A 'division' is a large
military unit or
formation usually consisting of around ten to twenty thousand soldiers. In most armies, a division is composed of several
regiments or
brigades, and in turn several divisions make up a
corps. In most
modern militaries, a division tends to be the largest
combined arms unit capable of independent
operations; due to its self-sustaining
role as a unit with a range of
combat troops and suitable combat support forces, which can be divided into various
organic combinations.
It should be noted that, while the focus of this article is on land-based military divisions, the military unit ''division'' also refers to a sub-unit of a department aboard Naval and Coast Guard ships and shore commands. In this usage, unit size varies widely, though typically divisions number less than 100 persons. In the U.S. Navy, a ''division officer'' (DIV-O) is usually an ensign who oversees a team of non-commissioned officers in their duties (although the purpose of this is generally regarded as being for the training of the ensign).
History
Origins
The first general to think of organising an army into smaller combined-arms units was
Maurice de Saxe, Marshal General of
France, in his book ''
Mes Réveries''. Because of his early death in
1750, it remained just an idea for the time being.
It was another French military leader who put the ideas into practice,
Victor-François de Broglie. He conducted practical experiments in the
Seven Years' War, and even though the war was not a success for the French, the divisional system was.
Early divisions
The first war that the divisional system was employed in was the French revolutionary war. The revolutionary government came to the same conclusion about it as the previous royal government and the army was organised into divisions.
It made the armies more flexible and easy to manoeuvre, and it also made the large army of the revolution manageable. Under
Napoleon the divisions were grouped together into
corps, because of their increasing size. Napoleon's military success spread the divisional and corps system all over
Europe. When the
Napoleonic Wars ended, all armies in Europe had adopted it.
The modern division
In modern times, the divisional structure has been standardized by most military forces. This does not mean that divisions are equal in size or structure from military to military, but generally divisions have in most cases come to be units of 10,000 to 20,000 troops with substantial enough support organic to the unit to be capable of independent operations. Usually the direct organization of the division consists of one to four brigades or regiments of the combat arm of the division along with a brigade or regiment of combat support (usually
artillery) and a number of direct-reporting
battalions for various specialized support tasks (often
reconnaissance and
combat engineers). In most militaries, ideal organization strength is standardized for each type of division, encapsulated in a
Table of Organization and Equipment, or TO&E, which specifies exact assignments of units, personnel, and equipment for the division.
The modern division has become in many militaries the primary identifiable combat unit, supplanting the regiment. The peak of use of the division as the primary combat unit was during
World War II, when hundreds of divisions were deployed. Presently, smaller numbers of divisions represent significant combat power. The recent
Invasion of Iraq was completed with only a handful of divisions with significant support forces.
Types
Divisions are often formed to organize units of a particular type together with appropriate support units to allow independent operations. In more recent times, divisions are more often organized as a
combined arms unit with
subordinate units representing various combat arms. In this case, the division often retains the name of a more specialized division, and may still be tasked with a primary role suited to that specialization.
Infantry
The most common form of divisions formed throughout most of history have been
infantry divisions. Often, in small militaries, all divisions were infantry and therefore the term ''division'' is synonymous with ''infantry division'' in those forces. The basic infantry division is usually formed with a number of infantry regiments (usually three), an artillery regiment, and a few support battalions.
Infantry divisions are often formed for specific purposes, and these are sometimes reflected in their name. Basic infantry, without its own transportation (thus relying on leg and horse mobility), is in modern times often considered ''light'' infantry, thus the formation of the ''light infantry division''. Its primary value in today's military environment is that it is easy to transport and keep supplied due to its lack of heavy equipment. It is ideal for
low-intensity conflict, but lacks firepower for full scale warfare.
Another kind of infantry division is ''mountain'' infantry. These units are designed to move and fight in alpine environments, and thus their training and equipment must be able to withstand rugged terrain and inclement conditions. Mountain units are often considered
elite units, and they may be used in more conventional environments when high-quality troops are needed. Another popular elite infantry formation is the ''airborne'' infantry, commonly called ''parachute'' infantry (or ''paratroopers''). These units are designed to drop their forces by air (both parachute and glider) and maintain combat operations autonomously behind enemy lines. More so than mountain divisions, these units require special training and equipment. A recent off-shoot has been the ''air-mobile'' infantry, designed to use helicopter insertion versus traditional airborne operations. All of these units are often employed as elite infantry in traditional combat situations.
During World War II, infantry units began becoming more and more mechanized. Many were given enough trucks to carry their entire force, sometimes becoming known as
''motorized'' infantry. Some were equipped with halftracks and other armored carriers, and were known as ''armored'' infantry (Germany's units were given the name ''Panzergrenadier''). As these units were developed after the war, the term ''motorized'' became common regardless of the type of transportation. For example, the
Soviet Union made wide use of
armored personnel carriers in its ''
motor rifle divisions'', as did the
United States Army in its ''infantry (motorized)'' divisions.
Today, one of the most common kinds of infantry divisions are
mechanized infantry divisions. Essentially an evolution of the motorized infantry division, mechanized infantry divisions contain infantry soldiers transported in
armored personnel carriers and
infantry fighting vehicles, backed up with heavy fire and striking power provided by
tanks,
helicopters, and
artillery. In the U.S. Army, three out of the eight active infantry divisions (the 1st, 3rd, and 4th) are mechanized, and another, the 2nd, has a mixture of mechanized and non-mechanized forces.
Cavalry
For most nations,
cavalry was deployed in smaller units and was not therefore organized into divisions, but for larger militaries, such as that of the
United States,
First French Empire,
Russian Empire, and
Soviet Union, a number of cavalry divisions were formed. They were most often similar to the nations' infantry divisions in structure, although they usually had fewer and lighter support elements, with cavalry brigades or regiments replacing the infantry units, and supporting units such as artillery and supply being horse-drawn. For the most part, large cavalry units did not remain after
World War II.
While horse cavalry had been found to be obsolete, the concept of cavalry as a fast force capable of missions traditionally fulfilled by horse cavalry made a return to military thinking during the Cold War. In general, two new types of cavalry were developed:
air cavalry or airmobile, relying on helicopter mobility, and
armored cavalry, based on an autonomous armored formation. The former was pioneered by the
U.S. 11th Airborne Division, under the name 11th Air Assault Division, and was reflagged as the
1st Cavalry Division (Airmobile) during the
Vietnam War.
After the end of the Vietnam War, the 1st Cavalry Division was reorganised and re-equipped with tanks and armored scout vehicles to form armored cavalry, as were all of the United States' independent Cavalry Regiments.
After the 1990-91 Gulf War, the
U.S. 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment (2nd ACR) was re-equipped with
Humvees and designated Armored Cavalry (Light), while units retaining their
Abrams tanks and
Bradley fighting Vehicles were classified as Armored Cavalry (Heavy). In 2004 the 2nd ACR was again reequipped, this time with
Stryker Armored Combat Vehicles, and renamed the 2nd Cavalry Regiment.
Armoured divisions
The development of the
tank near the end of
World War I prompted some nations to experiment with forming them into division-size units. Many did this the same way as they did cavalry, by merely replacing infantry with tank units and giving motorization to the support units. This proved unwieldy in combat, as the units had many tanks but few infantry units. Instead, a more balanced approach of balancing the number of tank, infantry, and artillery units within the division took place.
By the end of World War II, in most cases ''armoured division'' referred to divisions with significant tank battalions and motorization for its infantry, artillery, and support units. ''Infantry division'' referred to divisions with a majority of infantry units.
Since the end of the war, most armoured and infantry divisions have had significant numbers of both tank and infantry units within them. The difference has usually been in the mix of battalions assigned. Additionally, in some militaries, armoured divisions would be equipped with the most advanced or powerful tanks - such as the M1A2 Abrams in the United States.
Nomenclature
In most nations, divisions are designated by combining an
ordinal number and a type name. Nicknames are often assigned or adopted although these often are not considered an official part of the unit's . In some cases, divisions titles lack an ordinal number, often in the case of unique units or units serving as elite or special troops. For clarity in histories and reports, the nation is identified previous to the number.
It is important to note that division names are completely subject to the whim of whatever controlling body names the unit, commonly resulting in fanciful and incongruous names. Quite often the ordinal numbers do not run sequentially, leading to high numbers without that many divisions existing. Types as well are not always indicative of the actual structure or mission of the unit. Germany raised a parachute armoured division (''Fallschirmpanzer-Division'') during World War II which obviously never conducted, nor was intended to conduct, a parachute drop.
Nomenclature primarily serves to give each unit a unique identification to assist in command and control. This also helps in historical studies, but due to the nature of intelligence on the battlefield, division names and assignments are at times obscured. However, the size of the division makes such obfuscation rarely necessary.
National organization
Canada
The first division sized formation raised by the
Canadian military was the First Contingent of the
Canadian Expeditionary Force; raised in 1914, it was renamed the Canadian Division in early 1915 when it took to the field, and became the
1st Canadian Division when a
2nd Canadian Division took to the field later that year. A
3rd Canadian Division and
4th Canadian Division saw service in France and
Flanders, and a Fifth Canadian Division was disbanded in the
United Kingdom and broken up for reinforcements. The four divisions (collectively under the command of the Canadian Corps) were disbanded in 1919.
Canada had nominal divisions on paper between the wars, overseeing the Militia (part time reserve forces), but no active duty divisions. On
1 September 1939, two divisions were raised as part of the Canadian Active Service Force; a Third Division was raised in 1940, followed by a First Canadian (Armoured) Division and Fourth Canadian Division. The First Armoured was renamed the Fifth Canadian (Armoured) Division and the Fourth Division also became an armoured formation. The 1st and 5th Divisions fought in the
Mediterranean between 1943 and early 1945; the 2nd, 3rd and 4th Divisions served in
Northwest Europe. A Sixth, Seventh and Eighth Division were raised for service in Canada, with one brigade of the Sixth Division going to
Kiska in 1943. By 1945, the latter three divisions were disbanded as the threat to North America diminished. A Third Canadian Division (Canadian Army Occupation Force) was raised in 1945 for
occupation duty in Germany, organized parallel to the combatant Third Division, and a Sixth Canadian Division (Canadian Army Pacific Force) was undergoing formation and training for the
invasion of
Japan when the latter country
surrendered in September 1945. All five combatant divisions, as well as the CAOF and CAPF were disbanded by the end of 1946.
A First Canadian Division Headquarters (later renamed simply First Division) was authorized once again in April 1946, but remained dormant until formally disbanded in July 1954. Simultaneously, however, another "Headquarters, First Canadian Infantry Division" was authorized as part of the Canadian Army Active Force (the Regular forces of the Canadian military), in October 1953. This, the first peace-time Division in Canadian history, consisted of a brigade in Germany, one in
Edmonton and one at
Valcartier. This Division was disbanded in April 1958.
The First Canadian Division was reactivated one last time in 1988, but is no longer on the official order of battle. Canada currently has no active duty divisions.
United Kingdom
In the
British Army a division is commanded by a major-general and consists of three infantry, mechanised and/or armoured brigades and supporting units.
Currently, the British Army has five active divisions:
★
1st (UK) Armoured Division in
Germany
★
2nd Division — Scotland and Northern England, headquartered at
Edinburgh
★
3rd (UK) Mechanised Division, headquartered at
Tidworth
★
4th Division — East and South East England, headquartered at
Aldershot
★
5th Division — Wales, West and South West England, headquartered at
Shrewsbury
Germany
The
German Army has today five active divisions:
★ 1. Panzerdivision (1. PzDiv),
Hannover
★ Division Spezielle Operationen (DSO),
Veitshöchheim
★
Division Luftbewegliche Operationen (DLO),
Stadtallendorf
★ 10. Panzerdivision (10. PzDiv),
Sigmaringen
★ 13. Panzergrenadierdivision (13. PzGrenDiv),
Leipzig
1. Panzerdivision includes the main part of the rapid reaction forces. The DSO is specialized in airborne and commando operations, the DLO covers army aviation, airmobile forces and combat support troops. 10. Panzerdivision and 13. Panzergrenadierdivision are planned for peace keeping missions.
Each division is structured in two to three maneuver brigades. 1. PzDiv, DSO and DLO have division troops.
United States
A divisional unit in the United States Army typically consists of 10,000 to 20,000 soldiers commanded by a
major general. Two divisions usually compose a
corps and each division consists of four maneuver brigades, an aviation brigade, an engineer brigade, and division artillery, along with a number of smaller specialized units.
The United States Army currently has ten active divisions:
★
1st Infantry Division (Mechanized) at
Fort Riley,
Kansas and in
Germany
★
1st Armored Division at Fort Riley, Kansas and in Germany
★
1st Cavalry Division at
Fort Hood,
Texas
★
2nd Infantry Division in
South Korea
★
3rd Infantry Division (Mechanized) at
Fort Stewart,
Georgia
★
4th Infantry Division (Mechanized) at Fort Hood, Texas
★
10th Mountain Division (Light) at
Fort Drum, New York
★
25th Infantry Division (Light) at
Schofield Barracks, Hawaii
★
82nd Airborne Division at
Fort Bragg, North Carolina
★
101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) at
Fort Campbell, Kentucky
The
United States Marine Corps has a further three active divisions and one reserve division. They consist of three infantry regiments, one artillery regiment, a tank battalion, a Light Armored Reconnaissance battalion, an Amphibious Assault Vehicle battalion, a reconnaissance battalion, a combat engineer battalion, and a headquarters battalion.
★
1st Marine Division at
Camp Pendleton,
California.
★
2nd Marine Division at
Camp Lejeune,
North Carolina.
★
3rd Marine Division at
Camp Smedley D. Butler,
Okinawa,
Japan.
★
4th Marine Division with units located throughout the United States and headquartered in
New Orleans,
Louisiana.
USSR/Russian Federation
Main articles: List of Soviet Army divisions 1989-91
:There are two different types of units that match the English "division" term: ''дивизия'' (that is between ''regiment'' and ''army'' in size) and ''дивизион''. The last one may be
:# an ''artillery division'' as a set of
batteries, or
:# a ''ship division'' (''корабельный дивизион'', a specific service of a ship crew), or
:# a ''division of ships'' (''дивизион кораблей'', set of ships).
The title
Guard is the honor bestowed on units for heroism demonstrated in battles. The Guard was born on
18 September 1941 when rifle divisions 100, 127, and 153 were renamed into the First, the Second, and the Third Guards Rifle Divisions respectively. In many cases the unit simultaneously received a name usually related to place of the heaviest battles for which it was honored, like
Russian 4th Guards Kantemirovskaya Tank Division,
Russian 2nd Guards Tamanskaya Motor Rifle Division and others.
During the
Soviet era a motorized rifle division had 12,000 soldiers organized into three motorized rifle regiments, a tank regiment, an artillery regiment, an air defense regiment, surface-to-surface missile and antitank battalions, and supporting chemical, engineer, signal, reconnaissance, and rear services companies. A typical tank division had 10,000 soldiers organized into three tank regiments and one motorized rifle regiment. In 1989 the Ground Forces also included eight brigades of air assault, or air-mobile, units that conducted helicopter landing operations.
Compared to Russian forces, U.S. Army divisions have more infantry troops and larger logistic support, but fewer armored vehicles and artillery pieces. Russian forces are intended primarily for intensive, shorter operations, being quickly replaced by another division when worn out. Thus Soviet divisions had fewer mobility assets and projection capabilities than possessed by the United States. The U.S. military posture thus can deploy and operate at long distances, but the Russian military posture cannot do so to nearly such a degree.
In the early 1980s, out of a total of 194 active tank, motorized rifle and airborne divisions in the Soviet force, 65 were located in the western
USSR, 30 in
Eastern Europe and an additional 20 in the
Transcaucasus and
North Caucasus Military Districts (MDs). All these divisions were available for offensive operations against
NATO. In addition to these forces, 17 low-strength divisions, centrally located in the USSR, constituted the Strategic Reserves. For operation in the Southern Theater the Soviets had in place six divisions in the
Turkestan Military District and four engaged in combat operations in
Afghanistan. These forces could be reinforced by the 20 divisions from the
Caucasus MDs if they were not engaged against NATO. Soviet forces for operations in the
Far East were composed of 52 tank and motorized rifle divisions. The six
Warsaw Pact allies of the Soviet Union had a total of 55 active divisions, which, collectively with Soviet divisions, amounted to 249 combat divisions.
Many of these divisions, most notably those in the interior of the USSR, were at low stages of readiness. The Soviets also maintained 17 mobilization bases, predominantly in the western USSR, that could form additional combat divisions. These bases usually contained the combat equipment needed to form new divisions and would require augmentation in manpower and a substantial amount of training before they could be committed to combat operations.
In 1989 the Soviet Union had 150 motorized rifle and 52 tank divisions in three states of readiness. The Ground Forces had sixty-five divisions, kept at between 50 and 75 percent of their projected wartime strengths, in the westernmost military districts of the Soviet Union; fifty-two divisions at less than half their wartime levels in the
Siberian Military District, the
Transbaykal,
Central Asian, and
Far East Military Districts along the border with
China; and twenty-six low-readiness divisions in the Transcaucasus MD, the North Caucasus Military District, and the Turkestan Military District.
After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Russian tank and motorized-rifle divisions were reduced to near-cadre state, many being designated Bases for Storage of Weapons and Equipment (Russian acronym VKhVT). These bases, or "cadre" divisions were equipped with all the heavy armaments of a full-strength motor-rifle or tank division, while having only skeleton personnel strength, as low as 500 personnel. The officers and men of a cadre division focus primarily on maintaining the equipment in working condition. During wartime mobilization such a division would be beefed up to full manpower strength; however, in peacetime a cadre division is unfit for any combat.
In 1995, of 81 land forces divisions, 51 were not combat ready. Of 26 brigades, 14 are not in a state of operational readiness. Airborne troops and two peacekeeping divisions had the highest level of readiness. By 1996 the ground forces included sixty-nine divisions: seventeen armored, forty-seven motorized infantry, and five airborne.
Under the new defense policy document signed by President
Boris Yeltsin on
1 August 1998, the number of divisions in the regular armed forces was to be reduced to ten. These were to be full-strength, high-readiness Ground Forces divisions, one of which will be specifically trained in peacekeeping operations. The divisions, deployed in various parts of the country, would engage exclusively in combat training. This policy was not carried out, and was superseded by the "constant combat readiness" concept (see
Russian Ground Forces for details).
The Motorized Rifle Troops have been mechanized infantry since 1957. The Soviet Union fielded a new model of armored personnel carrier (APC) every decade since the late 1950s, and in 1967 it deployed the world's first infantry fighting vehicle (IFV). Similar to an APC, the tactically innovative IFV had much greater firepower, in the form of a 73mm main gun, an antitank missile launcher, a heavy machine gun, and firing ports that allowed troops to fire their individual weapons from inside the vehicle. In 1989 the Soviet Union had an inventory of over 65,000 APCs and IFVs, with the latter accounting for almost half of this inventory.
The Soviet Ground Forces viewed the tank as their primary weapon. In 1989 the Tank Troops had five types of main battle tanks, including the
T-54/55,
T-62,
T-64,
T-72, and
T-80. The greater part of the total tank inventory of 53,000 consisted of older, although still highly potent, T-54/55 and T-62 tanks.
The Rocket Troops and Artillery have been an important combat arm of the Ground Forces because of the belief that firepower has tremendous destructive and psychological effect on the enemy. In 1989 the Ground Forces had eighteen artillery divisions, in addition to the artillery and missile units organic to armies and divisions. Artillery and surface-to-surface missile brigades were attached to each combined arms or tank army. An artillery regiment and a surface-to-surface missile battalion were parts of each Soviet motorized rifle and tank division. In 1989 the Rocket Troops and Artillery manned 1,400 "operational-tactical" surface-to-surface missile launchers.
People's Republic of China
The
People’s Liberation Army (PLA) deploys the world’s largest ground force, currently totaling some 1.6 million personnel, or about 70% of the PLA’s total manpower (2.3 million in 2005). The ground forces divide into seven
Military Regions (MR). The regular forces of the ground forces consist of 18 group armies: corps-size combined arms units each with 24,000–50,000 personnel. The group armies contain among them 25 infantry divisions, 28 infantry brigades, nine armoured divisions, nine armoured brigades, two artillery divisions, 19 artillery brigades, 19 antiaircraft artillery/air-defense missile brigades, and 10 army aviation (helicopter) regiments. There are also three airborne divisions manned by the PLA Air Force (PLAAF). The PLA Navy (PLAN) has two multi-arm marine brigades.
In time of crisis, the PLA ground forces will receive reinforcements from numerous reserve and paramilitary units. The PLA reserve component has about 1.2–1.5 million personnel divided into 50 infantry, artillery, and antiaircraft artillery (AAA) divisions. In addition, approximately 1.1 million personnel serve in the
People’s Armed Police (PAP), which includes internal security and border defense forces under the control of the
Ministry of Public Security. The PAP internal security forces organize into 14 mobile divisions, 31 provisional/municipal internal security general corps, and 23 provisional/municipal border defense general corps.
The PLA’s tank inventory numbered around 10,000 during its peak time in the 1980s/90s, though current estimates say this number has reduced to 6,000–8,000 over the past few years. The Chinese-produced versions of the Soviet T-54/55 (Type 59/69) account for over two-thirds of the total PLA tank inventory. While retiring some of the older Type 59/69 series and replacing them with the second generation Type 88 and Type 96, the PLA is also upgrading the remaining Type 59/69 series tanks with new technologies including improved communication and
fire-control systems,
night vision equipment,
explosive reactive armour, improved power plant, and gun-fired
anti-tank guided missiles so that they can remain in service as mobile fire-support platforms.
The PLA operates about 2,000
light tanks including the
Type 62 light tank and the
Type 63 amphibious tank, both of which entered production in the 1960s. The improved Type 63A has replaced the Type 63 and features computerized fire-control, gun-fired anti-tank guided missile (ATGM), night fighting equipment, satellite navigation, and an improved power plant.
The armoured combat units previously known as tank divisions and brigades are now called armoured divisions and brigades to reflect their more combined arms nature. The PLA has transformed some former motorised infantry divisions (truck mobile) into mechanised units with tracked or wheeled armoured personnel carriers (APCs). Two amphibious mechanised divisions were also created in
Nanjing and
Guangzhou Military Regions. At least 40% of PLA divisions and brigades are now mechanised or armoured, almost double the percentage before the reduction.
See also
★
Air Division
★
List of military divisions
★
Division insignia of the United States Army
★
Military organization
References
★ Creveld, Martin van. ''The Art of War: War and Military Thought.'' London: Cassell, 2000. ISBN 0-304-35264-0
★ Jones, Archer. ''The Art of War in the Western World.'' University of Illinois Press, 2000. ISBN 0-252-06966-8