Artillery Command 3
Artillery |
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Internal association badge |
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active | July 1, 1972 to 1994 |
Country | Germany |
Armed forces | armed forces |
Armed forces | army |
Type | Artillery Command |
Insinuation | III. corps |
Location |
Koblenz , Boelcke barracks |
The Artillery Command 3 ( ArtKdo 3 ) was one of the artillery commands of the Army of the Bundeswehr . The artillery command 3 was part of the corps troops of III. Corps and like this stationed in the Boelcke barracks in Koblenz .
assignments
The artillery command bundled the most extensive artillery systems of the artillery troops at the level of the corps . Depending on the situation , the corps artillery increased the firepower of the divisional artillery . In the final phase of the Cold War , the rocket artillery of the artillery command was able to use tactical nuclear weapons with their Lance systems within the framework of nuclear participation . To own fire too far-reaching plan , the artillery commander with the rank possessed brigadier general or colonel last alongside troops of the topography troops also drones whose reconnaissance results and the commanding general of the corps and the commanders of subordinate divisions could be made available. Overall, the size of the artillery command corresponded roughly to one of the brigades of the field army.
structure
Around 1989 the artillery command was roughly divided into:
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Staff / Staff Battery Artillery Command 3, Koblenz
- Drone training battery 300, Idar-Oberstein (in peace to artillery school )
- Rocket Artillery Battalion 350 , Montabaur
- Resupply Battalion Sonderwaffen 320, Herborn
- Security Battalion 300, Giessen
history
The artillery command was set up in 1972 to capture Army Structure III . The staff of Corps Artillery Commander 3, who had been at the side of the commanding general since 1959, was used for the setup . This position arose in turn from the corps artillery commander 403, which was already planned in Munster in 1957 , but was transferred to Koblenz in 1957.
In 1976 the conversion from Sergeant to Lance took place .
After the end of the Cold War, the declared nuclear planning group of NATO in 1991 the abandonment of nuclear artillery systems in Germany. Most of the American special ammunition was withdrawn from Germany. The artillery command was therefore in 1994 about the same time as the dissolution of III. Corps decommissioned.
Association badge
The artillery command did not have its own association badge due to its planning as part of the dependent corps troops . The soldiers therefore wore the association badge of the higher corps .
As a "badge", the internal association badge of the staff and the staff battery " pars pro toto " was sometimes used imprecisely for the entire artillery command. Similar to the beret badge of the artillery troops, it showed a cannon barrel and a rocket on the crimson weapon color of the artillery and a Roman three for belonging to III. Corps.
Individual evidence
- ^ OW Dragoon: The Bundeswehr 1989 . Army Office. I. Corps. II Corps. III. Corps. 4th edition. 2.1 - Army, February 2012 ( religte.com [PDF; accessed July 3, 2018]).
Web links
- Peter Hall: Locations of the rocket artillery battalions "Lance" (1985). In: Surface-to-Surface Missiles - Military, Historical and Technical Aspects . Retrieved January 13, 2019 .
Coordinates: 50 ° 21 '27.9 " N , 7 ° 34' 53.7" E