Post by Phil McGregorPost by a***@hotmail.comPost by Phil McGregorPost by a***@hotmail.comPost by Phil McGregorGuards TANK Corps were *breakthrough* units.
ANY tank corps was a breakthrough unit.
Theory vs. practise.
Definition.
Theory vs. Practise.
See. I can repeat things, too.
But your repetition is pointless. If we are talking about the Soviet
military, we have to use their terminology and not one invented by
you.
Post by Phil McGregorPost by a***@hotmail.comPost by Phil McGregorGuards Tank Corps were used as the spearheads for almost all late war
operations.
Tank Corps supported them, but they were not the spearheads for the
most part, unless they were spearheading breakthroughs in secondary
areas made possible by the disruption of the German army by the major
breakthroughs caused by the aforementioned Guard Tank Corps.
What you are saying is totally irrelevant to the subject.
No. It may be relevant to what *you* are rabbiting on about, but *I*
have not been so rabbiting.
Unlike you, I'm not 'rabbiting' about anything. If you want to
continue conversatrion, do it in a polite way.
Post by Phil McGregorErgo, it is irrelevant to the issue *I* raised.
Ergo, it is irrelevant.
If you want to come with your own terminology, it is up to you.
However, this terminology is of no interest to me as long as it
differs from the official.
This lives you with 2 options: (a) operate within the official
terminology or (b) keep talking to yourself.
Post by Phil McGregorPost by a***@hotmail.comPost by Phil McGregorAccording to ...
http://www.dupuyinstitute.org/ubb/Forum4/HTML/000040.html
The USSR had, *in May 1945* ...
9 Guards Mechanized Corps
Correct
Detailed list of the mechanized units is easily available on the web
with the eliminated units being clearly marked. Result is more than
4-6.
The detailed list on the dupuy institute website cited above shows *IN
MAY 1945* that the Red Army had ...
9 GMC
4-6 MC
Precise link, please. Not to dupuy website in general but to the place
from which you are quoting. Actually, this is not really important
because number of the GMC's kills your pet theory.
Post by Phil McGregor... which is what *I* said.
It also notes that more were raised over the course of the war, but
that reclassification, losses, nominal units that never existed in
practical terms and etc. meant that *BY MAY 1945* there were ...
9 GMC
4-6 MC
If you want to argue about peanuts while I am referring to oranges,
fine. Just argue with yourself, as it seems obvious that it has
nothing to do with anything *I* have said.
Note: I have provided an actual citation to support my statement,
*you* have provided the vague "easily available on the web" comment
Fine:
"1st Tank Corps
2nd Tank Corps
3rd Tank Corps - see 9th Guards Tank Corps
4th Tank Corps - March 42-Feb 43 - converted to 5th Guards Tank Corps
5th Tank Corps - formed April 1942. Equipped largely with British-
built Valentine tanks, 5 TC was badly handly in the early stages of
the 1943 Smolensk operation, being mauled both from the air and from
the ground. However the deflection of German units necessitated by the
sacrifice of 5 TC meant that Spas Demensk fell on 13 August 1943.[1]
6th Tank Corps - see 11th Guards Tank Corps
7th Tank Corps
8th Tank Corps
9th Tank Corps - the 9th Tank Division can trace its history back to
12 May 1942 when the 9th Tank Corps was formed in the Moscow Military
District.[2] It took part in the Battle of Kursk, then across Ukraine
with the Central, Belorussian, and 1st Belorussian Fronts. It ended
the war in Berlin. As part of the occupation forces, it was assigned
to the 1st Guards Tank Army (also 1st Guards Mechanized Army). In
1957, it was reorganized into a Heavy Tank Division and re-designated
the 13th Heavy Tank Division. This lasted until 1965, when it was
returned back to its original 9th Tank Division designation. This it
retained until its withdrawal from the GDR in 1991 when it was
disbanded. Its divisional headquarters was at Riesa.
10th - 12th Tank Corps
13th Tank Corps - "The 13th Mechanized Corps is an oddball in the
Soviet Army. 13th Tank Corps had been so shot up that most of its tank
brigades were removed in September-October 1942, and when Mechanized
Brigades were substituted at the beginning of November, it should have
been redesignated as a Mechanized Corps with a new number, as had
happened to other tank corps in similar situations. Instead, the corps
retained the number '13' and even the Soviet sources get confused on
what to call it: a tank corps or a mechanized corps. It had the
subordinate units of a mechanized corps when it went into battle in
late November and December 1942. It fought as a mechanized corps with
57th, 51st and 2nd Guards Armies during December in the mobile battles
against German panzers south of Stalingrad, and in recognition of its
actions there on 9 January 1943 the 13th Mechanized Corps was
redesignated as the 4th Guards Mechanized Corps."[3]
14th Tank Corps
15th Tank Corps
16th Tank Corps - was part of 2nd Tank Army on formation. Became 12th
Guards Tank Corps
17th Tank Corps - became 4th Guards Tank Corps after Operation Little
Saturn.
18th Tank Corps
19th Tank Corps
20th Tank Corps - The 20th Tank Division can trace its history back to
12 December 1942 when the 20th Tank Corps was formed in the Moscow
Defense Zone. It took part in the counter-offensives in the winter of
1942/43 and the summer 1943 offensives in the southern Ukraine. After
taking part in the offensives in 1944 and early 1945, is was in Stavke
Reserves when the war ended. It was allocated to the Northern Group of
Forces by Directive No. 11096, where it remained through the Cold War.
In later 1945, it was reorganized into the 20th Tank Division. Between
1949 and 1955, it was known as the 7th Tank Division, although as a
cadre unit. IN 1955, it was restored to full strength and renamed the
20th Tank Division. It would remain in southern Poland until 1991 when
it was disbanded.
21st - 24th Tank Corps (see also http://stalingrad.ic.ru/s22tcorp.html
for 22nd Tank Corps)
25th Tank Corps - formed June 1942 in the Moscow Defence Zone
26th Tank Corps
27th Tank Corps - formed in the Moscow Defense Zone. The 27th was
never committed to combat, but instead on 8 September 1942 it was
reorganized into the 1st Mechanized Corps.
28th Tank Corps
29th - 31st Tank Corps[4]
1st Guards Tank Corps
2nd Guards Tank Corps
3rd Guards Tank Corps
4th Guards Tank Corps - now 4th Guards Kantemirovskaya Tank Division
5th - 8th Guards Tank Corps
9th Guards Tank Corps - 3rd Tank Corps was formed at Tula in the
Moscow Military District. It took part in the winter counter-
offensives in 1942/1943, the Battle of Kursk, then across Ukraine and
then the summer offensive in 1944, Operation Bagration, with the
Central, Belorussian, and 1st Belorussian Fronts. On 20 November 1944
it was awarded 'Guards' status ad re-designated the 9th Guards Tank
Corps.
10th Guards Tank Corps: ex 30th Tank Corps. Now 10th Guards Uralsko-
Lvovskaya Tank Division.
11th Guards Tank Corps - The 11th Guards Tank Division can trace its
history back to 10 April 1942 when the 6th Tank Corps was formed in
the Moscow Defense Zone.[5] It took part in the Battle of Kursk, then
across Ukraine with the Central, Belorussian, and 1st Belorussian
Fronts. On 23 October 1943, it was awarded 'Guards' status and
redesignated the 11th Guards Tank Corps. It ended the war in the
Berlin area. As part of the occupation forces, it was assigned to the
1st Guards Tank Army (also 1st Guards Mechanized Army). For the
occupation period and post-war era, it was mainly uneventful until
1968 when it took part in the invasion of Czechoslovakia. In 1992 it
was withdrawn from Germany and landed in Slonim the newly independent
Belarus. It would eventually be reorganized into the 11th Guards
Mechanized Brigade. Division Headquarters was at Dresden in the 1980s.
12th Guards Tank Corps - former 16th Tank Corps. 16 TC was formed on 1
June 1942 in the Moscow Defense Zone. It took part in the counter-
attacks against the Germans advancing on Stalingrad in the later
summer of 1942, the winter counter-offensives of 1942/43, the Battle
of Kursk in July (as part of the Central Front), then across Ukraine
with the Central, Belorussian, and 1st Belorussian Fronts. In the
summer of 1944, it was with the 2nd Tank Army, and took part in the
offensives, reaching the outskirts of Warsaw. On 20 November 1944, it
was awarded 'Guards' status and re-designated the 12th Guards Tank
Corps. The Corps took part in the Vistula-Oder and Berlin Operations,
ending the war in the Berlin area. As part of the occupation forces,
it was assigned to the 2nd Guards Tank Army (also 2nd Guards
Mechanized Army). In later 1945, it was reorganized into the 12th
Guards Tank Division. During the occupation period and post-war era,
its assignments remain unclear. Initially it was assigned to the 2nd
Guards Mechanized Army, but then transferred to the 4th Guards
Mechanized Army, which became the 20th Guards Combined-Arms Army in
1957. It eventually became part of the 3rd Shock Army - actually 3rd
Red Banner Army - and still with 3rd Red Banner Army, disbanded circa
1990."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tank_corps_(Soviet_Union)
Post by Phil McGregorhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M3_Half-track
No mention of "Halifax" Half Tracks.
Well, aren't we being a little bit dishonest?
Uncut post:
"
Post by Phil McGregorThe best data I can find online
Link, please.
Post by Phil McGregorindicates that the total M3/M5
Infantry Halftracks allocated to a GMC's three Mechanised Battalions
was on the order of 96, presumably 32 per Company.
"
Now, please show me where exactly in the site you are referencing to,
is there anything about distribution of the halftracks by the Soviet
mechanized batalions?
Not to mention that any site with a minimal credibility would show
that there were not 3 but 9 mechanized batallions (plus mechanized
machine-gun batalion) per Soviet mechanized corps.
Post by Phil McGregorNone.
Clear mention of M3E2/M5 as Lend Lease provision.
Did I say at any point that there was no import of the halftracks? On
a contrary, I brought some numbers related to this import. Judging by
the fact that you conveniently dropped my references to the numbers of
halftracks supplied by Lend Lease and their deployment and, even more
important, my comments on your bogus 'computations' (I wonder if you
intentionally lowered number of the mechanized batalions per corps
from 9 to 3 or was it an honest misreading), you have no factual
support for your claim about the GMC's equipment. Yes, the halftracks
had been imported *just as trucks, tanks, airplanes, etc.) but I did
not see any indication that they were sent exclusively to the GMC's
and that infantry of all (or any number) GMC's had been operating from
these halftracks.
I'll make it easy for you. Structure of the Soviet MC is well-
documented and easily available on the web (for example,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mechanized_corps_(Soviet_Union):
"Total[3]:
246 Armored Fighting Vehicles (183 T-34, 21 SU-76, 21 ISU-122, 21
ISU-152)
16,438 personnel
3 Tank Regiments and 3 Tank Battalions
9 Motorized Rifle Battalions and 1 Motorized Submachine Gun Battalion
3 Motorized Artillery Battalions
"
Find similar _regulation_ data on the GMC totals (with a precise
reference).