1st Armoured Regiment

Similar documents
British Motor Company

Part C: World War I Trench Warfare

Vehicle Organizations British Battalions & Regiments

IV IL-2

Churchills in the Italian Campaign

KAMPFGRUPPE KERSCHER

World War I Joseph Jackson Downs Douglas, Wesley Wright, and Samantha

THE PUSAN PERIMETER. ~_-,dj.~~~!~; Reworked M4A3 of A Company, 89th Tank Battalion, with units of the 29th Infantry Regiment, August, 1950.

Internal Organization of American Armored Formations

Organization of British Armored Divisions Structure and Divisional Elemental Assignments By Division

US BG-01->BG-03. Command X1 M4 75mm Sherman Tank US-02. MANEUVER ELEMENTS ME-01 X1 Light Tank Company

More than 7,600 Canadian troops died fighting in the Netherlands. The last months of the Second World War, The Canadian military was given the

This We'll Defend. Russell Phillips. Shilka Publishing U. S. A R M Y

AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND FORCES IN VIETNAM

D-DAY THE CANADIAN PUSH ON CARPIQUET AIRFIELD

UNITED STATES ARMY LATE WAR BATTLE GROUP

British equipment losses at Dunkirk and the post Dunkirk situation

COMPANY COMMANDER SUPPORT WEAPONS TACTICAL BRIEFING ON SUPPORT WEAPONS

BATTLE OF THE CARATARRA FRANZIA FROM COLDWARS 2010

(3rd Special Base Force) 1943 FORTIFIED COMPANY (TARAWA)

6th Airborne Armoured Recce Regiment

OPERATION HANNIBAL THE SEIZURE OF CORINTH CANAL BRIDGE 27 TH APRIL 1941 (GREECE)

A SUPPLEMENT FOR BOLT ACTION CANADIANS. Second World War

VILLERS BOCAGE CAMPAIGN

KEY WEAPONS OF WWI. Gas Tanks Machine Guns Rifles and bayonets Grenades Artillery Submarines Flame Throwers Airplanes and zeppelins

The Daimler Fighting Vehicles Project Part D1b Cavalry Of The Line, The Household Cavalry Regiment Germany 1950s

The Daimler Fighting Vehicles Project Part Bm On Active Service 1947 to 1957 Suez and Egypt

MARAUDER LAND SYSTEMS ELECTRONIC SYSTEMS AEROSPACE LEADERS IN DEFENCE AND SECURITY INNOVATION

RUles summary. The TURN TURN SEQUENCE ORDERS MOVEMENT FUBAR CHART. Appendix II TROOP QUALITY AND MORALE OFFICER MORALE MODIFERS

BUSHMASTER FAMILY OF VEHICLES.

THE BATTLE OF CELLENO By JC von Winterbach

The Irish Army

British Army El Maghar & Occupation of Junction Station November 1917

British Commando (1934/45)

DEFEAT IN THE CORNFIELDS

Organization of British Tank Brigades Structure and Brigade Elemental Assignments by Regiment

The Cauldron / Gazala, 1942 A Flames of War Mega-Game Scenario

Tankette Waltz. Movement:

The Capture of Hubert-Folie

The Battle for Ypres

Intelligence Handbook for the Mid-War French Army (July-December 1943)

THE PIMPLE YOUR ORDERS PREPARING FOR BATTLE

Organization of the Units of the Austro-Hungarian Army 1918 Infantry

WITH REVA, NOBODY GETS LEFT BEHIND!

US 2nd MARINE DIVISION

The Matilda II Infantry Tank (A.12)

TRIER, GERMANY. The Capture of Trier (March 1, 1945) Trier, the oldest

On Active Service- WW2 Home and BEF The Daimler Fighting Vehicles Project Part Ba

U.S. Army Flamethrower Vehicles

ATGM5. land combat weapon. ATGM5: Indigenously Designed, Developed and Manufactured (IDDM)

To hit Range Hit # Pen. Unit. Armor HE SA Speed Morale PV

UT30MK2 & MT30 Unmanned and Manned Turrets

IMPERIAL JAPAN. Armies of. Frontispiece artwork: Peter Dennis. Artwork courtesy of Osprey Publishing. Production and Photography: Mark Owen

Ticket to Don Gamemaster s notes

WARGAME RULES 20mm Scale Russo-German War c. 1943

Bell 206B OH-58A Kiowa & JetRanger

FBG News Forts & Bunkers Group Edition 3 of 2017 Composed by Frank PHILIPPART

Zeppelin The German Airship For use in Axis & Allies 1914 Board Game Historical Board Gaming v1.0

The Diary of 9 Platoon of 3 Company, 27 (Machine Gun) Battalion at Sidi Rezegh

RO BG-01->BG-03. Battle Group-03 Motorized Infantry Regiment. HEADQUARTERS ELEMENT Command. Transport x1 Light Truck GE-35 BATTLE GROUPS

British Army 2nd Battle of Gaza April 1917

Landships of Mogdonazia by John Bell

Unit Iconography & Rating Notes Unit iconography generally follows the Panzerblitz pattern, with the following adjustments:

ARRAS May 21, The History

The Guys : Same place in 2004:

TANK BATTLE AT JUVELIZE 22 nd September 1944 (Lorraine, France) A Rapid Fire scenario V 1.3 By Brad Smith and Mark Piper

Battle of Villers Bocage - by Mark Piper 13th June, 1944 (Normandy)

The Lexington Minute Men, Inc.

A BAD DAY AT DIEN BAN BY FRED DUPONT JULY 2011

Battle of Heartbreak Ridge Korea 18 AUG to 5 SEP 1951

Grenade Launchers in China

US Weapons of the. Persian Gulf War

Operation Barbarossa: the Complete Organisational and Statistical Analysis, and Military Simulation

Greek TO&Es v1.2

What you will find inside Nachtjäger

Equipment, Weapons, and Organization SS Leibstandarte Adolph Hitler 22 June 1941

NATO COMMUNICATION Urgent Transmission

CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY

The Sherman Medium Tank

VIETNAM ARMY LISTS Available Attachments LRRP Company MP Company Engineer Company Recon Troop Radar Detachment Armored Cavalry Troop AA Company

The Central Pacific: Tarawa (Gilbert Isles) and Kwajalein (Marshall Islands)

Airborne Armoured Recce Squadron

THE FALL GELB CAMPAIGN

234 Brigade Nov LBBG-01 Infantry Brigade (Experienced) HEADQUARTERS ELEMENT. LBBG-02 Infantry Battalion BATTLE GROUPS

THE FIRE SUPPORT DILEMMA

The Toron Dominion. The troopers in the foreground are members of the 82nd Nordonian Strikers, equipped with full armor and medium automatic rifles.

Imperial Guard Recon Forces

Pagoda Hill Mandalay March 10, 1945

In Their Words. Historical Traces of Operation Husky. the greatest driving skill to negotiate them in darkness.

Intelligence Briefing for the Mid-War Free French (January June 1943)

Marines On Peleliu 1

DESERT RATS. Command & Control. Sand & Steel in the Western Desert 1941/42

Image 1. Wirbelwind based on Pz IV chassis.

Introductory Scenario: Pushing in a German Outpost

D757.5 U5. U.S. War Dept. General Staff, G-2. German armored assault artillery December ARMY WAR COLLEGE CARLISLE BARRACKS,

BEST IN CLASS: 440HP SECOND-GENERATION 6.7L POWER STROKE

Septembre Presentation of the "VAB" Armoured Vehicle

The HIPPO All Terrain Support Vehicle (ATSV)

LAND 400 Phase 2. Defending Australia and its National Interests

Service Battery: 1 medium ammo truck with AAMG and trailer

Transcription:

1st Armoured Regiment The 1st Armoured Regiment was raised on 7 July 1949, as part of the new Australian Regular Army. The regiment s nucleus consisted of personnel from the 1st Australian Armoured Car Squadron, which had returned from Japan several months earlier as part of the occupation force. 1st Armoured Regiment was based at Puckapunyal, Victoria, where it was initially equipped with the British-built Churchill tanks. This was only a temporary measure and in 1952 the Churchills were replaced with another British tank, the Centurion. Australian armoured personnel carrier (APC) units served in Vietnam from 1965. As Australia s contribution to the war increased, so too did the deployment of Australian armour. In October 1967 the government announced it would increase the size of the 1st Australian Task Force (1ATF) at Nui Dat in Phuoc Tuy province, from two to three infantry battalions and with the addition of a tank squadron. The first tanks from the regiment s C Squadron arrived in Vietnam in February 1968. The squadron initially comprised two troops, each of four tanks, and two tanks of the squadron headquarters, as well as two dozer tanks and two bridgelayer tanks. A third troop was created by placing the two headquarters tanks together with the two dozer tanks. This number constituted only half of the squadron and it was not until August the rest of the squadron arrived from Australia. This brought the squadron up to its full strength of 20 tanks (another six tanks were held by the Detachment 1 Forward Delivery Troops). Before their dispatch to Vietnam the Centurions received a number of modifications: a large external fuel tank was fitted on the back of each vehicle to increase its range; the main gun system was upgraded; a ranging machine-gun was fitted; and an infra-red illumination system was also installed for improved night vision. However, once operations began the external fuel tank was found to be potentially hazardous as they could catch fire if hit by a shell or bullet. The modifications continued in country once the squadron began operating in Vietnam: The tank s side skirts were removed, as they caused mud and debris to build around the tracks behind them, the track guards were replaced with heavy gauge steel plate; and storage racks were welded to the back of the turret so ammunition and other equipment could be carried, such as an additional radio to allow communication between tank and infantry soldiers. The squadron s first major operation was Operation Pinnaroo (27 February to 15 April 1968), also involving an APC troop from 3rd Cavalry Regiment, and artillery, as well as engineers who supported the 2nd Battalion/NZ (ANZAC) and the 3rd Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment [2RAR/NZ (ANZAC) and 3RAR] for a reconnaissance-in-force mission to destroy the Viet Cong (VC) base installations in the Long Hai mountains. The area had long been a centre of Vietnamese resistance and was riddled with mines. C Squadron s tank dozers were used to help clear some of the mines and from 18 March the squadron s Centurions worked closely with the infantry and they cleared the low ground east of the mountains. For the next three years, until 1971, the 1st Armoured Regiment s tanks worked closely with the Australian infantry and the APCs of 3rd Cavalry Regiment, on operations throughout Phuoc Tuy

and neighbouring provinces. The Centurions provided fire support for infantry operations, were used to directly attack enemy positions, and helped defend the Fire Support Bases. The tanks played a significant role during the battles of Coral Balmoral in May 1968. North Vietnamese Army (NVA) regimental-sized forces made determined attacks against two Australian fire support bases and the firepower support of the Centurions proved crucial at Fire Support Base Balmoral. On 30 May two infantry platoons patrolling from Fire Support Base Coral became pinned down very close to enemy bunkers. APCs were able to extract some of the troops but were unable to reach one platoon. Two Centurions were sent forward through heavy jungle, reaching the Australians and the VC bunkers. The Centurion crews fired everything they had: canister, solid shot and high explosive shells, and machine-guns. Each shell cleared more jungle and opened up further targets. The platoon was able to be withdrawn, and with APCs providing machine-gun support, the tanks destroyed a series of bunkers. C Squadron s performance in the battles of Coral Balmoral demonstrated the advantage of using armour in Vietnam. Offensively, the tanks were able to destroy enemy bunkers without air support and reduced infantry casualties. Defensively, the tanks fire was able to break up an enemy attack. The Centurions were able to move through the countryside more easily than expected. Although they were vulnerable to enemy anti-tank weapons and mines, their firepower and shock action had a decisive effect on the battlefield. Before Coral Balmoral, some infantry had doubted the usefulness or necessity of the Centurion tanks; after the battle, the infantry did not like working without them. Indeed, the tanks were considered to be worth their weight in gold. In February 1969 C Squadron was relieved by B Squadron, the latter remaining in Vietnam for the rest of the year. On 6 and 7 June B Squadron was involved in the fierce action fought at Binh Ba, a village five kilometres north of 1ATF base. The attack began on the morning of 6 June when tanks and APCs advanced with D Company, 5th Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment (5RAR) towards the village which was occupied by Viet Cong and North Vietnamese troops. As the fight continued, 5RAR s B Company took up a blocking position around some of the village to prevent the enemy escaping. The fighting was hard and savage. The infantry had to clear each house of enemy, who shot at them before retreating into tunnels as the Australians passed. Each time the Australians were fired on, the tanks would blast a hole in the wall of the building, through which small teams could enter to silence any opposition. This work continued through the afternoon and resumed the next day. In December 1969 B Squadron was redesignated A Squadron. A year later in December 1970 A Squadron was in turn redesignated C Squadron. By late 1970 Australia was beginning to reduce its commitment to the war and the size of 1ATF was reduced from three infantry battalions to two. The tanks, however, continued to be engaged in operations in 1971, providing decisive armoured firepower in many actions, notably during Operations Overlord (5-14 June), Hermit Park (14 June-27 July), and Iron Fox (28 July-5 August). In these and many other engagements the Centurions were credited with preserving the lives of Australian infantry soldiers.

During 1971 troops were progressively withdrawn from Vietnam, as the government reduced Australia s commitment to the war. In June and July the tanks of C Squadron were progressively phased out of operations and the squadron returned home in September. Glossary Puckapunyal Equipment N113 Armoured Personnel Carrier Centurion Tanks Battle Honours Vietnam (1968-72) Hat Dich Bien Ba Commanding Officers Badman, Peter Richard Bourke. Peter William Chipman. John Alfred Smith, Alexander Henry Vickers. Alan Lindsay