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Wikipedia

III Armored Corps

III Corps[4] is a corps of the United States Army headquartered at Fort Cavazos, Texas. It is a major formation of the United States Army Forces Command.

III Corps
Active
  • 1918–1919
  • 1927–1946
  • 1951–1959
  • 1961–present
Country United States
Branch United States Army
RoleHeadquarters
SizeCorps
Garrison/HQFort Cavazos, Texas
Nickname(s)"Phantom Corps"[1] or "America's Hammer"[2]
Colors   Blue and White
EngagementsWorld War I
World War II
Iraq Campaign
Operation Inherent Resolve
Commanders
Commanding GeneralLTG Sean C. Bernabe
Command Sergeant MajorCSM Arthur "Cliff" Burgoyne Jr.
Deputy Commanding General, ManeuverBG Thomas M. Feltey[3]
Deputy Commanding General, SupportMaj Gen Benjamin J. Cattermole, British Army
Insignia
Shoulder Sleeve Insignia

Distinctive unit insignia
Combat service identification badge

Activated in World War I in France, III Corps oversaw US Army divisions as they repelled several major German offensives and led them into Germany. The corps was deactivated following the end of the war.

Reactivated in the interwar years, III Corps trained US Army formations for combat before and during World War II, before itself being deployed to the European Theater where it participated in several key engagements, including the Battle of the Bulge where it relieved the surrounded 101st Airborne Division.

For the next 50 years, the corps was a key training element for the US Army as it sent troops overseas in support of the Cold War, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War. The corps saw no combat deployments, however, until Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2003. As of April 2019, III Corps includes some of the oldest formations of their type in the US Army: 1st Infantry Division, 1st Cavalry Division, 1st Armored Division and 1st Medical Brigade.

History

World War I

III Corps was first organized on 16 May 1917 in France.[5] It was designed as three of the four newly activated corps of the American Expeditionary Force, which at that time numbered over one million men in 23 divisions. The corps took command of US forces training with the French Seventh Army at the same time that IV Corps took command of US forces training with the French Eighth Army.[6]

Aisne-Marne campaign

In July, the corps was rushed to the Villers-Cotterêts area in preparation for the Third Battle of the Aisne, the first major Allied counteroffensive of the year. There, it was put under the French Tenth Army and given administrative command of the 1st Division and the 2nd Division which were previously under command of the French XX Corps.[7] However, the command group arrived in the area too late to exercise tactical command, and it was instead attached to the French XX Corps. On 18 July, the attack was launched, with the force spearheading the French Tenth Army's assault on the high ground south of Soissons. During this attack, the Corps also cut rail lines supplying the German Army.

The first day of the attack was a success, but on the second day, the Germans were reinforced with heavier weapons and were able to blunt the attack, inflicting high casualties. The force was successful despite heavy casualties, and German forces were forced to retreat.[8] On 1 August, the corps arrived in the Vesle area near the Marne River, where it assumed command of the 3rd Division, 28th Division, and 32nd Division from the French XXXVIII Corps, placing side by side with the U.S. I Corps for a few days.[9] Troops continued to advance until September when they withdrew to form the new First United States Army.[10]

Meuse-Argonne campaign

 
Map of the area during the Meuse-Argonne campaign

First Army formed up in preparation to advance in the Meuse-Argonne campaign. It consisted of over 600,000 men in I Corps, III Corps, and V Corps. III Corps took the Army's east flank, protecting it as the Army advanced to Montfaucon, then Cunel and Romagne-sous-Montfaucon.[11] The offensive was slow and hampered by inexperience of many of the divisions under the Army's command, though III Corps was effective in protecting its sector.[12] They advanced through September and October, taking a few weeks for rest after the formation of Second United States Army.[13] On 1 November, the First Army went on a general offensive, pushing north to the Meuse River and the Barricourt Ridge. It was successful, pushing German forces back and advancing to the river until the end of the war.[14] Around that time, III Corps received its shoulder sleeve insignia, approved it by telegram, though the insignia would not be officially authorized until 1922.[15]

The corps was demobilized in Neuwied, Germany at the close of hostilities.[16] Following the end of World War I, III Corps remained in Europe for several months before it returned to the United States. It was demobilized at Camp Sherman, Ohio.[5]

Interwar period

On 15 August 1927 the XXII Corps was activated in the United States. On 13 October of that year XXII Corps was redesignated as III Corps. It was formally activated on 18 December 1927.[5] Throughout much of the next decade, the corps was directed primarily with training and equipping smaller units, as the US military began slowly building in strength in response to international conflicts.[17] In 1940, III Corps was tasked specifically with training newly formed US Army combat divisions in preparation for deployment.[1] It was moved to Camp Hood, Texas for this mission.[18]

World War II

Following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor bringing America into World War II, III Corps remained in the United States, where it was assigned to organize defenses of the West Coast, specifically California, against the threat of attack from Japan. During this time III Corps operated at Monterey, California.[16][19]

The corps was moved to Fort McPherson, Georgia in early 1942 for training. After a short period, the corps returned to Monterey and on 19 August 1942, it was designated a separate corps, capable of deployment. During the next two years, III Corps would train thousands of troops for combat, including 33 division-sized units, and participate in four corps-level maneuvers, including the Louisiana Maneuvers.[16]

Europe

On 23 August 1944, the corps headquarters departed California for Camp Myles Standish in Massachusetts. It deployed for the European Theater of Operations (ETO) on 5 September 1944. Upon arrival at Cherbourg, France, III Corps, under the command of Major General John Millikin, was assigned to the Ninth Army, part of Lieutenant General Omar Bradley's U.S. 12th Army Group, and given the code name "CENTURY" which it retained throughout the war.[16] The corps headquarters was established at Carteret, in Normandy, and for six weeks, the corps received and processed all the troops of the 12th Army Group arriving over the Normandy beaches during that period. The corps also participated in the "Red Ball Express" by organizing 45 provisional truck companies to carry fuel and ammunition for the units on the front lines.[16]

 
The "Red Ball Express" which III Corps helped organize.

The corps was assigned to Lieutenant General George S. Patton's Third Army on 10 October 1944, and moved to Etain, near Verdun, and into combat. The corps' first fighting was for the Metz region, as it was moved to attack Fort Jeanne d'Arc, one of the last forts holding out in the region. That fort fell on 13 December 1944.[16]

Later that month on 16 December came the last German counteroffensive in the Battle of the Bulge, as over 250,000 German troops, supported by over 1,000 tanks and assault guns assaulted the lines of VIII Corps, some 40 miles to the north of III Corps.[20] The next day Patton, the Third Army commander, warned III Corps that it would likely be ordered to assist.[21] At that time the corps consisted of the 26th and 80th Infantry Divisions and the 4th Armored Division.[22] III Corps was moved north to assist in the relief of Bastogne, Belgium, with the attack commencing at 04:00 on 22 December 1944.[23] The corps advanced north, catching the German forces by surprise on their south flank, cutting them off.[24] The 4th Armored Division was eventually able to reach Bastogne, where the 101st Airborne Division had been surrounded by German forces, and relieve it.[25] During the first 10 days of this action, III Corps liberated more than 100 towns, including Bastogne. This operation was key in halting the German offensive and the eventual drive to the Rhine River.[16]

During the first four months of 1945, III Corps moved quickly to the offensive. On 25 February, the corps, now as part of the First Army, established a bridgehead over the Roer River, which, in turn, led to the capture of the Ludendorff Bridge at Remagen, on the Rhine River, on 7 March.[1] On 30 March, the Edersee Dam was captured intact by Task Force Wolfe of the 7th Armored Division, and the corps, now commanded by Major General James Van Fleet after Millikin's relief, continued the attack to seize the Ruhr Pocket on 5 April 1945. In late April, III Corps reformed and launched a drive through Bavaria towards Austria. On 2 May 1945, III Corps was ordered to halt at the Inn River on the Austrian border, just days before V-E Day, when the German forces surrendered, bringing an end of World War II in Europe.[16]

Post-war

At the end of the war, III Corps had added campaign streamers for Northern France, Rhineland, Ardennes-Alsace, and Central Europe, had taken more than 226,102 prisoners and had seized more than 4,500 square miles (12,000 km2) of German territory. The corps had also participated in most of the critical actions from Normandy to the German-Austrian border. Its wartime commanders included Major General John Millikin and Major General James A. Van Fleet.[16] After 13 months of occupation duty in Germany, the corps returned to Camp Polk, Louisiana, where it was inactivated on 10 October 1946.[5]

Cold War era

On 15 March 1951, during the height of the Korean War, III Corps was again called to active duty at Camp Roberts, California.[5] In April 1954, III Corps moved to Fort Hood, Texas, where it participated in a number of important exercises, either as director headquarters or as a player unit. It took command of the 1st Armored Division and the 4th Armored Division.[26] The main purpose of these operations was the testing of new doctrines, organizations, and equipment. On 5 May 1959, the corps was again inactivated.[5]

The Berlin crisis brought III Corps back to active duty for the fourth time on 1 September 1961.[5] Units participated in an intensive training program and were operationally ready by December 1961. In February 1962, the Department of the Army designated III Corps as a unit of the U.S. Strategic Army Corps and in September 1965, assigned III Corps to the U.S. Strategic Army Forces.[18] Throughout much of the 1960s, III Corps and its subordinate units trained for rapid deployment to Europe in the event of an outbreak of war there.[27]

During the Vietnam War era, the corps supervised the training and deployment of more than 137 units and detachments to Southeast Asia, including the I and II Field Force staffs. The corps also trained more than 40,000 individual replacements for units in Vietnam, for a total of over 100,000 soldiers trained.[18] As the war in Southeast Asia ended, the corps received many units and individual soldiers for reassignment or inactivation. It was also during this period that III Corps units participated in a number of key tests and evaluations that would help determine Army organization and equipment for the next 30 years.[16] During this era, the corps also received its distinctive unit insignia.[15]

 
Exercise REFORGER which III Corps units participated in

In July 1973, III Corps became part of the newly established Forces Command and its training, testing, and evaluation mission began to grow. For the remainder of the decade, III Corps would take part in a number of Training and Doctrine Command tests of organizations and tactical concepts, and play a key role in the fielding of new equipment. III Corps units would also participate in major exercises such as Exercise REFORGER (Return of Forces to Germany) and disaster relief operations in the United States and Central America.[16]

In the summer of 1974, the Army decided to implement one of the recommendations of the Howze Board and created an air cavalry combat brigade. The assets of the 2d Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division were used to create the 6th Cavalry Brigade (Air Combat). The new brigade was assigned to the III Corps as a corps asset. 1st Squadron, 6th Cavalry Regiment, was transferred to the new brigade on 21 February 1975. The brigade served as a test bed for new concepts involving the employment of attack helicopters on the modern battlefield. In 1985–85, the brigade consisted of 1st Squadron, 6th Cavalry; 4th Squadron, 9th Cavalry Regiment (4-9 CAV); and 5th and 7th Squadrons, 17th Cavalry Regiment (5-17 CAV and 7-17 CAV), all flying attack helicopters.[28]

As part of the Army's modernization effort in the 1980s corps units introduced new organizations and equipment including the M1 Abrams tank, M2 Bradley Fighting Vehicle, AH-64 Apache helicopter, Multiple Launch Rocket System, and Mobile Subscriber Equipment. In 1987, III Corps also conducted the largest deployment of forces to Germany since the Second World War, Exercise Reforger '87. During this time, the corps began assisting in the training and support of active and reserve component units. This support involves training guidance, resources, and the maintenance of relationships that extend to wartime affiliations.[16]

Organization 1972

During the Cold War in 1972 III Corps consisted of the following formations and units:

1990s

Following the end of the Cold War, III Corps headquarters itself saw no major contingencies, however it saw numerous units under its command deploy to contingencies around the world. III Corps units were sent to Grenada, Panama, Honduras, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Iraq. In the fall of 1990, two 6th Cavalry Brigade (Air Combat) units deployed to Iraq during Operation Desert Shield. One of those units was 2nd Battalion, 158th Aviation Regiment, a Chinook battalion from Fort Hood. Other corps units also provided humanitarian support for Operation Restore Hope in Somalia. III Corps elements supported Operation Joint Endeavor in Bosnia and Herzegovina as well.[18]

It was after the Cold War that III Corps was acclimated to the role of primary counteroffensive force for the US Army. With the downsizing of other major Army formations, III Corps gained command of heavier units, including the 1st Cavalry Division while the XVIII Airborne Corps took charge of rapid-deployment for emergency contingencies, including the 101st Airborne Division and 82nd Airborne Division. III Corps took charge of the heavy units designed for large, conventional offensive actions.[2]

21st century

In 2001, the corps was composed of the 1st Cavalry Division and the 4th Infantry Division as well as the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment and the 13th Corps Support Command.[1] However, with realignment of the US Army and the return of several formations from Europe, the corps took command of the 1st Infantry Division and the 1st Armored Division as well, both of these units having been transferred from V Corps in Germany.

The corps headquarters saw its first combat deployment since the Second World War in 2004, when it deployed to Iraq for Operation Iraqi Freedom. There, III Corps headquarters assumed duties as Headquarters Multi-National Corps – Iraq, relieving V Corps. III Corps served as the administrative command for 2,500 soldiers of the Multi-National Force – Iraq command element, providing operational direction into 2005, when it was returned to Fort Hood, relieved by XVIII Airborne Corps.[30] III Corps has for many years participated in an exchange program which sees a Canadian Army officer appointed as a deputy commanding general. Notably, Peter Devlin deployed with the corps to Iraq in 2005.

III Corps Artillery was inactivated on 8 September 2006. Henceforth the field artillery brigades, soon to become Fires Brigades, would be assigned to the corps and division headquarters directly.

 
President Barack Obama speaks outside of III Corps headquarters, Fort Cavazos, Texas

In December 2006, the corps returned to Iraq for a second time to serve as commanding headquarters for Multi-National Corps Iraq. During this 15-month deployment, the corps took command of the force at its largest with Iraq War troop surge. The corps conducted a similar mission to its first deployment, focusing on providing personnel management, training, communications, convoy escort, and other duties to support the commanding elements of Multi-National Force Iraq. III Corps fulfilled this mission until February 2008, when it returned home, again relieved by XVIII Airborne Corps.[31]

In 2009, the corps began a number of training initiatives with the Republic of Korea Army. These included Operation Key Resolve, a command post exercise simulating major, high intensity combat operations. The exercises were held in Yongin, South Korea. These operations were designed to keep the corps familiar with commanding during large-scale conventional warfare, as opposed to counter-insurgency tactics it employed during its two tours in Iraq.[32] Upon return to the United States, the corps conducted similar exercises at Fort Cavazos.[33]

On 5 November 2009, a gunman opened fire in the Soldier Readiness Center of Fort Hood, killing 13 people and wounding 30 others. Nidal Hasan, a Muslim U.S. Army major and psychiatrist, was alleged to be the gunman. He was felled and then arrested by civilian police officers Sergeant Mark Todd and Sergeant Kimberly Munley. Much of the subsequent investigation was handled by III Corps, as the soldiers killed were under the corps' chain of command.[34][35][36]

III Corps, commanded by LTG Robert W. Cone, assumed its final Iraq mission from I Corps from Joint Base Lewis–McChord, Washington in February 2010. As the core element of United States Forces – Iraq headquarters, III Corps oversaw a theater-wide transition from full-spectrum operations to stability operations. The corps changed the counterinsurgency (COIN) fight dynamic from partnered combat operations, led by brigade combat teams, to training, advising, and assisting operations, led by brigades organized as advise and assist brigades. The corps also completed the transition to complete Iraqi lead for security operations. During the deployment, III Corps reduced the amount of aviation assets in Iraq, resulting in one enhanced combat aviation brigade with six maneuver battalions having responsibility for the entire joint operations area. III Corps also oversaw the reduction of the force in Iraq from 110,000 to 50,000 U.S. personnel by 1 Sept. 2010, which established the conditions for the end of Operation Iraqi Freedom and the transition to Operation New Dawn. XVIII Airborne Corps from Fort Liberty, North Carolina, assumed the Iraq follow-on mission from III Corps in February 2011.

The corps saw its first action in Afghanistan when it deployed to Kabul in early April 2013. The corps, under the command of LTG Mark A. Milley, replaced the U.S. V Corps from Stuttgart, Germany, in May 2013 and assumed the mission of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) Joint Command, or IJC, which was responsible for day-to-day operations throughout Afghanistan. During the corps' deployment, IJC oversaw Milestone 13/Tranche 5 ceremony on 18 June 2013, which marked the official transition of full responsibility for nationwide security operations from ISAF to the Government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan. After the Milestone 13 ceremony, IJC transitioned from Coalition-led combat operations to Afghan-led combat operations and Coalition forces providing training, advice, and assistance. The ANSF, officially less than three years old, reached its peak of more than 350,000 members and conducted more than 70 major operations in more than 22 provinces. In November 2013, IJC forces provided technical support to the ANSF as it secured the Loya Jirga, a country-wide gathering of Afghan local leaders and officials, in Kabul. The Loya Jirga successfully laid the groundwork for a U.S.-Afghanistan Bilateral Security Agreement. During the deployment, III Corps also oversaw the drawdown of U.S. forces from more than 80,000 to 34,000 by 1 Feb. 2014. XVIII Airborne Corps from Fort Liberty, North Carolina, assumed the ISAF Joint Command mission from III Corps in March 2014.

On 22 September 2015, III Corps assumed command of CJTF-OIR from United States Army Central.

On 13 October 2020, the III Corps commander launched Operation People First at Fort Cavazos, Fort Bliss, Fort Carson, Fort Riley, and other III Corps units.[37]

Organization

 
III Corps organization 2021 (click to enlarge)

  III Corps, Fort Cavazos, Texas

List of Commanding Generals

Honors

The corps received five campaign streamers in World War I and four campaign streamers in World War II.[19] It also received two campaign streamers and two unit awards during the War on Terrorism.[41]

Unit decorations

Ribbon Award Year Notes
  Meritorious Unit Commendation (Army) 2004–2005 for service in Central Asia
  Meritorious Unit Commendation (Army) 2007–2008 for service in Central Asia
  Meritorious Unit Commendation (Army) 2010–2011 for service in Central Asia
  Meritorious Unit Commendation (Army) 2012–2013 for service in Central Asia
  Joint Meritorious Unit Award 2019-2020 for service in Iraq / Syria

Campaign streamers

References

  1. ^ a b c d (PDF). Fort Cavazos Public Affairs Office. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 September 2018. Retrieved 25 November 2009.
  2. ^ a b "III Corps". GlobalSecurity.org. Retrieved 25 November 2009.
  3. ^ "III Armored Corps welcomes incoming deputy commanding general". DVIDS. 9 June 2023.
  4. ^ "III Armored Corps History". Army.mil. Retrieved 14 August 2022.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Wilson, p. 53.
  6. ^ Stewart, p. 35.
  7. ^ Stewart, p. 37.
  8. ^ Stewart, p. 38.
  9. ^ Stewart, p. 39.
  10. ^ Stewart, p. 40.
  11. ^ Stewart, p. 44.
  12. ^ Stewart, p. 45
  13. ^ Stewart, p. 48.
  14. ^ Stewart, p. 49.
  15. ^ a b . The Institute of Heraldry. Archived from the original on 13 November 2009. Retrieved 18 November 2009.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "GlobalSecurity.org: III Corps History". GlobalSecurity. Retrieved 25 November 2009.
  17. ^ Stewart, p. 67.
  18. ^ a b c d "History of Fort Hood". Fort Hood Public Affairs Office. Retrieved 25 November 2009.
  19. ^ a b Wilson, p. 54.
  20. ^ Axelrod, p. 145.
  21. ^ Axelrod, p. 147.
  22. ^ Axelrod, p. 148.
  23. ^ Axelrod, p. 149.
  24. ^ Stewart, p. 156.
  25. ^ Axelrod, p. 150.
  26. ^ "III Corps Opened at Fort Hood". Fort Hood Sentinel. Retrieved 25 November 2009.
  27. ^ "Fort Hood gets heavy". Fort Hood Sentinel. Retrieved 25 November 2009.
  28. ^ Isby, David C. and Charles Kamps Jr., Armies of NATO's Central Front, JAne's Publishing Company, 1985, 377.
  29. ^ Army - The Magazine of Landpower - October 1989 (1972). "Command and Staff". Association of the US Army. Retrieved 26 June 2020.
  30. ^ "9 Jan. 2004 Speech by Gov. Rick Perry". Office of Rick Perry. Retrieved 25 November 2009.
  31. ^ "Transfer of Authority: XVIII Airborne Corps Special Troops Battalion takes the lead from III Corps' Task Force Phantom". United States Army. Retrieved 25 November 2009.
  32. ^ "Phantom Warriors transition from Key Resolve to Unified Endeavor". United States Army. Retrieved 26 November 2009.
  33. ^ "Full-spectrum capability key for III Corps". United States Army. Retrieved 26 November 2009.
  34. ^ "Fort Hood Gunman Who Killed 12, Wounded 30 Survived Gun Battle". ABC News. Retrieved 3 May 2020.
  35. ^ "Deadly shootings at US army base". BBC News. 6 November 2009. Retrieved 5 May 2010.
  36. ^ Root, Jay (Associated Press), "Officer Gives Account of the Firefight at Fort Hood", Arizona Republic, 8 November 2009.
  37. ^ Brandy Cruz, Fort Hood Public Affairs (10 December 2020) Operation People First: Fort Hood, III Corps command team remains focused on future CG Pat White meets with 1800 junior Soldiers at Fort Hood Stadium. A Fort Hood Independent Review Committee (FHIRC) released a 136 page report on the command climate at Fort Hood, which Secretary of the Army McCarthy released 8 December 2020. His commanders have 36 hours to release the FHIRC report to the Soldiers in their chains of command. Gen. White asks that the Soldiers ask questions and demand answers on Operation People First.
  38. ^ Geiger, Capt. Grace (5 April 2017). "3rd Cav Regt transitions to III Corps". Killeen, TX: 3d Cavalry Regiment Public Affairs Office. DVIDS. Retrieved 8 April 2017.
  39. ^ Fifty Years of Excellence: Fort Hood 50th Anniversary, 1942–1992. Fort Hood Public Affairs, U.S. Army. 1992. Retrieved 17 November 2022.
  40. ^ The Phanton Warrior Standard for Every Service Member: Past III Corps Commanders. Fort Hood Public Affairs, U.S. Army. 6 October 2011. p. 167. Retrieved 17 November 2022.
  41. ^ . United States Army Center of Military History. Archived from the original on 5 December 2009. Retrieved 26 November 2009.

Sources

  • Axelrod, Alan (2006). Patton: A Biography. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-4039-7139-5.
  • Stewart, Richard W. (2005). American military history ([Textbook version] ed.). Washington, D.C.: Center of Military History, U.S. Army. ISBN 0-16-072362-0. OCLC 60767166.
  • Wilson, John B. (1987). Armies, corps, divisions, and separate brigades. Center of Military History, U.S. Army. OCLC 15018137.

External links

  • III Armored Corps Home Page 1 April 2019 at the Wayback Machine – official site
  • United States Army Center of Military History
  • GlobalSecurity.org page on III Corps
  • Gen. Saint Chosen to Command Army in Europe[1]

armored, corps, third, army, corps, union, army, during, american, civil, corps, union, army, corps, corps, united, states, army, headquartered, fort, cavazos, texas, major, formation, united, states, army, forces, command, corpsactive1918, 19191927, 19461951,. For the Third Army Corps of the Union Army during the American Civil War see III Corps Union Army III Corps 4 is a corps of the United States Army headquartered at Fort Cavazos Texas It is a major formation of the United States Army Forces Command III CorpsActive1918 19191927 19461951 19591961 presentCountry United StatesBranch United States ArmyRoleHeadquartersSizeCorpsGarrison HQFort Cavazos TexasNickname s Phantom Corps 1 or America s Hammer 2 Colors Blue and WhiteEngagementsWorld War IWorld War IIIraq CampaignOperation Inherent ResolveCommandersCommanding GeneralLTG Sean C BernabeCommand Sergeant MajorCSM Arthur Cliff Burgoyne Jr Deputy Commanding General ManeuverBG Thomas M Feltey 3 Deputy Commanding General SupportMaj Gen Benjamin J Cattermole British ArmyInsigniaShoulder Sleeve InsigniaDistinctive unit insigniaCombat service identification badge Activated in World War I in France III Corps oversaw US Army divisions as they repelled several major German offensives and led them into Germany The corps was deactivated following the end of the war Reactivated in the interwar years III Corps trained US Army formations for combat before and during World War II before itself being deployed to the European Theater where it participated in several key engagements including the Battle of the Bulge where it relieved the surrounded 101st Airborne Division For the next 50 years the corps was a key training element for the US Army as it sent troops overseas in support of the Cold War the Korean War and the Vietnam War The corps saw no combat deployments however until Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2003 As of April 2019 update III Corps includes some of the oldest formations of their type in the US Army 1st Infantry Division 1st Cavalry Division 1st Armored Division and 1st Medical Brigade Contents 1 History 1 1 World War I 1 1 1 Aisne Marne campaign 1 1 2 Meuse Argonne campaign 1 1 3 Interwar period 1 2 World War II 1 2 1 Europe 1 2 2 Post war 1 3 Cold War era 1 3 1 Organization 1972 1 4 1990s 1 5 21st century 2 Organization 3 List of Commanding Generals 4 Honors 4 1 Unit decorations 4 2 Campaign streamers 5 References 6 Sources 7 External linksHistory EditWorld War I Edit III Corps was first organized on 16 May 1917 in France 5 It was designed as three of the four newly activated corps of the American Expeditionary Force which at that time numbered over one million men in 23 divisions The corps took command of US forces training with the French Seventh Army at the same time that IV Corps took command of US forces training with the French Eighth Army 6 Aisne Marne campaign Edit In July the corps was rushed to the Villers Cotterets area in preparation for the Third Battle of the Aisne the first major Allied counteroffensive of the year There it was put under the French Tenth Army and given administrative command of the 1st Division and the 2nd Division which were previously under command of the French XX Corps 7 However the command group arrived in the area too late to exercise tactical command and it was instead attached to the French XX Corps On 18 July the attack was launched with the force spearheading the French Tenth Army s assault on the high ground south of Soissons During this attack the Corps also cut rail lines supplying the German Army The first day of the attack was a success but on the second day the Germans were reinforced with heavier weapons and were able to blunt the attack inflicting high casualties The force was successful despite heavy casualties and German forces were forced to retreat 8 On 1 August the corps arrived in the Vesle area near the Marne River where it assumed command of the 3rd Division 28th Division and 32nd Division from the French XXXVIII Corps placing side by side with the U S I Corps for a few days 9 Troops continued to advance until September when they withdrew to form the new First United States Army 10 Meuse Argonne campaign Edit Map of the area during the Meuse Argonne campaignFirst Army formed up in preparation to advance in the Meuse Argonne campaign It consisted of over 600 000 men in I Corps III Corps and V Corps III Corps took the Army s east flank protecting it as the Army advanced to Montfaucon then Cunel and Romagne sous Montfaucon 11 The offensive was slow and hampered by inexperience of many of the divisions under the Army s command though III Corps was effective in protecting its sector 12 They advanced through September and October taking a few weeks for rest after the formation of Second United States Army 13 On 1 November the First Army went on a general offensive pushing north to the Meuse River and the Barricourt Ridge It was successful pushing German forces back and advancing to the river until the end of the war 14 Around that time III Corps received its shoulder sleeve insignia approved it by telegram though the insignia would not be officially authorized until 1922 15 The corps was demobilized in Neuwied Germany at the close of hostilities 16 Following the end of World War I III Corps remained in Europe for several months before it returned to the United States It was demobilized at Camp Sherman Ohio 5 Interwar period Edit On 15 August 1927 the XXII Corps was activated in the United States On 13 October of that year XXII Corps was redesignated as III Corps It was formally activated on 18 December 1927 5 Throughout much of the next decade the corps was directed primarily with training and equipping smaller units as the US military began slowly building in strength in response to international conflicts 17 In 1940 III Corps was tasked specifically with training newly formed US Army combat divisions in preparation for deployment 1 It was moved to Camp Hood Texas for this mission 18 World War II Edit Following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor bringing America into World War II III Corps remained in the United States where it was assigned to organize defenses of the West Coast specifically California against the threat of attack from Japan During this time III Corps operated at Monterey California 16 19 The corps was moved to Fort McPherson Georgia in early 1942 for training After a short period the corps returned to Monterey and on 19 August 1942 it was designated a separate corps capable of deployment During the next two years III Corps would train thousands of troops for combat including 33 division sized units and participate in four corps level maneuvers including the Louisiana Maneuvers 16 Europe Edit On 23 August 1944 the corps headquarters departed California for Camp Myles Standish in Massachusetts It deployed for the European Theater of Operations ETO on 5 September 1944 Upon arrival at Cherbourg France III Corps under the command of Major General John Millikin was assigned to the Ninth Army part of Lieutenant General Omar Bradley s U S 12th Army Group and given the code name CENTURY which it retained throughout the war 16 The corps headquarters was established at Carteret in Normandy and for six weeks the corps received and processed all the troops of the 12th Army Group arriving over the Normandy beaches during that period The corps also participated in the Red Ball Express by organizing 45 provisional truck companies to carry fuel and ammunition for the units on the front lines 16 The Red Ball Express which III Corps helped organize The corps was assigned to Lieutenant General George S Patton s Third Army on 10 October 1944 and moved to Etain near Verdun and into combat The corps first fighting was for the Metz region as it was moved to attack Fort Jeanne d Arc one of the last forts holding out in the region That fort fell on 13 December 1944 16 Later that month on 16 December came the last German counteroffensive in the Battle of the Bulge as over 250 000 German troops supported by over 1 000 tanks and assault guns assaulted the lines of VIII Corps some 40 miles to the north of III Corps 20 The next day Patton the Third Army commander warned III Corps that it would likely be ordered to assist 21 At that time the corps consisted of the 26th and 80th Infantry Divisions and the 4th Armored Division 22 III Corps was moved north to assist in the relief of Bastogne Belgium with the attack commencing at 04 00 on 22 December 1944 23 The corps advanced north catching the German forces by surprise on their south flank cutting them off 24 The 4th Armored Division was eventually able to reach Bastogne where the 101st Airborne Division had been surrounded by German forces and relieve it 25 During the first 10 days of this action III Corps liberated more than 100 towns including Bastogne This operation was key in halting the German offensive and the eventual drive to the Rhine River 16 During the first four months of 1945 III Corps moved quickly to the offensive On 25 February the corps now as part of the First Army established a bridgehead over the Roer River which in turn led to the capture of the Ludendorff Bridge at Remagen on the Rhine River on 7 March 1 On 30 March the Edersee Dam was captured intact by Task Force Wolfe of the 7th Armored Division and the corps now commanded by Major General James Van Fleet after Millikin s relief continued the attack to seize the Ruhr Pocket on 5 April 1945 In late April III Corps reformed and launched a drive through Bavaria towards Austria On 2 May 1945 III Corps was ordered to halt at the Inn River on the Austrian border just days before V E Day when the German forces surrendered bringing an end of World War II in Europe 16 Post war Edit At the end of the war III Corps had added campaign streamers for Northern France Rhineland Ardennes Alsace and Central Europe had taken more than 226 102 prisoners and had seized more than 4 500 square miles 12 000 km2 of German territory The corps had also participated in most of the critical actions from Normandy to the German Austrian border Its wartime commanders included Major General John Millikin and Major General James A Van Fleet 16 After 13 months of occupation duty in Germany the corps returned to Camp Polk Louisiana where it was inactivated on 10 October 1946 5 Cold War era Edit On 15 March 1951 during the height of the Korean War III Corps was again called to active duty at Camp Roberts California 5 In April 1954 III Corps moved to Fort Hood Texas where it participated in a number of important exercises either as director headquarters or as a player unit It took command of the 1st Armored Division and the 4th Armored Division 26 The main purpose of these operations was the testing of new doctrines organizations and equipment On 5 May 1959 the corps was again inactivated 5 The Berlin crisis brought III Corps back to active duty for the fourth time on 1 September 1961 5 Units participated in an intensive training program and were operationally ready by December 1961 In February 1962 the Department of the Army designated III Corps as a unit of the U S Strategic Army Corps and in September 1965 assigned III Corps to the U S Strategic Army Forces 18 Throughout much of the 1960s III Corps and its subordinate units trained for rapid deployment to Europe in the event of an outbreak of war there 27 During the Vietnam War era the corps supervised the training and deployment of more than 137 units and detachments to Southeast Asia including the I and II Field Force staffs The corps also trained more than 40 000 individual replacements for units in Vietnam for a total of over 100 000 soldiers trained 18 As the war in Southeast Asia ended the corps received many units and individual soldiers for reassignment or inactivation It was also during this period that III Corps units participated in a number of key tests and evaluations that would help determine Army organization and equipment for the next 30 years 16 During this era the corps also received its distinctive unit insignia 15 Exercise REFORGER which III Corps units participated inIn July 1973 III Corps became part of the newly established Forces Command and its training testing and evaluation mission began to grow For the remainder of the decade III Corps would take part in a number of Training and Doctrine Command tests of organizations and tactical concepts and play a key role in the fielding of new equipment III Corps units would also participate in major exercises such as Exercise REFORGER Return of Forces to Germany and disaster relief operations in the United States and Central America 16 In the summer of 1974 the Army decided to implement one of the recommendations of the Howze Board and created an air cavalry combat brigade The assets of the 2d Brigade 1st Cavalry Division were used to create the 6th Cavalry Brigade Air Combat The new brigade was assigned to the III Corps as a corps asset 1st Squadron 6th Cavalry Regiment was transferred to the new brigade on 21 February 1975 The brigade served as a test bed for new concepts involving the employment of attack helicopters on the modern battlefield In 1985 85 the brigade consisted of 1st Squadron 6th Cavalry 4th Squadron 9th Cavalry Regiment 4 9 CAV and 5th and 7th Squadrons 17th Cavalry Regiment 5 17 CAV and 7 17 CAV all flying attack helicopters 28 As part of the Army s modernization effort in the 1980s corps units introduced new organizations and equipment including the M1 Abrams tank M2 Bradley Fighting Vehicle AH 64 Apache helicopter Multiple Launch Rocket System and Mobile Subscriber Equipment In 1987 III Corps also conducted the largest deployment of forces to Germany since the Second World War Exercise Reforger 87 During this time the corps began assisting in the training and support of active and reserve component units This support involves training guidance resources and the maintenance of relationships that extend to wartime affiliations 16 Organization 1972 Edit During the Cold War in 1972 III Corps consisted of the following formations and units III Corps Fort Cavazos Texas 29 1st Cavalry Division Fort Cavazos Texas Operation Reforger Formation 2nd Armored Division Fort Cavazos Texas Operation Reforger Formation 2nd Armored Division Forward Garlstedt West Germany as of 1978 5th Infantry Division Mechanized Fort Polk Louisiana Operation Reforger Formation 101st Airborne Division Fort Campbell III Corps Artillery Fort Sill Oklahoma 75th Field Artillery Brigade Fort Sill Oklahoma 212th Field Artillery Brigade Fort Sill Oklahoma Operation Reforger Unit 214th Field Artillery Brigade Fort Sill Oklahoma 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment Fort Bliss Texas Operation Reforger Unit 6th Cavalry Brigade Air Combat Fort Cavazos Texas 31st Air Defense Artillery Brigade Fort Cavazos Texas 89th Military Police Brigade Fort Cavazos Texas 3rd Signal Brigade Corps Fort Cavazos Texas 504th Military Intelligence Brigade Fort Cavazos Texas 13th Corps Support Command Fort Cavazos Texas1990s Edit Following the end of the Cold War III Corps headquarters itself saw no major contingencies however it saw numerous units under its command deploy to contingencies around the world III Corps units were sent to Grenada Panama Honduras Saudi Arabia Kuwait and Iraq In the fall of 1990 two 6th Cavalry Brigade Air Combat units deployed to Iraq during Operation Desert Shield One of those units was 2nd Battalion 158th Aviation Regiment a Chinook battalion from Fort Hood Other corps units also provided humanitarian support for Operation Restore Hope in Somalia III Corps elements supported Operation Joint Endeavor in Bosnia and Herzegovina as well 18 It was after the Cold War that III Corps was acclimated to the role of primary counteroffensive force for the US Army With the downsizing of other major Army formations III Corps gained command of heavier units including the 1st Cavalry Division while the XVIII Airborne Corps took charge of rapid deployment for emergency contingencies including the 101st Airborne Division and 82nd Airborne Division III Corps took charge of the heavy units designed for large conventional offensive actions 2 21st century Edit In 2001 the corps was composed of the 1st Cavalry Division and the 4th Infantry Division as well as the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment and the 13th Corps Support Command 1 However with realignment of the US Army and the return of several formations from Europe the corps took command of the 1st Infantry Division and the 1st Armored Division as well both of these units having been transferred from V Corps in Germany The corps headquarters saw its first combat deployment since the Second World War in 2004 when it deployed to Iraq for Operation Iraqi Freedom There III Corps headquarters assumed duties as Headquarters Multi National Corps Iraq relieving V Corps III Corps served as the administrative command for 2 500 soldiers of the Multi National Force Iraq command element providing operational direction into 2005 when it was returned to Fort Hood relieved by XVIII Airborne Corps 30 III Corps has for many years participated in an exchange program which sees a Canadian Army officer appointed as a deputy commanding general Notably Peter Devlin deployed with the corps to Iraq in 2005 III Corps Artillery was inactivated on 8 September 2006 Henceforth the field artillery brigades soon to become Fires Brigades would be assigned to the corps and division headquarters directly President Barack Obama speaks outside of III Corps headquarters Fort Cavazos TexasIn December 2006 the corps returned to Iraq for a second time to serve as commanding headquarters for Multi National Corps Iraq During this 15 month deployment the corps took command of the force at its largest with Iraq War troop surge The corps conducted a similar mission to its first deployment focusing on providing personnel management training communications convoy escort and other duties to support the commanding elements of Multi National Force Iraq III Corps fulfilled this mission until February 2008 when it returned home again relieved by XVIII Airborne Corps 31 In 2009 the corps began a number of training initiatives with the Republic of Korea Army These included Operation Key Resolve a command post exercise simulating major high intensity combat operations The exercises were held in Yongin South Korea These operations were designed to keep the corps familiar with commanding during large scale conventional warfare as opposed to counter insurgency tactics it employed during its two tours in Iraq 32 Upon return to the United States the corps conducted similar exercises at Fort Cavazos 33 On 5 November 2009 a gunman opened fire in the Soldier Readiness Center of Fort Hood killing 13 people and wounding 30 others Nidal Hasan a Muslim U S Army major and psychiatrist was alleged to be the gunman He was felled and then arrested by civilian police officers Sergeant Mark Todd and Sergeant Kimberly Munley Much of the subsequent investigation was handled by III Corps as the soldiers killed were under the corps chain of command 34 35 36 III Corps commanded by LTG Robert W Cone assumed its final Iraq mission from I Corps from Joint Base Lewis McChord Washington in February 2010 As the core element of United States Forces Iraq headquarters III Corps oversaw a theater wide transition from full spectrum operations to stability operations The corps changed the counterinsurgency COIN fight dynamic from partnered combat operations led by brigade combat teams to training advising and assisting operations led by brigades organized as advise and assist brigades The corps also completed the transition to complete Iraqi lead for security operations During the deployment III Corps reduced the amount of aviation assets in Iraq resulting in one enhanced combat aviation brigade with six maneuver battalions having responsibility for the entire joint operations area III Corps also oversaw the reduction of the force in Iraq from 110 000 to 50 000 U S personnel by 1 Sept 2010 which established the conditions for the end of Operation Iraqi Freedom and the transition to Operation New Dawn XVIII Airborne Corps from Fort Liberty North Carolina assumed the Iraq follow on mission from III Corps in February 2011 The corps saw its first action in Afghanistan when it deployed to Kabul in early April 2013 The corps under the command of LTG Mark A Milley replaced the U S V Corps from Stuttgart Germany in May 2013 and assumed the mission of the International Security Assistance Force ISAF Joint Command or IJC which was responsible for day to day operations throughout Afghanistan During the corps deployment IJC oversaw Milestone 13 Tranche 5 ceremony on 18 June 2013 which marked the official transition of full responsibility for nationwide security operations from ISAF to the Government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan After the Milestone 13 ceremony IJC transitioned from Coalition led combat operations to Afghan led combat operations and Coalition forces providing training advice and assistance The ANSF officially less than three years old reached its peak of more than 350 000 members and conducted more than 70 major operations in more than 22 provinces In November 2013 IJC forces provided technical support to the ANSF as it secured the Loya Jirga a country wide gathering of Afghan local leaders and officials in Kabul The Loya Jirga successfully laid the groundwork for a U S Afghanistan Bilateral Security Agreement During the deployment III Corps also oversaw the drawdown of U S forces from more than 80 000 to 34 000 by 1 Feb 2014 XVIII Airborne Corps from Fort Liberty North Carolina assumed the ISAF Joint Command mission from III Corps in March 2014 On 22 September 2015 III Corps assumed command of CJTF OIR from United States Army Central On 13 October 2020 the III Corps commander launched Operation People First at Fort Cavazos Fort Bliss Fort Carson Fort Riley and other III Corps units 37 Organization Edit III Corps organization 2021 click to enlarge III Corps Fort Cavazos Texas III Corps Headquarters and Headquarters Battalion Fort Cavazos Texas 1st Infantry Division Fort Riley Kansas 1st Cavalry Division Fort Cavazos Texas 1st Armored Division Fort Bliss Texas 4th Infantry Division Fort Carson Colorado 75th Field Artillery Brigade Fort Sill Oklahoma 36th Engineer Brigade Fort Cavazos Texas 3rd Cavalry Regiment 38 Fort Cavazos Texas 11th Signal Brigade Fort Cavazos Texas 504th Military Intelligence Brigade Fort Cavazos Texas 89th Military Police Brigade Fort Cavazos Texas 13th Sustainment Command Fort Cavazos Texas 1st Medical Brigade Fort Cavazos TexasList of Commanding Generals EditWilliam M Wright June 1916 July 1918 Robert Lee Bullard July 1918 October 1918 John L Hines October 1918 July 1919 Walter K Wilson December 1940 July 1941 Joseph W Stilwell July 1941 December 1941 Walter K Wilson December 1941 April 1942 John P Lucas April 1942 May 1943 Harold R Bull June 1943 October 1943 John Millikin October 1943 17 March 1945 James A Van Fleet March 1945 February 1946 Ira T Wyche February 1946 May 1946 Leland S Hobbs May 1946 October 1946 William B Kean March 1951 July 1952 Ira P Swift August 1952 April 1953 William S Biddle October 1953 April 1954 Hobart R Gay April 1954 October 1954 Thomas L Harrold October 1954 June 1956 William N Gillmorre June 1956 August 1958 Earle G Wheeler March 1959 March 1960 John A Beall Jr September 1961 April 1962 Thomas W Dunn April 1962 October 1963 Harvey J Jablonsky November 1963 January 1964 Harvey H Fischer January 1964 February 1965 Ralph E Haines Jr March 1965 April 1967 George R Mather June 1967 July 1968 Beverley E Powell September 1968 July 1971 George P Seneff Jr July 1971 September 1973 Allen M Burdett Jr September 1973 March 1975 Robert M Shoemaker March 1975 November 1977 Marvin D Fuller November 1977 January 1980 Richard E Cavazos January 1980 February 1982 Walter F Ulmer Jr February 1982 June 1985 Crosbie E Saint June 1985 June 1988 Richard G Graves June 1988 June 1991 Horace G Taylor June 1991 39 October 1993 Paul E Funk October 1993 December 1995 Thomas A Schwartz December 1995 August 1998 Leon J LaPorte August 1998 August 2001 Burwell B Bell III August 2001 November 2002 Thomas F Metz February 2003 May 2006 Raymond T Odierno May 2006 July 2008 Rick Lynch July 2008 September 2009 Robert W Cone September 2009 April 2011 Donald M Campbell Jr April 2011 40 2012 Mark A Milley 2012 2014 Sean B MacFarland 2014 2017 Paul E Funk II 2017 2019 Robert P White 2019 2022 Sean C Bernabe 2022 PresentHonors EditThe corps received five campaign streamers in World War I and four campaign streamers in World War II 19 It also received two campaign streamers and two unit awards during the War on Terrorism 41 Unit decorations Edit Ribbon Award Year Notes Meritorious Unit Commendation Army 2004 2005 for service in Central Asia Meritorious Unit Commendation Army 2007 2008 for service in Central Asia Meritorious Unit Commendation Army 2010 2011 for service in Central Asia Meritorious Unit Commendation Army 2012 2013 for service in Central Asia Joint Meritorious Unit Award 2019 2020 for service in Iraq Syria Campaign streamers Edit Conflict Streamer Year s World War I Aisne Marne 1918World War I Oise Marne 1918World War I Meuse Argonne 1918World War I Champagne 1918World War I Lorraine 1918World War II Normandy 1944World War II Northern France 1944World War II Rhineland 1945World War II Central Europe 1945Operation Iraqi Freedom Iraq 2004 2005Operation Iraqi Freedom Iraq 2007 2008Operation Iraqi Freedom Iraq 2009 2010Operation New Dawn Iraq 2010 2011References Edit a b c d Fort Cavazos Fact Sheet III Corps PDF Fort Cavazos Public Affairs Office Archived from the original PDF on 10 September 2018 Retrieved 25 November 2009 a b III Corps GlobalSecurity org Retrieved 25 November 2009 III Armored Corps welcomes incoming deputy commanding general DVIDS 9 June 2023 III Armored Corps History Army mil Retrieved 14 August 2022 a b c d e f g Wilson p 53 Stewart p 35 Stewart p 37 Stewart p 38 Stewart p 39 Stewart p 40 Stewart p 44 Stewart p 45 Stewart p 48 Stewart p 49 a b The Institute of Heraldry III Corps The Institute of Heraldry Archived from the original on 13 November 2009 Retrieved 18 November 2009 a b c d e f g h i j k l GlobalSecurity org III Corps History GlobalSecurity Retrieved 25 November 2009 Stewart p 67 a b c d History of Fort Hood Fort Hood Public Affairs Office Retrieved 25 November 2009 a b Wilson p 54 Axelrod p 145 Axelrod p 147 Axelrod p 148 Axelrod p 149 Stewart p 156 Axelrod p 150 III Corps Opened at Fort Hood Fort Hood Sentinel Retrieved 25 November 2009 Fort Hood gets heavy Fort Hood Sentinel Retrieved 25 November 2009 Isby David C and Charles Kamps Jr Armies of NATO s Central Front JAne s Publishing Company 1985 377 Army The Magazine of Landpower October 1989 1972 Command and Staff Association of the US Army Retrieved 26 June 2020 9 Jan 2004 Speech by Gov Rick Perry Office of Rick Perry Retrieved 25 November 2009 Transfer of Authority XVIII Airborne Corps Special Troops Battalion takes the lead from III Corps Task Force Phantom United States Army Retrieved 25 November 2009 Phantom Warriors transition from Key Resolve to Unified Endeavor United States Army Retrieved 26 November 2009 Full spectrum capability key for III Corps United States Army Retrieved 26 November 2009 Fort Hood Gunman Who Killed 12 Wounded 30 Survived Gun Battle ABC News Retrieved 3 May 2020 Deadly shootings at US army base BBC News 6 November 2009 Retrieved 5 May 2010 Root Jay Associated Press Officer Gives Account of the Firefight at Fort Hood Arizona Republic 8 November 2009 Brandy Cruz Fort Hood Public Affairs 10 December 2020 Operation People First Fort Hood III Corps command team remains focused on future CG Pat White meets with 1800 junior Soldiers at Fort Hood Stadium A Fort Hood Independent Review Committee FHIRC released a 136 page report on the command climate at Fort Hood which Secretary of the Army McCarthy released 8 December 2020 His commanders have 36 hours to release the FHIRC report to the Soldiers in their chains of command Gen White asks that the Soldiers ask questions and demand answers on Operation People First Geiger Capt Grace 5 April 2017 3rd Cav Regt transitions to III Corps Killeen TX 3d Cavalry Regiment Public Affairs Office DVIDS Retrieved 8 April 2017 Fifty Years of Excellence Fort Hood 50th Anniversary 1942 1992 Fort Hood Public Affairs U S Army 1992 Retrieved 17 November 2022 The Phanton Warrior Standard for Every Service Member Past III Corps Commanders Fort Hood Public Affairs U S Army 6 October 2011 p 167 Retrieved 17 November 2022 War on Terrorism Awards United States Army Center of Military History Archived from the original on 5 December 2009 Retrieved 26 November 2009 Sources EditAxelrod Alan 2006 Patton A Biography Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 4039 7139 5 Stewart Richard W 2005 American military history Textbook version ed Washington D C Center of Military History U S Army ISBN 0 16 072362 0 OCLC 60767166 Wilson John B 1987 Armies corps divisions and separate brigades Center of Military History U S Army OCLC 15018137 External links EditIII Armored Corps Home Page Archived 1 April 2019 at the Wayback Machine official site United States Army Center of Military History GlobalSecurity org page on III Corps Gen Saint Chosen to Command Army in Europe 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title III Armored Corps amp oldid 1161552071, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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