Berlin Brigade
After the end of World War II, under the conditions of the Yalta and Potsdam agreements, the Allied forces occupied West Berlin. This occupation lasted throughout the Cold War. The Berlin Brigade were the brigade-sized garrison forces based there by the British and American armies; the French army also had units in Berlin, called Forces Françaises à Berlin.
United States
The Berlin Brigade of the United States Army was a separate brigade based in Berlin; its shoulder sleeve insignia was the U.S. Army Europe patch with Berlin tab.
During the Berlin Wall Crisis of 1961, the Army reorganized the command structure of the forces in Berlin and created the U.S. Army Berlin and created the Berlin Brigade from the units already in the city. The 6th Infantry Regiment,[1] active in Germany since 1950, was reorganized in mid-1958 according to the "pentomic" structure: Each "battle group" consisted of five line (rifle) companies, a combat support company, and a headquarters & headquarters company. The Berlin Brigade had the 2d[2] and 3d Battle Groups, 6th Infantry until 1963, when Army force structure abandoned battle groups in favor of brigades and subordinate battalions.
The reorganized brigade consisted of the following units:
- 2d Battalion, 6th Infantry
- 3d Battalion, 6th Infantry
- 4th Battalion, 18th Infantry (reflagged on 13 September 1972 as the 4th Battalion, 6th Infantry)[3]
- Battery C, 94th Field Artillery
- Company F (later 6th Battalion), 40th Armor
- 42d Engineer Company
- 42d AG Unit (Postal)
- 42d Military Police Group (Customs) (attached elements)
- 287th Military Police Company (Separate)
- 43d Chemical Detachment
- 76th Chemical Detachment
- 279th Station Hospital (became US Army Hospital Berlin in 1976)
- 168th Medical Detachment (Veterinary Service)
- 592d Signal Company
- 298th Army Band
The 168th and 298th share the distinction of being the longest-serving units in Berlin. They both arrived in the city in a 37-vehicle convoy on 3 July 1945. The commanders of both units were old high school classmates.
The brigade's infantry battalions were reflagged again in 1984 as the 4th, 5th and 6th Battalions, 502d Infantry Regiment, and Battery C, 94th FA was reflagged as Battery E, 320th Field Artillery.
From 1947 to 1987, brigade soldiers were tasked with month-long rotations at Spandau Prison. These rotations, shared with British, French and Soviet soldiers, continued until Spandau's last prisoner, Rudolph Hess, died in 1987.
Until the end of the Cold War, members of the brigade were eligible for the Army of Occupation Medal with Germany clasp. Because of the legal status of West Berlin, it was technically "occupied" territory left over from World War II.
During the early 1980s, the U.S. Army Regimental System initiative renamed a large percentage of infantry, armor and artillery battalions to align overseas commands with units assigned to stateside brigades, reinforcing the Army's regimental designations and unit morale. The original intent was to initiate personnel replacement and rotations within regiments,[4] a "next step" that did not provide sufficient flexibility to Army personnel managers. The impact on Berlin-based infantry battalions was to reflag the 2d, 3d and 4th Battalions, 6th Infantry as the 4th, 5th and 6th Battalions, 502d Infantry, respectively, during the summer of 1984, assigning Berlin infantry units a shared identification with infantry battalions of 2d Brigade, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) at Fort Campbell, Kentucky.
When the Berlin Wall fell in 1989, the operational structure of the Brigade was as follows:
- Berlin Brigade
- 4th Bn, 502d Infantry Regiment, (6x M106, 12x M901, 14x M113, 8x M125)
- 5th Bn, 502d Infantry Regiment, (6x M106, 12x M901, 14x M113, 8x M125)
- 6th Bn, 502d Infantry Regiment, (6x M106, 12x M901, 14x M113, 8x M125)
- D Company, 40th Armor Regiment, (14x M1A1)
- F Company, 40th Armor Regiment, (14x M1A1)
- E Battery, 320th Field Artillery Regiment, (8x M109A3
- 42d Engineer Company
- 42d Postal Unit
Members of the brigade deployed to Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm in 1990–1991. But the first Berlin Brigade units to take part in an out-of-theater operation were the command-and-staff element of Headquarters and Headquarters Company (HHC), as well as one platoon from Company D, 6th Battalion, 502d Infantry, and the 42d Engineer Company. These units were later joined by the members of the 42d AG Unit (Postal). These units served in Operation Provide Comfort, a relief and protection mission for Iraqi Kurds. They served with a multinational "Allied Ground Combat Force" that also included British, French, Italian, Dutch, and Turkish infantry companies. Based in Silopi, Turkey, near the Iraqi border, from July to October 1991, these ground forces were soon withdrawn to avoid entanglement in the local Turkish-PKK conflict and because it was decided that the US Air Force presence at Incirlik constituted an adequate deterrent to Iraqi attempts at encroaching on the Kurdish autonomous zone. Soldiers of this task force were authorized to wear the Berlin Brigade shoulder sleeve insignia as a combat patch on the right shoulder of their uniform, the first and only time elements of the Berlin Brigade were authorized to do so.
Elements of the Berlin Brigade were the first combat units selected to deploy as a member of the United Nations Protectionary Forces (UNPROFOR) to Macedonia in July 1993; later to be renamed Task Force Able Sentry.
Under the treaties that enabled the reunification of Germany, all non-German military forces were required to leave Berlin. The Berlin Brigade was officially inactivated by President Bill Clinton on 6 July 1994. The last unit to leave Berlin was the 42d AG Unit (Postal). The 42d was a small unit responsible for the mail service for the military assigned to Berlin, the Potsdam unit, and the Helmstedt detachment. It received very little recognition but was vital to the morale of the brigade. Besides postal service, the unit also performed other services, such as courier duty throughout the European theater. The unit was based at Andrews Barracks under Special Troops.
United Kingdom
The Berlin Infantry Brigade of the British Army was formed in October 1953 out of the force called "Area Troops Berlin" and consisted of some 3,100 men in three infantry battalions, an armoured squadron, and a number of support units. Its shoulder sleeve insignia was a red circle over a black background with the word Berlin in red on a black background running around the top.[5] It was not initially part of the British Army of the Rhine despite being based in Germany.[6] However, it is recorded, at the very least, by the mid-1980s, that the brigade was indeed part of BAOR, being its second major component after I (BR) Corps.[7]
The military post code for Berlin was originally BAOR 2, later BFPO 45.
The three infantry battalions and armoured squadron assigned to Berlin were rotated regularly; the single armoured squadron was detached from an armoured regiment assigned to I (BR) Corps. The infantry battalions were rotated every two years.[8] 7 Flight AAC, based at RAF Gatow, provided aviation support. Other units, such as 62 Transport and Movements Squadron RCT, 14 Field Workshop REME, RAOC, 504 CRASC (ODT), 131 DID RASC, Det No 2 Independent Petrol Station Platoon RASC, 31st Quartering and Barracks Office RASC,121 & 122 Barracks Stores, 38 (Berlin) Field Squadron RE, 229 Signals Squadron and 3 Squadron 13 Signals Regiment Royal Signals, 3 Intelligence and Security Coy Int Corps, 247 Provost Coy RMP, 248 German Security Unit and the British Military Hospital (BMH) Berlin[9] were also permanently based in Berlin.
When the Berlin Wall fell, the operational structure of the British Brigade in Berlin was as follows:
- Berlin Infantry Brigade
- Berlin Infantry Brigade HQ
- 229 Signal Squadron, Berlin HQ
- 1st Btn, Royal Welch Fusiliers
- 1st Btn, King's Regiment, (replaced by 1st Btn, Irish Guards December 1989)
- 1st Btn, The Light Infantry
- BRIXMIS, British Military Mission to the East administered by Berlin Bde HQ
- C Squadron, 14th/20th King's Hussars, (18x Chieftain)
- 38th (Berlin) Field Squadron, Royal Engineers
- 7th Flight, Army Air Corps, (3x Gazelle AH.1)
- 6th Troop, 46th Air Defense Battery
In 1992, the brigade was reduced to two battalions, then further reduced in 1993 to a single battalion. The brigade was disbanded in September 1994.[10]
Month, Year | Name |
---|---|
November 1946 - | British Troops Berlin |
February 1949 - | Area Troops Berlin |
October 1953 - | Berlin Infantry Brigade Group |
December 1963 - | Berlin Infantry Brigade |
April 1977 - | Berlin Field Force |
January 1981 – September 1994 | Berlin Infantry Brigade |
See also
External links and references
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Berlin Brigade. |
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Berlin Infantry Brigade. |
- USA 6941st Guard Veterans Association
- 248 German Security Unit Veterans Association
- Berlin Brigade Memories
- Installations of the Berlin Brigade
- History of the Berlin Brigade
- History of the French, American and British Berlin Brigades
- Berlin Brigade - McNair Barracks
- Berlin 1969 – the Allies in Berlin at midpoint of the Cold War
- Co F 40th Armor site by Bob Decker.
- Berlin U.S. Military Veterans Association (BUSMVA) website
- British Army of the Rhine Locations
- Berlin-Brigade Installations
- "West Alliierte in Berlin". The history of the three Western Allied Forces and their civilian employees in Berlin from 1945–1994.
- BerlinBrigade.com Dedicated to all that served in West Berlin from 1945 to 1994
References
- ↑ http://www.history.army.mil/html/forcestruc/lineages/branches/inf/0006in.htm
- ↑ http://www.history.army.mil/html/forcestruc/lineages/branches/inf/0006in002bn.htm
- ↑ http://www.history.army.mil/html/forcestruc/lineages/branches/inf/0006in004bn.htm
- ↑ "Army Regulation 600-82, The U.S. Army Regimental System" (PDF). Retrieved 20 May 2011.
- ↑ "Berlin Brigade". Western-allies-berlin.com. 22 June 2005. Retrieved 20 May 2011.
- ↑ The British Army in Germany: An ... – Google Books. Google Books. Retrieved 20 May 2011.
- ↑ David C. Isby & Charles Kamps Jr, Armies of NATO's Central Front, Jane's, 1985, p.303
- ↑ "Berlin Infantry Brigade". Western-allies-berlin.com. 2 July 1945. Retrieved 20 May 2011.
- ↑ "British Army Units". Western-allies-berlin.com. Retrieved 20 May 2011.
- ↑ The British Army in Germany: An ... – Google Books. Google Books. Retrieved 20 May 2011.
- ↑ Graham Watson; Richard A. Rinaldi (2005). The British Army in Germany (BAOR and after): An Organizational History 1947–2004. Tiger Lily Publications LLC. p. 127. ISBN 0-9720296-9-9.
- Durie, W. (2012). The British Garrison Berlin 1945-1994 "No where to go" Berlin: Vergangenheits/Berlin. ISBN 978-3-86408-068-5.
Bibliography
- William Durie, "The United States Garrison Berlin 1945-1994", Aug 2014, ISBN 978-3864080685.
- British Garrison Berlin 1945 -1994, "No where to go", W. Durie ISBN 978-3-86408-068-5 (will be published in Germany on 14 May 2012)
- AMTLICH GEWONNEN; considering the spirit during the Berlin Wall period,
including a dedication to the former personnel of 7350th Air Base Group, Großek, Michael (2012) ISBN 978-3-89950-993-9