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Mobility, Shock, and Firepower: The Emergence of the U.S. Armys Armor Branch, 1917-1945 PDF

587 Pages·2008·7.79 MB·English
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a M n o Mobility d b , F i l i r it Shock e y , p , o S w h and e o r c k Firepower , AT r h m e o e T e U.S. A ’ r he mergence of The rmy S m B e rA rg Armor BrAnch, 1917–1945 n e c n h c , e 1 o 9 f 1 T 7 h e – U 1 9.S 4. 5 A r m y ’ S R o b e r t S . C Forge the thunderbolt! a m e r o n U.S. A rmy c enTer of m iliTAry h iSTory Pin : 084344–000 Robert S. Cameron Mobility , Shock , and Firepower T e U.S. A ’ he mergence of The rmy S A B , 1917–1945 rmor rAnch by Robert Stewart Cameron Center of Military History United States Army Washington, D.C., 2008 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Cameron, Robert Stewart. Mobility, shock, and firepower : the emergence of the U.S. Army’s armor branch, 1917–1945 / by Robert Stewart Cameron. p. cm. — (Army historical series) Includes bibliographical references and index. 1. United States. Army. Armored Force—History. I. Title. II. Series. UA30.C36 2008 358’.18097309041—dc22 2007045505 CMH Pub no. 30–23–1 UNITED STATES ARMy HISTORICAL SERIES Richard W. Stewart, General Editor Advisory Committee (As of October 2007) Theodore A. Wilson University of Kansas William T. Allison Joyce E. Morrow Weber State University Administrative Assistant to the Secretary of the Army James J. Carafano Heritage Foundation Brig. Gen. Mark E. O’Neill U.S. Army Command and General Brig. Gen. Patrick Finnegan Staff College U.S. Military Academy Mark P. Parillo John F. Guilmartin Kansas State University Ohio State University Reina Pennington Brian M. Linn Norwich University Texas A&M University Ronald H. Spector Howard Lowell George Washington University National Archives and Records Administration Col. Thomas Torrance U.S. Army War College Lt. Gen. Thomas Metz U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Stephen F. Vogel Command Washington Post U.S. Army Center of Military History Jeffrey J. Clarke, Chief of Military History Chief Historian Richard W. Stewart Chief, Histories Division Joel D. Meyerson Chief, Publishing Division Keith R. Tidman CONTENTS Chapter Page Foreword ....................................................... xv Preface ........................................................ xvii 1. America Adopts the Tank ......................................... 1 The Tank Corps .............................................. 1 The Tank Corps’ Demise ....................................... 9 The War Department and the National Defense Act of 1920 .......... 14 Infantry Tank Development .................................... 21 Reconsidering the Tank’s Battlefield Role ........................ 28 The Experimental Mechanized Force ............................ 32 The Bureau System Versus Mechanization ........................ 34 The Mechanized Force ........................................ 40 2. Early Development of the Mechanized Cavalry ....................... 45 Demise of the Mechanized Force ................................ 45 Birth of the Mechanized Cavalry ................................ 49 The 1934 Fort Riley Maneuvers ................................ 56 Reorganization of the Mechanized Cavalry ........................ 61 The Bureau System and Mechanized Cavalry Reorganization ......... 66 Mechanization of a Second Cavalry Regiment ..................... 70 Second Army Maneuvers of 1936 ............................... 74 3. Mechanization: The Chief of Cavalry’s Runaway Horse ................ 79 American Cavalry in the 1930s ................................. 79 The Problem of the Cavalry’s Image ............................. 84 The Office of the Chief of Cavalry and the Bureau System. . . . . . . . . . . . 88 The Mechanized Cavalry Board ................................. 97 The Cavalry School and Mechanization ......................... 101 The Chief of Cavalry and Cavalry Modernization .................. 105 4. The Infantry and Mechanization .................................. 109 Army Doctrine in the 1930s ................................... 109 Infantry Motorization ........................................ 112 Division Redesign .......................................... 115 The Foundations of Infantry Tank Doctrine ...................... 119 Chapter Page 4. The Infantry and Mechanization (Continued) Tank Development and the Infantry School ...................... 123 Infantry Tank Organization ................................... 127 Infantry Tanks ............................................. 133 5. The View from Abroad ......................................... 139 The Military Intelligence Division and Its Military Attachés ......... 139 Army Intelligence Dissemination .............................. 144 The Confusion of British Mechanization ......................... 147 French Mechanized Development .............................. 156 The Military Intelligence Division and the Panzer Division .......... 167 World Mechanization ........................................ 182 6. Cavalry at the Crossroads ....................................... 189 Mechanized Cavalry Development, 1936–1939 ................... 189 Mechanized Cavalry Maneuvers, 1937–1938 ..................... 195 The Cavalry Field Manual of 1938 ............................. 200 The War Department and Mechanization ........................ 208 The Case for Horse Cavalry ................................... 210 The Future of Cavalry ....................................... 214 7. A New Beginning: The Armored Force ............................ 221 Building a Mechanized Cavalry Division ........................ 221 Stepping Back: The Mechanized Cavalry Division Rejected ......... 226 First Army Maneuvers, 1939 .................................. 229 The Mechanized Cavalry Division Revisited ..................... 232 Third Army Maneuver Preparations ............................ 237 The Crucible of Mechanization: Third Army Maneuvers, 1940 ....... 243 The Armored Force and the Centralization of Mechanized Development ............................................ 250 8. Armored Force Development, 1940–1941 .......................... 259 Building the Training Base ................................... 259 Command Climate .......................................... 265 A New Doctrinal Base ....................................... 270 Early Training Activities ..................................... 273 The Armored Force and Foreign Experiences ..................... 277 Armored Division Development ............................... 283 An Armored Corps? ......................................... 286 The War Department’s Army .................................. 290 vi Chapter Page 9. Creating an Armored Force Nemesis .............................. 293 Antitank Development in the 1930s ............................. 293 Building an Antitank Unit .................................... 297 Antitank Weapons .......................................... 301 Self-propelled Antitank Weapons .............................. 307 Foreign Antitank Developments ............................... 309 The Problem of Antitank Doctrine, 1940–1941 .................... 312 Antitank the American Way ................................... 317 10. The Art of Maneuver, 1941 .................................... 325 Louisiana Maneuvers ........................................ 325 Carolina Maneuvers ......................................... 335 Assessing Mobile Operations .................................. 343 Antitank Operations ......................................... 350 Maneuver Management ...................................... 353 Cavalry: A Maneuver Casualty ................................ 357 11. From Armored Force to Armored Center .......................... 361 Armored Force Expansion and Personnel Shortfall ................. 361 Training Challenges and Accomplishments ....................... 365 The Question of Separate Branch Status ......................... 369 Demise of the Armored Corps ................................. 371 Evolution of the Armored Division ............................. 373 Combat Operations in North Africa ............................. 377 The Armored Division’s New Look ............................ 382 Applying Lessons Learned in North Africa ....................... 385 Armored Materiel ........................................... 390 Sustaining Combat Capability ................................. 393 Air Support ................................................ 396 Branch Status Resolution ..................................... 398 Evaluating the Armored Wartime Experience ..................... 401 12. Tank Destroyer Development ................................... 405 Building a Tank Destroyer Force, 1941–1942 ..................... 405 Doctrine and Organization .................................... 408 The First Tank Destroyers .................................... 412 Combat Debut ............................................. 414 Tank Destroyer Criticism ..................................... 418 Tank Destroyer Doctrine and Training Revisited .................. 421 Organizational and Materiel Development ....................... 426 Tank Destroyers ............................................ 428 vii Chapter Page 12. Tank Destroyer Development (Continued) An Uncertain Future ......................................... 431 13. Armored Divisions in Battle, 1944–1945 .......................... 435 Armored Division Doctrine ................................... 435 The Armored Division Organization ............................ 444 Combat Operations .......................................... 451 Armored Division Air Support ................................. 457 Armored Materiel ........................................... 461 Armored Maintenance ....................................... 466 14. Armored Enablers: Mechanized Cavalry, Independent Tanks, and Tank Destroyers ...................................... 471 Mechanized Cavalry ......................................... 471 Independent Tank Battalion Readiness .......................... 481 Independent Tank Battalion Combat Operations ................... 484 Rejection of Independent Tank Battalion Doctrine ................. 491 The Armored Group ......................................... 494 From Tank Destroyer to Armored Gun .......................... 495 15. Conclusion ................................................. 509 Bibliography ................................................... 521 Acronyms ..................................................... 535 Index ......................................................... 537 Table Armored Division and Corps Activation, 1940–1943 ................... 362 Charts No. 1. War Department Bureau System, 1917 ............................. 15 2. War Department Rationalization, 1918 ............................. 18 3. Mechanized Cavalry Regiment, 1932 ............................... 56 4. Proposed Mechanized Cavalry Regiment, 1935 ....................... 64 5. Triangular Division, 1939 ....................................... 118 6. British Mobile Division, 1936 ................................... 149 7. British Armored Division, 1939 .................................. 151 8. French Light Mechanized Division, 1939 .......................... 160 9. French Armored Division, 1940 .................................. 163 10. Panzer Division, 1937 ......................................... 174 viii

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Dr. Robert Cameron’s Mobility, Shock, and Firepower: The Emergence of the U.S. Army’s Armor Branch, 1917–1945 captures the multifaceted development of the Armored Force from its inauspicious beginnings in World War I to its fully mature, operational status at the close of World War II. Through
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