Light Divisions just have infantry, mainly using small arms, with air support overhead. They can respond rapidly to situations and they are very flexible, with a smaller logistics tail.
The Army has 4 of these divisions. There's the 82nd Airborne. Everyone in that division can parachute from a plane and deploy that way. If there is a breaking crisis in the world, the 82nd is the division always kept ready to deploy within just a few days (However, their deployment to Iraq and Afghanistan has disrupted that). There's the 101st Air Assault, armed through the teeth with hundreds of Blackhawk, Chinook, and Apache helicopters, for an assault using helicopters. Up in New York there's the 10th Mountain, and they are just regular infantry. (They also only have 2 Brigades, not 3 like most Divisions). And in Hawaii and Washington State is the 25th ID, again, regular infantry.
Those are the Light Divisions. The other generic type of Division is the Heavy Division. Heavy Divisions have over 500 armored vehicles. They have to be crewed by soldiers, so the deployable infantry strength in a Heavy Division is less than in a Light Division. And their vehicles result in a larger logistics tail because they require fuel, spare parts, maintenance, recovery etc, and slower deployment time (weeks to deploy).
Within the generic Heavy Division label, there are two types: Armored and Mechanized. Armored Heavy Divisions have the most armored capability, great for conventional battlefield combat, while the Mechanized Division has less armored vehicles but more deployable infantry. The Mechanized Division is more balanced and between Mech and Armored, Mech is better suited for peacekeeping and low-intensity situations.
The Army has 6 Heavy Divisions. 2 are Armored. They are the 1st Armored based in Germany and the 1st Cav based in the U.S.
There are 3 pure Mech Divisions. The 3rd ID and 4th ID based in the US. The 1st ID based in Germany.
There's also the 2nd ID, based in the US and South Korea. The 2nd ID is a mixed division. It has 1 Armored Brigade, 1 Mech Brigade, and 1 Light Infantry Brigade. Since it has 2 heavy brigades, it is counted as a Heavy Division.
If you're wondering how things are organized here it is:
III Counterattack Corps (Based: US)
1st Cavalry Division
4th Infantry Division
3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment
XVIII Airborne Corps (US)
3rd Infantry Division
10th Mountain Division
82nd Airborne Division
101st Air Assault Division
2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment
7th Army - Europe
V Corps (Germany)
*1st Armored Division
*1st Infantry Division
173rd Airborne Brigade (Italy)
8th Army - South Korea
*2nd Infantry Division (2 Brigades)
Pacific Command
25th Infantry Division (2 Brigades in Hawaii, one in US)
I Corps
*3rd Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division (Light)
*1st Brigade, 25th Infantry Division (US-based Brigade)
**
As you can see there are some other combat units besides the Divisions. There's the 173rd Airborne Brigade, seperate from any division. It is in Italy, part of Europe's 7th Army. There's also the 3rd Armored Cav Regiment, for armored scouting and armored combat power. There's the 2nd Armored Cav Regiment (Light), which scouts using HMMV's or perhaps the new Stryker one day. And up in Alaska is the 172nd Infanty Brigade, part of Pacific Command.
Basically, III Corps is the US-based unit with the combat power in terms of tanks.
XVIII Corps is the US-based unit with the two Airborne Light Divisions, one Light Infantry Division, and one Mechanized Division. With all that Light Infantry, it is designed to quickly respond to global events. It can deploy within days, and it does have some armor thanks to the 3td ID.
7th Army and V Corps is in Europe, with one Mech Heavy Division and one Armored Heavy Division, plus one Airborne Brigade.
Pacific Command has the 25th ID (Light Infantry Division) and 172nd Infantry Brigade (Light), plus the one US-based Light Infantry Brigade of the 2nd ID.
And the other two brigades of the 2nd, the ones with armor, are in the 8th Army over in Korea.
Edited by - ViperTTB on Sep 21 2003 7:43 PM
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