Telecommunications and Electronic Reconnaissance Brigade 94

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Telecommunication and Electronic Reconnaissance
Brigade 94 - Fm / EloAufklBrig 94 -

No coats of arms.svg

( did not have an association badge )
active April 1, 1992 to December 31, 2003
Country GermanyGermany Germany
Armed forces Bundeswehr Kreuz.svg armed forces
Armed forces Bundeswehr Kreuz.svg Force Base
Type Telecommunication and Electronic Reconnaissance Brigade
Insinuation KdoStrat Aufkl.svgCommand Force Base
Staff seat Down

The telecommunications and electronic reconnaissance brigade 94 was a telecommunications and electronic reconnaissance brigade of the Bundeswehr . The headquarters were in the Heinrich Hertz barracks in Daun . The Telecommunications and Electronic Reconnaissance Brigade was most recently subordinate to the Strategic Reconnaissance Command of the Armed Forces Base. The brigade was part of the army for most of its existence .

history

prehistory

During the final phase of the East-West conflict , telecommunications staff 94 was the heart of the electronic warfare of the EloKa telecommunications force of the territorial army at the level of the army command . In the peacetime the telecommunications staff 94 was subordinate to the Army Office . In the event of a defense, it was intended to be subordinated to the Army Telecommunications Command .

Telecommunication staff 94 operated and / or provided the personnel for the reconnaissance towers of the Army and most of the reconnaissance towers of the Air Force along the zone border near Barwedel , near Thurau , on the Stöberhai , on the Hoher Meissner , in the Hoher Bogen and on the Großer Kornberg for telecommunication and Electronic Enlightenment of the Warsaw Pact . The 94 telecommunications staff was therefore of central importance for foreign espionage and the investigation of the mobilization of the Warsaw Pact troops.

Lineup

After the end of the Cold War, the telecommunications and electronic reconnaissance brigade 94 was re-established from parts of the telecommunications staff 94 in the Heinrich Hertz barracks in Daun to take over the army structure V / V (N) .

Change to the armed forces base

On June 14, 2002, the change to the newly designed armed forces base took place . There the Telecommunications and Electronic Reconnaissance Brigade 94 was subordinated to the Strategic Reconnaissance Command, which was put into service at about the same time .

resolution

Shortly after switching to the armed forces base, the brigade was decommissioned on December 31, 2003. Parts of the defense material and personnel were used to set up telecommunications area 93 . The electronic warfare evaluation center emerged from this later .

Association badge

Unlike most of the other brigades in the Army, the brigade did not have its own badge . The soldiers therefore wore the association badges of the higher-level agencies.

As a "badge", the internal association badge of the staff of the Telecommunications and Electronic Reconnaissance Brigade 94 " pars pro toto " was sometimes used imprecisely for the entire brigade. It was essentially the same as the internal association badge of its "predecessor" telecommunications staff 94 and the "successor" telecommunications area 93. Similar to the association badge of the Army Office, which had been in charge for the longest time, the internal association badge showed a sword on a red background, a globe with a double flash similar to the tactical symbol of the EloKa telecommunications company . The inclined grid on the right side of the shield is the Dauner grid of the Lords of Daun and is similar to the Daun city ​​coat of arms .

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e location database of the Bundeswehr in the Federal Republic of Germany as well as the training grounds used by the Bundeswehr abroad. In: Website of the Military History Research Office . Center for Military History and Social Sciences of the Bundeswehr; Military History Research Office, accessed on March 28, 2019 (For technical reasons, direct links to individual search queries or search results are not possible. Please use the "search form" to research information on the individual offices).
  2. a b c d e Manfred Bischoff: Forces and means of telecommunications and electronic reconnaissance of the army (FmElo Aufkl H) in the 1980s and 1990s. In: Telecommunications and Electronic Reconnaissance. Radio and radio technology reconnaissance . Manfred Bischoff, accessed December 25, 2019 .
  3. a b O.W. Dragoons: 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]).

Coordinates: 50 ° 12 ′ 43.3 "  N , 6 ° 49 ′ 4.1"  E