Zeon PDF Driver Trial

Similar documents
Organization of Russian Armored Corps, Brigades, Regiments, Break Through Regiments and independent Battalions, Summer 1944

2 nd Division: 5 th & 6 th Canadian Field Artillery Brigades. 3 rd Division: 9 th & 10 th Bde. 4 th Division: 3 rd & 4 th

Standard Internal Structure German Infantry Divisions

US I Corps Aisne-Marne Operation 18 July - 6 August 1918

The forces to deploy will include: 19 Light Brigade Headquarters and Signal Squadron (209) Elements of 845 Naval Air Squadron

Organizational Summary American Armored Division 12 February 1944 Table of Organization 17

DENMARK. I. Army. 43,000 sq. km. 1,400 sq. km. Density per sq. km. Denmark (proper) Length of railway system (III. I932)... 5,290 km.

DENMARK. I. Army. Area: Population

DENMARK. 43,000 sq. km. 1,400,,,, Denmark (proper) (xi. 1930).. 3,551,000 Population... Faroe Isles (xi. 1930).. 24,000 Greenland (ix. 92 )...

US V Corps St. Mihiel Front and Operation 29 August - 16 September 1918

American I Corps Château-Thierry 4-17 July 1918

French XVII Army Corps Verdun-sur-Meuse Front 18 September-6 November 1918

FINLAND. I. Army. ORGANS OF MILITARY COMMAND AND ADMINISTRATION. Area (including inland waters)...388,000 sq. km,

MEXICO. I. Army. Area '... 1,969,000 sq. km. Population (V. 1930) 6,404,000 Density per sq. km. 8.3 Length of railway system (XII. 1930)... 20,58I km.

No Washington September 5, glider infantry regiment Designation:...Glider Infantry. Headquarters (T/O 7-52) Headquarters company

OPERATION HERRICK 16 ROULEMENT - CORRECTION. The Secretary of State for Defence (The Rt Hon Philip Hammond MP):

NEW ZEALAND. I. Army. Area ,ooo sq. km. Population (XII. 1933)

VENEZUELA. I. Army. I,070 km.

POLAND. I. Army. Density per sq. km ORGANS OF MILITARY COMMAND AND ADMINISTRATION

3 Commando Brigade Headquarters, Royal Marines has taken over control in Afghanistan from 16 Air Assault Brigade. The command comprises:

AUSTRIA. Limitation of the Armaments of Austria in accordance with the Military, Naval and Air Clauses

Army Assault Forces - Normandy 6-7 June 1944

AUSTRIA' I. Army. 6,724 km. Note.-For the provisional national defence regulations issued on September 4th, I933, see page 50.

AND EQUIPMENT Washington 25, D.C., 26 February 1944 No infantry regiment Designation:... Infantry. Antitank. 3 battallions (each)

US 5th Army 14 August 1944

HUNGARY. Limitation of the Armaments of Hungary in accordance with the Military, Naval, and Air Clauses of the Treaty of Trianon.

Northern Command. Regular Troops in the Command. 5 th Inniskilling Dragoon Guards (1) 4 th Bn. Royal Tank Corps (2) Royal Artillery

THE ESTONIAN DEFENCE FORCES

The New Zealand Army September March 1941

AUSTRIA! Area... 84,000 sq. km. Population (III. i934)... 6,763,000 Density per sq. km.' Length of railway system (XII. I930 )... 6,724 km.

Ethnic Estonian Units in the Soviet Army during the Period

PARAGUAY. Army. GENERAL. Per sq. km... I. 9

LITHUANIA. I. Army. Area... 6,000 sq. km. Population (XII. I932).. 2,422,000 Density per sq. km Length of railway system (193)... 1,566 km.

DENMARK. Army. GENERAL. Iceland ,846..

,589 km. Length of railway system (1930)..

AND EQUIPMENT Washington 25, D.C., 29 Februayr 1944 No ranger infantry battalion Designation: Ranger Infantry Battalion. Headquarters Company

AUSTRIA1. Army. GENERAL. Density per sq. km Length of railway system (xii. i929)... 7,602 km. A. SUPREME MILITARY AUTHORITY AND ITS ORGANS

No Washington, September 15, cavalry reconnaissance squadron, mechanized

LITHUANIA. I. Army. 26I km. With Poland (provisional administrative boundary) km.

Organization German XXIV Panzer Corps (16th & 17th Panzer Divisions) 22 April 1944

FUTURE. WARRIOR Your guide to the Yorkshire Regiment soldier offer YORKSHIRE LEAD IN COMBAT LEAD IN SPORT

THE ARMS TRADE TREATY REPORTING TEMPLATE

Canadian Forces in Northwest Europe 8 May 1945

May 09, 1940 Memorandum to the Politburo of the Central Committee of the CPSU on Troop Strength Orders for the Red Army, 9 May 1940

THE ARMS TRADE TREATY REPORTING TEMPLATE

DENMARK. Army. GENERAL Area. Denmark (properly so called) 43,017 sq. km. Denmark (properly so called) 3,267,831 Faroe Isles...

MERITORIOUS UNIT COMMENDATION

(Notified in G.R.Os. dated 11th December, 1942) headquarters of an armoured brigade group. war establishment. (i) Summary of ranks.

Malta Command (1) 10 April 2018 [MALTA COMMAND (1943)] Headquarters, Malta Command. 1 st (Malta) Infantry Brigade (2)

Allied 15th Army Group Invasion of Sicily 10 July 1943

THE ARMS TRADE TREATY REPORTING TEMPLATE

CANADA. I. Army. Area.. 9,542,000 sq. km. Population (V. I933) I.,68i,000 Density per sq. km...

US 5th Army 9 April 1945

5 June 2018 DOCUMENT C-M(2018)0025 (DNK-OVERVIEW) NATO DEFENCE PLANNING CAPABILITY REVIEW 2017/2018 DENMARK OVERVIEW

THE ARMS TRADE TREATY REPORTING TEMPLATE

US Army (1942/43) Strategy. Enemies. US Army Summary. Special Rules

Morley S. Piper. Interview Transcript. Tony Kedzierski 10/29/2013

LATHE B. ROW MAJOR INFANTRY

THE ARMS TRADE TREATY PROVISIONAL TEMPLATE

Bitish Home Forces 1 July 1943

Beyond Breaking 4 th August 1982

NEWSLETTER SPRING 2016

AND EQUIPMENT Washington 25, D.C. 16 December 1944 No. 7-31T. infantry regiment, parachute Designation:... Parachute Infantry. Headquarters Company

TURKISH NATIONAL REPORT ON FEMALE SOLDIERS IN THE TURKISH ARMED FORCES BRUSSELS/BELGIUM 2006

THE ARMS TRADE TREATY REPORTING TEMPLATE

URUGUAY. 186,926 sq. km. Population (3I-XII-26). 1,720,468 Per sq. km. 9.2 Length of railway lines (1926) 3,000 km. Army.

Chapter 3 Motorized Infantry and Infantry Brigades

NORWAY. I. Army. Density per sq. km

United States of America. Patches & Tabs

TURKISH NATIONAL REPORT ON FEMALE SOLDIERS IN THE TURKISH ARMED FORCES BERLİN/GERMANY 2007

Supporting the Front The Battle of Vimy Ridge April 1917

BRITISH EMPIRE (continued) NEW ZEALAND. Army.

Minimum daily rates of pay for typical ranks or appointments of all arms. All rates in Shillings (s) and Pence (d):

US MARINE CORPS ORIENTATION

THE ARMS TRADE TREATY REPORTING TEMPLATE

UPDATE FROM COMBINED FORCE NAHR-E-SARAJ (NORTH)

CUBA. I. Army. ORGANS OF MILITARY COMMAND AND ADMINISTRATION.

THE ARMS TRADE TREATY REPORTING TEMPLATE

Command Flags and Pennants of the Bundeswehr since 1956

CANADA. I. Army. ORGANS OF MILITARY COMMAND AND ADMINISTRATION. Area.. 9,557,000 sq. km. Population (VI. 93 ).. 10,377,000 Density per sq. km...

INDIA MAIN CHARACTERISTICS OF THE ARMED FORCES.

RECRUIT SUSTAINMENT PROGRAM SOLDIER TRAINING READINESS MODULES Army Structure/Chain of Command 19 January 2012

US 5th Army 14 February 1944

IRISH FREE STATE. I. Army.

THE WAR THAT CHANGED THE WORLD

URUGUAY. I. Army. Area... I87,000 sq. km. Population (XII. I932)... 1,975,000 Density per sq. km... Io.6 Length of railway system (XI'I ).

SUBJECT: Army Directive (Expanding Positions and Changing the Army Policy for the Assignment of Female Soldiers)

ERRATA AND EXTRA RULES

Counter-Attack at Villers-Bretonneux

Table of Organization/Equipment

US Marine Corps (1944/45)

The War in Europe 5.2

Organization of Russian Independent Artillery Brigades and Regiments Summer 1944

GREECE. I. Army. Density per sq. km ORGANS OF MILITARY COMMAND AND ADMINISTRATION.

Command and staff service

French Military Weapons Manuals READ ONLINE

Afrika Corps 20 January 1942

War Department, and Equipment No *

Israeli Defence Force: The Mechanised Rifle Company

UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA

Transcription:

The Reconstruction of The Danish Army after The Second World War (Enclosure 1: Status of weapons February 1948) (Enclosure 2: Status of personnel and units in January 1948) (Enclosure 3: Forming of the Home Guard 1946) At the German assault 29 th of August 1943 (Operation Safari) the Danish Army was dissolved and its officers and personnel were interned. The Army was stripped of all material, weapons and ammunition, and the army barracks were taken over by the German occupation forces. Danish forces at the liberation When Denmark was liberated 5 th of May 1945 we had no regular armed forces. The immediate tasks then had to be taken care of by: 1) The Danish Resistance Movement App. 40.000 men, irregular armed with light weapons, dropped by allied planes or smuggled into the country via Sweden or stolen from German dumps or soldiers. Training very limited. 2) The Danish Brigade (DANFORCE) App. 5.000 soldiers, formed in battalions with modern equipment and weapons, well trained in Swedish camps from which the force was transferred to Denmark on 5 th of May 1945. 3) Officers and NCO s from the regular army A total of app. 2.500, of which some served in the resistance and in the Danish Brigade. On 1 st of June 1945 the conscripts of 1940-43 (app. 8.000 men) were called up again and equipped and armed from stocks brought back by the Danish Brigade. All units were formed as infantry regardless of previous training. On 10 th of July 1945 the Danish Brigade was demobilized. The regular officers returned to the regular army and an additional number of officers were offered voluntary service in the army. On 18 th of July 1945 app. 9.500 new recruits from the 1943-group were called up for service. They were armed partly with Swedish partly with British weapons and equipment. They had only light weapons and were all trained as infantry. During September 1945 the Resistance, which so far mainly had been used as guards in internment camps, was demobilized. The army s tasks in 1945 The assorted army had many big tasks in 1945. Among these are: Guarding 300.000 German refugees spread all over the country in camps. Guarding the German border.

Guarding abandoned German fortifications, ammunitions depots and airfields. Guard and work duties in Danish barracks. Training of new recruits. Training of officers and NCO s. Preparations for sending out an occupation force to Germany. Preparations for taking over Bornholm from the Russian forces. A Danish Division On 20 th of November 1945 app. 15.000 new recruits from the 1943- and 1945-group were called up for service. 11.000 of these soldiers were designated to form part of a Danish division that was supposed to go to Germany as occupations troops from spring 1946. These soldiers were equipped with British weapons, from the beginning only light infantry weapons. It was intended that heavier equipment (heavy weapons, artillery etc.) should arrive very quickly after the call-up, but the first deliveries was delayed until January 1946 and the rest came very slowly. The division force included: 6 infantry battalions, Armed with rifles, tommy-guns, 51 mm mortars, 81 mm mortars and 57 mm antitank guns. 1 recce regiment, Armed with rifles, tommy-guns, 81 mm mortars and 57 mm antitank guns. No real recce equipment was supplied until several months later. 6 field artillery brigades, Armed with 88 mm field guns (25 pounders) 1 anti-aircraft brigade, Armed with 40 mm AA-guns 1 heavy machinegun company, Armed with machineguns and 105 mm mortars 1 anti-tank company, Armed with 76 mm anti-tank guns The rest of the conscripts app. 4.000 men were trained and used as guards etc. and equipped with light Swedish weapons. Training of Officers and NCO s Around 1 st of November 1945 most of the training courses for officers and NCO s were established. The regiments established courses for about 1.000 corporals, and at Ellsinore and Soenderborg app. 1.000 cornets (in Danish kornetter ) were trained. All branches established courses for sergeants with a total of app. 100 students.

The Army Academy re-established the classes for officers and warrant officers that were interrupted in 1943. Beside that new classes were established. The number of students was 160 and it was planned to continue with training of 50 officers and 30 warrant officers on a yearly basis. Shortage of officers Training wasn t enough to provide for the adequate number of officers especially junior officers - needed in the army. Therefore on 1 st of December 1945 there was a call-up of app. 400 conscript second lieutenants and cornets from the 1939-group to fill the ranks. To add more officers there was established a course for app. Leaders from the resistance on 1 st of March 1946. This came about because of an act from summer 1945 that allowed these leaders to become regular army officers after proper army training of 12 months. 225 of these leaders accepted the offer, and 150 of them became officers and 75 became warrant officers. At the same time there was an offer to those who had been serving as officers in one of the allied powers to enter the Danish army with a corresponding rank, but only about 25 officers joined the Danish army this way. (Personally I would like to comment on this: I was drafted in 1972 and have seen some of these officers of which a few were good but the main part of them were lousy leaders and officers, who lived for their reputation as war heroes. I think the last of them left the army in the late 80 es, thank god! But just after WW2 this was the only way to get officers in a hurry.) 16 th of April 1946 the conscripts called up 18 th of July 1945 were demobilized. On 1 st of May 1946 the training courses of cornets and corporals ended and the army received 1.800 cornets and lance corporals. At the same time new classes with 1.700 conscripts from the 1945- group were established. On 1 st of June 1946 9.500 new conscripts were called up. 5.000 of these soldiers were designated as the German Force, mainly armed with British weapons and serving in North Germany. At the same time, on 1 st of June 1946, app. 200 officers of the reserve were appointed officers of the line after passing a special training. At the same time app. 200 conscript NCO s were appointed NCO s of the reserve without the normal extra training. To fully appreciate this, one must understand that under the laws of the military in those days only half of the officers and maybe 10 % of the NCO s were personnel of the line, the rest were of the reserve and had contracts with the army for service. Slowly the Danish Army was reorganized, in enclosure 1 and 2 you can see the status in the beginning of 1948, a year before Denmark joined NATO 4 th of April 1949.

Enclosure 1: Status of weapons end February 1948 Item Number of Swedish type Number of British type 88 mm field gun 0 65 76 mm antitank gun 0 12 57 mm antitank gun 0 50 37 mm antitank gun 62 0 40 mm antitank & antiaircraft gun 0 25 20 mm antitank & antiaircraft gun 62 0 120 mm mortar 4 0 105 mm mortar 0 4 81 mm mortar 58 40 51 mm mortar 0 174 47 mm mortar 153 0 90 mm antitank rifle 0 290 Machineguns 83 13 Light machine gun 560 1.079 Rifles 12.196 15.494 Sub machine gun 9.466 4.408 Pistol 2.273 0 Remarks: Not all weapons were in good shape and had all accessories, and especially the 4.408 British made stenguns were in a very poor shape.

Enclosure 2: Status of personnel and units in January 1948 Text Numbers Drafted 13 th of May 1947 11.100 Of these only met 9.950 Rejected for health reasons 700 Army Technical Corps 175 Army Catering Corps 175 Army Health service 100 Army Supply Corps 200 Army Air Corps (ground) 300 NCO s trainees 1.300-3.400 Soldiers at hand for infantry etc. 6.550 Border Command (HQ Åbenrå): 2 nd Pioneer Battalion (Tønder, 2 companies) 207 17 th Infantry Battalion (Tinglev, HQ and 2 companies) 270 12 th Infantry Battalion (Kruså, HQ and 2 companies) 251 4 th Infantry Battalion (Sønderborg, HQ, 1 company and 1 camp) 336 Total 1.064 Bornholm: 15 th Infantry Battalion 560 3 rd Artillery Battalion 170 Total 730 Danish Brigade in Germany: Brigade Staff 100 9 th Infantry Regiment HQ 28 6 th Infantry Battalion 619 13 th Infantry Battalion 611 7 th Infantry Battalion 586 Jutland Dragoon Regiment 126 4 th Field Artillery Regiment HQ 37 6 th Field Artillery Battalion 200 4 th Field Artillery Battalion 168 Elements of 12 th Field Artillery battalion 141

14 th Field Artillery Battalion 148 2 nd Pioneer battalion 134 The Signal battalion 176 Military Police 126 Repair and Depot facilities, medical Corps personnel 250 Officers and NCO s 500 Observers and liaison 250 Total 4.200 Guard duties etc. in Denmark (typical elements of units mentioned above): ZEALAND 1 st Battalion / The Royal Life Guard (Copenhagen) 331 2 nd Field Artillery Battalion (Copenhagen) 76 10 th Field Artillery Battalion (Copenhagen) 83 2 nd Pioneer Battalion (Copenhagen) 130 12 th Field Artillery Battalion (Copenhagen) 140 1 st Field Artillery Battalion (Avedøre) 7 21 st Infantry Battalion (Høvelte) 19 2 nd Battalion / The Royal Life Guard (Sandholm) 37 The Signal Battalion (Værløse) 63 17 th Infantry Battalion (Roskilde) 78 5 th Field Artillery battalion (Holbæk) 20 The Guard Hussar Regiment (Næstved) 215 19 th Infantry Battalion (Vordingborg) 38 FUENEN 4 th Infantry Battalion (Odense) 51 JUTLAND 3 rd Infantry Battalion (Haderslev) 24 20 th Infantry Battalion (Viborg) 33 Jutland Dragoon Regiment (Ålborg) 10 Jutland Dragoon Regiment (Hjørring) 29 Jutland Dragoon Regiment (Skrydstrup) 36 12 th Infantry Battalion (Fredericia) 30 1 st Pioneer Battalion (Tønder) 40 Jutland Dragoon Regiment (Randers) 51 Total 1.541 Army Air Corps: One Battalion in Jutland and one in Zealand for training purpose.

Sergeant and Corporal trainees Infantry Cornet and Lieutenants School (Helsingør) 260 Engineer NCO School (Copenhagen) 110 Artillery NCO School (Holbæk) 280 Cavalry NCO School (Næstved) 170 Zealand Division Corporal School (Slagelse) 200 Jutland Division Corporal School (Nymindegab) 235 Infantry Sergeant and Staff Sergeant School (Sønderborg) 230 Total 1.485 The Army personnel situation at the end of February 1948: Skilled personnel 8.044 Unskilled personnel, basically conscripts from 12 th of November 1947 8.730

Enclosure 3: Forming of the Home Guard In July 1945 Lieutenant Colonel Svend Wagner put forward a proposal for at Temporary Home Guard based on the members of the resistance and other volunteers. The proposal was premature, so in stead local Home Guard Associations was founded. This allowed the former resistance members to continue training for the purpose of a later entrance in a real Home Guard and at the same time gave the government opportunity to control resistance weapons. The resistance troops were sent home in August 1945, and at that time the Army Command the Home Guard Associations, that allowed each former resistance member to have one rifle, carbine or pistol at home. All other weapons, including explosives and heavy weapons such as machineguns, were to be turned over to the Army Technical Corps. In Easter 1946 the Danish Home Guard Association was founded at a meeting in Odense on the island of Fuenen. 31 st of May 1946, after extended negotiations, an agreement was signed between the Ministry of War and the Danish Home Guard Associations, based on the above mentioned conditions. Orders were issued to collect the Home Guard weapons. In fall 1946 the issue of uniforms to the Home Guard came up, and in spring 1947 Denmark bought 7.000 used battledress uniforms from UK for the Home Guard (in Denmark known as model 1944). The Home Guard was divided into Regions, and in every region there was an officer of the line or the reserve in charge of training, storing weapons and maintaining other equipment. 1 st of March 1947 the Army Command ordered Lieutenant Colonel Skjoldager to be responsible for Home Guard weapons and training. In the summer 1947 the Home Guard numbered 40.000 with app. 300 army instructors and 25 naval instructors. The budget was app. 200.000 Danish Kroner. The Home Guard had no wartime tasks and was from the government point of view a private association. This was the Home Guard status in the beginning of 1948.