm Girder Bridge Co 5080th-5081st Eng Cbt Spt Eq Co 5115th Eng Co (ADM) 5665th Eng Det (Water Purification) COMBAT ELECTRONIC WARFARE INTELLIGENCE 200th Aerial Xlt Bn 210th Tax Xplt Bn 220th EW Bn MILITARY POLICE 230th MP Bn PSYCHOLOGICAL OPERATIONS 200th PSYOP Bn 283rd PSYOP Tac Bn SIGNAL HHC, 20th Signal Brigade 700th Signal Bn (Corps) 712th Signal Bn 704th Area Signal Bn RESTRUCTURED GENERAL SUPPORT 90th Mat Cen (Armt & Cbt Veh) 92nd Mat Cen (WVeh) 94th Mat Cen (Comm & Elect) 96th Mat Cen (Grnd Spt Equip) 98th Mat Cen (Msl) 70th Spt Cen (Avn) 20th Gen Sup Cen AMMUNITION 55th-56th Ammo Bn MAINTENANCE 90th Maint Bn (GS) 95th Maint Bn (DS) 71st Trans Ac Maint Bn (DS/GS) 924th-925th LE Maint Co (GS) 930th-931st Hvy Eq Maint Co (GS) 700th-701st Trans Ac Maint Co (DS) 900th-901st Maint Co (Rr) (DS) 908th-910th Lt Maint Co (Fwd) (DS) 706th-707th Trans Ac Maint Co (GS) 932nd-933rd Coll & Class Co 934th Tire Repair Co MEDICAL HHD, 80th Medical Brigade 800th-809th Medical Bn 850th-852nd Med Air Amb Co 855th-860th Med Amb Co 865th-868th Med Clearance Co 809th-813th Cbt Spt Hosp 834th-836th Evac Hosp 845th-848th MEDSOM PERSONAL & ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES 10th Pers & Admin Bn 100th-101st Pers Svc Co 108th Admin Svcs Det 110th-112th Repl Reg Det 126th-143rd AG Postal Service Org 144th-145th SPS Org 148th-149th Army Band FINANCE 110th-114th Fin Svc Org SUPPLY & SERVICES 33rd Petrol Group 20th-22nd Sup & Svc Bn 31st-32nd Petrol Op Bn 33rd Petrol Sup Bn (GS) 201st-204th Sup & Svc Co (DS) 223rd-225th Fld Svc Co (GS)(Fwd) 235th Fld Svc Co (GS) 238th-241st Gen Sup Co (GS) 248th-249th Rep Parts Sup Co (GS)(Corps) 236th Hv Mat Cpt Co (GS) 253rd-254th Ac & Msl Repair Parts Co 255th-256th QM Adrp Sup Co 257th-260th Petrl Sup Co 280th-281st Eng Eq Op Tm (Water Purif) 278th QM Svc Org (Petrol Prod Lab) CIVIL AFFAIRS 50th CA Bn TRANSPORTATION (LESS AVN) HHC, 7th Trans Bde HHC, 70th-71st TMT Grp 771st-778th TMT Bn 701st-704th Trans Lt Trk Co (2.5-ton) 705th-708th Trans Lt Trk Co (5-ton) 709th-720th Trans Med Trk Co (Cgo) 721st-724th Trans Med Trk Co (Petrol) 729th-730th Trans Hv Trk Co As you can see, there is quite an extensive list of support units, and this is just for a single Corps! I should note, that while this is the doctrine troop list, in real life, no Corps had this many support units during the Cold War.
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The reason that the American Army does so well in wartime, is that war is chaos, and the American Army practices chaos on a daily basis. |
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That is the truth in real life none of the units had their full compliment until they were deploying...*shrug*
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good stuff dragoon. thanks!
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"There is only one tactical principal which is not subject to change. It is to use the means at hand to inflict the maximum amount of wounds, death and destruction on the enemy in the minimum amount of time." --General George S. Patton, Jr. |
#4
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Still, as a paper study, it has its points
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The reason that the American Army does so well in wartime, is that war is chaos, and the American Army practices chaos on a daily basis. |
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No Prob!
Just for a trivia....this troop list represents over 350 TO&E tables....someday I'll get my greedy claws on all of them!
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The reason that the American Army does so well in wartime, is that war is chaos, and the American Army practices chaos on a daily basis. |
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Yeah well WWII the US had planned on some 187 Divisions, but ended up with half of that since so many troops were needed for support roles.
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S&T magazine, back in the SPI days, did a study and figured out that if the "extra" combat elements had been converted into divisions, that at least another 42 divisions could have been fielded. One thing was for sure....a lot of waste and duplicated effort went into fielding the WWII army.
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The reason that the American Army does so well in wartime, is that war is chaos, and the American Army practices chaos on a daily basis. |
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And then there was the practise by the veteran divisions of laying their hands on anything resembling an automatic weapon. The 2nd Infantry Division had an average of two BARs per squad, and there were some squads that had as many as 4 BARs and a bazooka, well above normal TO&E!! Not to mention helping themselves to German field phones, they were able to wire in every unit, right down to squad level...when the 106th took over the positions, they didn't have the sweet stuff...and it cost them dearly.
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The reason that the American Army does so well in wartime, is that war is chaos, and the American Army practices chaos on a daily basis. |
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A big reason the divisions were stripped down as much as they were, was to minimize the shipping needed to send them overseas. After all, a division going to the Pacific might not need the tank-destroyer battalion or tank battalion that an ETO division did. And even then, there were not enough GHQ tank or TD battalions for each infantry division to keep one of each permanently, they rotated among divisions as needed in the ETO. As it was, just about all of the "normal" attachments (tank battalion, AAA battalion) were standardized in the postwar TO&E.
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My Twilight claim to fame: I ran "Allegheny Uprising" at Allegheny College, spring of 1988. |
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Yeah that is another problem is when people help themselves with their light fingers to equip their unit to higher than TO&E.
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hence why in game i tend to live off the commies backs(not like i have that many other options without a friendly supply chain)
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the best course of action when all is against you is to slow down and think critically about the situation. this way you are not blindly rushing into an ambush and your mind is doing something useful rather than getting you killed. |
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The shipping problem was the real drive to streamline the divisions. But it was the excess wasted on the numerous support units that really caused the problems. This bleed off heavily impacted the combat arms to such an extent that by 1944, Eisenhower had to make the decision to cull his service units in order to make up shortfalls in infantry replacements, this led Marshall to cancel many programs (ATSP for one, several army air forces cadet classes for another) and send these men to Europe as replacements.
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The reason that the American Army does so well in wartime, is that war is chaos, and the American Army practices chaos on a daily basis. |
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The reason that the American Army does so well in wartime, is that war is chaos, and the American Army practices chaos on a daily basis. |
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and the tenth's favorite machinegun was the MG42. (of course we were told to grab everything we could off the germans right before we took riva ridge and mount belvadere)
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the best course of action when all is against you is to slow down and think critically about the situation. this way you are not blindly rushing into an ambush and your mind is doing something useful rather than getting you killed. |
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The Panzerfaust was more effective than what was issued. The MP-40 was decent weapon to pick up. It still boggles my mind at time the amount of submachine guns that one could find with infantry units. Yeah I know the basic rifles were you had to pull the trigger for each shot, regardless if it was old bolt action or semi-auto load. Then again it boggles my mind that M-3 was kept in the armories for as long as it was. Talk about gun literally pressed stamped, granted many of the submachine guns were, but they took the M-3 to the extreme. Like the US Army couldn't find a more suitable replacement until the M4 carbine. As for the Jackboot and shelter half well it doesn't surprise me. I remember when I was in we were always required to take our sleeping bag and shelter half. Which seemed to be waste of time since we weren't ever allowed to use the shelter half, and dragging out your sleeping bag meant you had to waste time in the morning rolling the damn thing up. Especially when you had poncho and it liner to use for shelter and sleeping in. Sadly, never used the poncho as such. Much like the field jackets we were issued, but never allowed to used, but the liners use with a sweater under your bdu blouse almost kept you as warm on those cold days...lol |
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Issued but not used!? What madness is that!? :O
I made a point of at least trying every issued item, even those that had developed a bad reputation. Uncovered a few gems that way such as the light weight sleeping bag (and cover) aka "horse blanket". Most didn't use them (ok, everyone except me) because they were rough and scratchy. Well, after a run through the wash to clean it, it was soft, warm, compact, and above all, light! Awesome piece of kit. Even better, it was the perfect size to fit over the heavy winter sleeping bag as an additional layer of warm goodness! In my opinion, if it's issued, it's there to be used!
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If it moves, shoot it, if not push it, if it still doesn't move, use explosives. Nothing happens in isolation - it's called "the butterfly effect" Mors ante pudorem Last edited by Legbreaker; 04-30-2021 at 02:29 PM. |
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Just think about the massive amount of TA-50 (or "kit") you were issued at every duty station. You used maybe a quarter of it, and the rest stayed home, to be taken out every so often to make sure it's still serviceable. An air mattress? What knucklehead thought of that...
The most TA-50 I used was in Korea, and the extra stuff was mainly cold-weather items.
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I'm guided by the beauty of our weapons...First We Take Manhattan, Jennifer Warnes Entirely too much T2K stuff here: www.pmulcahy.com |
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Depends on where you are I suppose. It can be vital in the cold.
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Yeah it was amazing the amount of the equipment that would spend more time in storage locker then with you in the field for example the Gas Mask... While at Bragg I think we only dragged it out for IG, the training days for MOPP gear, and Corps FXs where we could be sent anywhere along the coast or to Fort Campbell depending on the exercise. Otherwise the bulk thing stayed tucked away.
Now that has me chuckling thinking about the new load bearing system is set up, it would make it impossible for left hand shooter to have leg hoster for their side arm...lol |
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You were issued a gas mask permanently? :O
Over here you got a basic issue. Items such as gas masks, entrenching tools, compasses, even (early on anyway) winter sleeping bags were issued on an as need, per exercise basis. It kept the crap you had to cart around to a minimum and the QM always had whatever was needed, in the quantity actually needed. All we really kept, at least as far as field gear anyway, was uniforms, webbing, pack and about another 15-20kgs of gear. Non-field gear issued consisted of little more than a few sets of "poly's" (polyester khaki uniforms for on base or parade ground). My Company was unique in the Army being also issued a kilt for ceremonial duties. I've got a list of my issued items floating about somewhere. I'll post when I can find it.
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If it moves, shoot it, if not push it, if it still doesn't move, use explosives. Nothing happens in isolation - it's called "the butterfly effect" Mors ante pudorem Last edited by Legbreaker; 01-26-2011 at 05:17 PM. |
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To me it seems strange that American units wouldn't have their gas mask with them at all times while in the field. We consider it to be life saving equipment - being no different than your rifle, helmet, and kevlar.
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The sad thing for many exercise it and the rest of mopp gear were in the rucksack.
Yes I agree it would seem that it is valuable piece of defensive equipment, I am also including day trips out to this range or that range where we had to have load bearing equipment, kevlar, and weapon. |
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While we were in we had duffle bag overflowing of gear that spent more time in the locker than in use...
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Group,
Following is a link to the NATO OOB for 1989. It's not the complete document, but interesting nonetheless. http://www.scribd.com/doc/37695/NATO...of-Battle-1989 Tony |
#27
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Unfortunately impossible to save without signing up for a Scribd or Facebook account.
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I'm guided by the beauty of our weapons...First We Take Manhattan, Jennifer Warnes Entirely too much T2K stuff here: www.pmulcahy.com |
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Every unit I've ever been, including the National Guard, required the carriage of the protective mask.
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I'm guided by the beauty of our weapons...First We Take Manhattan, Jennifer Warnes Entirely too much T2K stuff here: www.pmulcahy.com |
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I'm guided by the beauty of our weapons...First We Take Manhattan, Jennifer Warnes Entirely too much T2K stuff here: www.pmulcahy.com |
#30
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Can you read it okay? Tony |
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