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United States Army Alaska

The United States Army Alaska (USARAK or "America's Arctic Warriors"[1]) was a military command of the United States Army located in the U.S. state of Alaska. A subordinate command of I Corps, USARAK was the ground element of the Alaskan Command. USARAK was headquartered at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson and commanded by a major general. USARAK was reflagged as the 11th Airborne Division on June 6, 2022.[3]

United States Army Alaska

Active1994—2022
Country United States
Branch United States Army
RoleArctic Warfare
Part of I Corps
Alaskan Command
Garrison/HQFort Richardson
Nickname(s)America's Arctic Warriors (Special Designation)[1]
Motto(s)"Arctic Tough!"
MarchUnited States Army Alaska March
EngagementsOperation Inherent Resolve
War in Afghanistan
Websitehttps://home.army.mil/alaska/index.php
Commanders
Previous CommanderMajor General Brian Eifler[2]
Command Sergeant MajorCommand Sergeant Major Vern B. Daley
Insignia
Distinctive unit insignia
USARPAC Early–Entry Command Post Beret Flash, mission assigned to USARAK HQ
Early–Entry Command Post Airborne Background Trimming

Early Army involvement in Alaska edit

 
A U.S. Army Alaska Stryker from Bravo Company, 3-21 Infantry Regiment, 1st Stryker Brigade Combat Team during Operation Arctic Pegasus at Deadhorse, Alaska, 3 November 2015.

The U.S. Army's important history in the Great Land began at the very moment Alaska became American soil on 18 October 1867. Elements of the 9th Infantry were on hand as the Russian Golden Eagle was lowered and the Stars and Stripes were raised in Sitka, which then became headquarters for the Alaska Military District.

Charged with maintaining law and order in the new territory, U.S. Army soldiers helped quell uprisings and built new forts at Wrangell, St. Paul Canal, Kodiak Island, and on the Kenai Peninsula. They also enforced regulations regarding the killing of fur seals, whose population had been severely depleted during the Russian reign.

The Army relinquished control of Alaska to the U.S. Treasury Department in 1877, but did not entirely leave the territory. The Signal Corps operated weather stations, and a number of officers led small geographic explorations to learn more about the territory. These expeditions into various parts of Alaska continued through the turn of the 20th century, as mapmaking and road and bridge building expanded the frontier. The Klondike Gold Rush in Yukon Territory, Canada, and later gold rushes in Alaska helped that expansion, as thousands of people poured into Alaska.

Early 20th Century edit

Although the Royal Canadian Mounted Police maintained law and order in the Yukon during the Gold Rush, the U.S. government, after sending Captain Patrick H. Ray and First Lieutenant Wilds P. Richardson to study the situation, did not deem it necessary to send the Army into Alaska as peacekeepers. As more and more people came into Alaska and northwestern Canada, the need for better communications with the lower 48 states became critical. The Washington-Alaska Military Cable and Telegraph System (WAMCATS) connected all the forts in the territory with Seattle. By 1903, the line stretched from Seattle to southeastern Alaska, Valdez, the interior, and Nome. The project fell under the direction of Brigadier General Adolphus W. Greely. Lieutenant William "Billy" Mitchell, another officer who would later achieve military fame, also worked on the four-year project.

While Greely and his men struggled to complete the WAMCATS project, Richardson, on his third tour of duty in Alaska, headed the Alaska Road Commission, building garrisons and trails in south-central Alaska. The Army in Alaska saw a decline in activity from 1908 to 1939, with a brief surge during World War I. Work continued building roads and bridges and improving trails during this period.

Alaska during World War II edit

Military construction in Alaska accelerated in 1940 as the world prepared for another great war. Ladd Field, near Fairbanks, was built as a cold-weather test station and Fort Richardson, named for Wilds P. Richardson, was built near Anchorage. Colonel Simon B. Buckner assumed command of the Alaska Defense Force in 1940, achieving the rank of major general during his following three-year tenure in what evolved into the Alaska Department.

Through the Lend-Lease program, the United States transferred nearly 8,000 aircraft to the Soviet Union at Ladd Field, which later became Fort Wainwright. The aircraft were flown from Great Falls, Montana, to Ladd Field by American crews. Russian crews then flew the planes to Siberia and on to the Russian Front. The pilots leaving Great Falls followed a series of small airfields that became known as the Northwest Staging Route. One of those airfields, Big Delta Airfield, later became Fort Greely, providing ample acreage large scale training exercises, northern warfare training and extreme cold weather testing.

Following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, Army and Navy engineers began building airstrips in the Aleutian Islands to defend against possible Japanese attacks. U.S. Army units also built an initial pioneer road in 1942 for the Alaska-Canada (ALCAN) Highway in less than eight months. In 1943, civilian contractors followed and constructed a more permanent, all-weather highway. The 1,420-mile road was built as an overland supply route to get personnel and equipment to Alaska. The ALCAN Highway complemented military infrastructure that was built throughout Alaska than ensured Allied forces could defend the territory and carry the fight to the enemy, if necessary.

Alaska was the only American soil on which ground fighting occurred during World War II; the Aleutian Islands Campaign began following the Japanese bombing of Dutch Harbor and seizure of Attu and Kiska islands in the Aleutian Chain in June 1942. The successful battle by the U.S. to retake Attu in May 1943 was proportionately one of the most costly amphibious assaults of World War II in the American and Pacific theaters in terms of American casualties suffered. The Japanese secretly evacuated Kiska in late-July 1943, several weeks prior to U.S. and Canadian forces seizing the island in mid-August 1943. At the end of the war, most Army installations throughout the state closed permanently or transferred to other agencies. Postwar emphasis turned to training.

Post World War II: USARAL edit

The Alaskan Command (ALCOM) was created in January 1947. As the first Unified Command under the Department of Defense, ALCOM was headquartered at Elmendorf Air Force Base near Anchorage where it controlled all military forces in Alaska.

The Alaskan Department changed its name again in 1947. The new name for the headquarters for all Army personnel in Alaska became U.S. Army Alaska, or USARAL. Military missions assigned to USARAL included ground and air defense of Alaska, with priority to the Anchorage and Fairbanks areas; development of cold-weather and mountain-warfare doctrines; conducting a cold-weather and mountain school at Fort Greely; providing logistical support to Air Force and Navy elements in Alaska; conducting National Guard and U.S. Army Reserve training; supervising Reserve Officer Training Corps activities; and, providing internal security, including plans for recovery from nuclear attack. By 1959, several Nike Hercules missile battalions were activated in the Anchorage and Fairbanks areas which operated under the last unit inactivated in 1979.

The Army established the Yukon Command at Ladd Air Force Base as a component of the U.S. Army Alaska (USARAL) with the mission of point defense of U.S. military installations north of the Alaska Range. Consequently, infantry and anti-aircraft units comprised most of the Army presence at Ladd AFB during the 1950s. Elements of the 4th Regimental Combat Team arrived at Ladd AFB in 1950, and the 1st Battle Group, 9th "Manchu" Infantry Regiment took its place in 1956. At some time by December 1957, the 1st Battle Group, 9th "Manchu" Infantry was split between Ladd AFB and Eielson AFB, with the headquarters being at Eielson AFB and some of the line companies (C Company, for one) remaining at Ladd AFB. That configuration remained until at least December 1959. The 4th AAA Group was stationed at Ladd until 1958. In 1959, a NIKE battalion equipped with nuclear-capable Nike Hercules surface-to-air missiles (SAMs) took over the interior defense mission.

Later two battalions of Nike missiles were stationed in Alaska: 4th Battalion (later 1st Battalion), 43rd Air Defense Artillery Regiment, and 2d Battalion, 562nd Air Defense Artillery Regiment. The two battalions and their direct support ordnance companies fell under the command of the USARAL Artillery Group, headquartered at Fort Richardson.[4] The Group was directly responsible to the USARAL Commanding General for Army participation in the air defense of Alaska, which involved Nike Hercules batteries, fighter interceptors, and the associated early warning radars and communications systems.

In 1964 the USARAL Air Defense Artillery Group, composed of two Nike-Hercules missile battalions, was activated and moved its offices from Building 1 to building 656, Fort Richardson. The USARAL Air Defense Artillery Group was renamed the 87th Artillery Group (Air Defense) in January 1968.[5] 4/43 ADA defended Anchorage (which would have included the battery at Site Summit) while 2-562 ADA provided area defense around Fairbanks. 4/43 ADA was redesignated as the 1st Battalion, 43rd Air Defense Artillery in 1971. It was at that time that the 2/562 ADA was deactivated. In March 1971 the Department of the Army announced its decision to close the remaining Fairbanks area missile sites of the 2/562 Artillery, the 166th Ordnance, and the 87th Artillery Group by the end of June 1971.

USARAL's combat units officially reorganized in July 1963, into the 172nd Infantry Brigade (Mechanized) at Fort Richardson and the 171st Infantry Brigade (Mechanized) at Fort Wainwright. The two brigades were re-designated as Light Infantry Brigades in 1969.

Home of the 6th Infantry Division edit

USARAL was discontinued as a major subordinate command on 31 December 1972, and the 172nd Infantry Brigade (Alaska), headquartered at Fort Richardson, assumed command and control, reporting to U.S. Army Forces Command at Fort McPherson, Georgia. The 171st Infantry Brigade was inactivated in 1973 leaving the reorganized 172nd Infantry Brigade (Separate) as the principal combat formation, split-stationed at both Fort Richardson and Fort Wainwright

The 6th Infantry Division (Light), headquartered at Fort Richardson, was activated in 1986, replacing 172nd Infantry Brigade (Separate). The 6th ID (L) Division headquarters moved to Fort Wainwright in 1990. The 6th 1D (L) maintained an Arctic focus in its unit training and was actively involved in training exercises in Japan and Thailand, at the Joint Readiness Training Center in Arkansas and Louisiana, and throughout Alaska until its inactivation in July 1994. At that time, Army forces in Alaska reorganized under the command of U.S. Army Alaska (USARAK), headquartered at Fort Richardson, with the 172nd Infantry Brigade as the principal combat formation, split-stationed at both Fort Richardson and Fort Wainwright.

1993 onwards: USARAK edit

USARAK was headquartered at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson and Fort Wainwright, aligned as a major subordinate command of U.S. Army Pacific (USARPAC). USARAK provided trained and ready forces in support of worldwide unified land operations; supports theater engagement in the Pacific/Arctic and military operations in the Alaska Joint Operations Area, in order to contribute to a stable and secure operational environment. The 1st Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division was headquartered at Fort Wainwright, near Fairbanks, along with Northern Warfare Training Center (NWTC) and U.S. Army Garrison Alaska. 4th Brigade Combat Team (Airborne), 25th Infantry Division, SFC Christopher R. Brevard Noncommissioned Officer's Academy, and selected units of the 17th Combat Support Sustainment Battalion were stationed at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson.[6] Following the commands reflag to the 11th Airborne, all active-duty subordinate units were absorbed into the new division.

Structure edit

 
US Army Alaska order of battle
 
Staff Sgt. Timothy Bennett, a cavalry scout with Blackjack Troop, 1st Squadron, 40th Cavalry Regiment, 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team (Airborne), 25th Infantry Division, packs his parachute up after a night airborne training jump at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska, 8 December 2015.

Active component units within United States Army Alaska included:[7]

Units based at Fort Wainwright hosted by US Army Garrison Alaska:

Units based at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson (JBER) hosted by the 673rd Air Base Wing:

  • HQ, US Army Alaska
  • 4th Brigade Combat Team (Airborne), 25th Infantry Division, "Spartans"
  • Arctic Support Command elements at JBER:
    • 17th Combat Support Sustainment Battalion (subordinate to Arctic Support Command at Fort Wainwright)
      • 4th Quartermaster Company (Theater Aerial Delivery)
      • 109th Transportation Company
      • 205th Ordnance Detachment (Modular)
      • 98th Maintenance Company (Support)
      • 486th Movement Control Team
      • 95th Chemical Company
      • 545th MP Detachment (Law Enforcement)
      • 9th Army Band
    • SFC Brevard NCO Academy
  • Army Field Support Battalion - Alaska (subordinate of the 402nd Army Field Support Brigade)
  • 59th Signal Battalion / Network Enterprise Center (subordinate unit of the 516th Signal Brigade)
    • Headquarters & Headquarters Detachment
    • 507th Signal Company[12] (Fort Greely)
    • Company C, 307th Signal Battalion (Expeditionary)[13]

Reserve component units located throughout the state included:

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Special Unit Designations". United States Army Center of Military History. 21 April 2010. Retrieved 12 July 2010.
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 6 September 2021. Retrieved 22 July 2021.
  3. ^ "Army Creating Second Paratrooper Division as Service Forges New Identity for Arctic Troops". Military.com. 5 May 2022. Retrieved 5 May 2022.
  4. ^ U.S. Army Alaska, 'Nike Operations in Alaska,' Chapter 4
  5. ^ Woodman, Duty Station Northwest, Vol. 111, p. 154, cited at http://nikealaska.org/87th/87th.html
  6. ^ "History :: United States Army in Alaska". home.army.mil. Retrieved 24 September 2021.
  7. ^ "Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson > Units > Army". www.jber.jb.mil. Retrieved 23 July 2019.
  8. ^ "HEADQUARTERS AND HEADQUARTERS COMPANY 1st BRIGADE COMBAT TEAM, 25th INFANTRY DIVISION".
  9. ^ "U.S. Army Center of Military History - Lineage and Honors Information".
  10. ^ "539th Transportation Company".
  11. ^ "574th QUARTERMASTER COMPANY - Lineage and Honors Information - U.S. Army Center of Military History".
  12. ^ "507th Signal Company".
  13. ^ "319th Signal Battalion".

External links edit

  • United States Army Alaska, Official homepage
  • United States Army Alaska,

united, states, army, alaska, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, october, 2016, learn, when, remove, this, templa. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations October 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message The United States Army Alaska USARAK or America s Arctic Warriors 1 was a military command of the United States Army located in the U S state of Alaska A subordinate command of I Corps USARAK was the ground element of the Alaskan Command USARAK was headquartered at Joint Base Elmendorf Richardson and commanded by a major general USARAK was reflagged as the 11th Airborne Division on June 6 2022 3 United States Army AlaskaShoulder sleeve insigniaActive1994 2022Country United StatesBranch United States ArmyRoleArctic WarfarePart ofI Corps Alaskan CommandGarrison HQFort RichardsonNickname s America s Arctic Warriors Special Designation 1 Motto s Arctic Tough MarchUnited States Army Alaska MarchEngagementsOperation Inherent ResolveWar in AfghanistanWebsitehttps home army mil alaska index phpCommandersPrevious CommanderMajor General Brian Eifler 2 Command Sergeant MajorCommand Sergeant Major Vern B DaleyInsigniaDistinctive unit insigniaUSARPAC Early Entry Command Post Beret Flash mission assigned to USARAK HQEarly Entry Command Post Airborne Background Trimming Contents 1 Early Army involvement in Alaska 2 Early 20th Century 3 Alaska during World War II 4 Post World War II USARAL 5 Home of the 6th Infantry Division 6 1993 onwards USARAK 6 1 Structure 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksEarly Army involvement in Alaska edit nbsp A U S Army Alaska Stryker from Bravo Company 3 21 Infantry Regiment 1st Stryker Brigade Combat Team during Operation Arctic Pegasus at Deadhorse Alaska 3 November 2015 The U S Army s important history in the Great Land began at the very moment Alaska became American soil on 18 October 1867 Elements of the 9th Infantry were on hand as the Russian Golden Eagle was lowered and the Stars and Stripes were raised in Sitka which then became headquarters for the Alaska Military District Charged with maintaining law and order in the new territory U S Army soldiers helped quell uprisings and built new forts at Wrangell St Paul Canal Kodiak Island and on the Kenai Peninsula They also enforced regulations regarding the killing of fur seals whose population had been severely depleted during the Russian reign The Army relinquished control of Alaska to the U S Treasury Department in 1877 but did not entirely leave the territory The Signal Corps operated weather stations and a number of officers led small geographic explorations to learn more about the territory These expeditions into various parts of Alaska continued through the turn of the 20th century as mapmaking and road and bridge building expanded the frontier The Klondike Gold Rush in Yukon Territory Canada and later gold rushes in Alaska helped that expansion as thousands of people poured into Alaska Early 20th Century editAlthough the Royal Canadian Mounted Police maintained law and order in the Yukon during the Gold Rush the U S government after sending Captain Patrick H Ray and First Lieutenant Wilds P Richardson to study the situation did not deem it necessary to send the Army into Alaska as peacekeepers As more and more people came into Alaska and northwestern Canada the need for better communications with the lower 48 states became critical The Washington Alaska Military Cable and Telegraph System WAMCATS connected all the forts in the territory with Seattle By 1903 the line stretched from Seattle to southeastern Alaska Valdez the interior and Nome The project fell under the direction of Brigadier General Adolphus W Greely Lieutenant William Billy Mitchell another officer who would later achieve military fame also worked on the four year project While Greely and his men struggled to complete the WAMCATS project Richardson on his third tour of duty in Alaska headed the Alaska Road Commission building garrisons and trails in south central Alaska The Army in Alaska saw a decline in activity from 1908 to 1939 with a brief surge during World War I Work continued building roads and bridges and improving trails during this period Alaska during World War II editMilitary construction in Alaska accelerated in 1940 as the world prepared for another great war Ladd Field near Fairbanks was built as a cold weather test station and Fort Richardson named for Wilds P Richardson was built near Anchorage Colonel Simon B Buckner assumed command of the Alaska Defense Force in 1940 achieving the rank of major general during his following three year tenure in what evolved into the Alaska Department Through the Lend Lease program the United States transferred nearly 8 000 aircraft to the Soviet Union at Ladd Field which later became Fort Wainwright The aircraft were flown from Great Falls Montana to Ladd Field by American crews Russian crews then flew the planes to Siberia and on to the Russian Front The pilots leaving Great Falls followed a series of small airfields that became known as the Northwest Staging Route One of those airfields Big Delta Airfield later became Fort Greely providing ample acreage large scale training exercises northern warfare training and extreme cold weather testing Following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941 Army and Navy engineers began building airstrips in the Aleutian Islands to defend against possible Japanese attacks U S Army units also built an initial pioneer road in 1942 for the Alaska Canada ALCAN Highway in less than eight months In 1943 civilian contractors followed and constructed a more permanent all weather highway The 1 420 mile road was built as an overland supply route to get personnel and equipment to Alaska The ALCAN Highway complemented military infrastructure that was built throughout Alaska than ensured Allied forces could defend the territory and carry the fight to the enemy if necessary Alaska was the only American soil on which ground fighting occurred during World War II the Aleutian Islands Campaign began following the Japanese bombing of Dutch Harbor and seizure of Attu and Kiska islands in the Aleutian Chain in June 1942 The successful battle by the U S to retake Attu in May 1943 was proportionately one of the most costly amphibious assaults of World War II in the American and Pacific theaters in terms of American casualties suffered The Japanese secretly evacuated Kiska in late July 1943 several weeks prior to U S and Canadian forces seizing the island in mid August 1943 At the end of the war most Army installations throughout the state closed permanently or transferred to other agencies Postwar emphasis turned to training Post World War II USARAL editThe Alaskan Command ALCOM was created in January 1947 As the first Unified Command under the Department of Defense ALCOM was headquartered at Elmendorf Air Force Base near Anchorage where it controlled all military forces in Alaska The Alaskan Department changed its name again in 1947 The new name for the headquarters for all Army personnel in Alaska became U S Army Alaska or USARAL Military missions assigned to USARAL included ground and air defense of Alaska with priority to the Anchorage and Fairbanks areas development of cold weather and mountain warfare doctrines conducting a cold weather and mountain school at Fort Greely providing logistical support to Air Force and Navy elements in Alaska conducting National Guard and U S Army Reserve training supervising Reserve Officer Training Corps activities and providing internal security including plans for recovery from nuclear attack By 1959 several Nike Hercules missile battalions were activated in the Anchorage and Fairbanks areas which operated under the last unit inactivated in 1979 The Army established the Yukon Command at Ladd Air Force Base as a component of the U S Army Alaska USARAL with the mission of point defense of U S military installations north of the Alaska Range Consequently infantry and anti aircraft units comprised most of the Army presence at Ladd AFB during the 1950s Elements of the 4th Regimental Combat Team arrived at Ladd AFB in 1950 and the 1st Battle Group 9th Manchu Infantry Regiment took its place in 1956 At some time by December 1957 the 1st Battle Group 9th Manchu Infantry was split between Ladd AFB and Eielson AFB with the headquarters being at Eielson AFB and some of the line companies C Company for one remaining at Ladd AFB That configuration remained until at least December 1959 The 4th AAA Group was stationed at Ladd until 1958 In 1959 a NIKE battalion equipped with nuclear capable Nike Hercules surface to air missiles SAMs took over the interior defense mission Later two battalions of Nike missiles were stationed in Alaska 4th Battalion later 1st Battalion 43rd Air Defense Artillery Regiment and 2d Battalion 562nd Air Defense Artillery Regiment The two battalions and their direct support ordnance companies fell under the command of the USARAL Artillery Group headquartered at Fort Richardson 4 The Group was directly responsible to the USARAL Commanding General for Army participation in the air defense of Alaska which involved Nike Hercules batteries fighter interceptors and the associated early warning radars and communications systems In 1964 the USARAL Air Defense Artillery Group composed of two Nike Hercules missile battalions was activated and moved its offices from Building 1 to building 656 Fort Richardson The USARAL Air Defense Artillery Group was renamed the 87th Artillery Group Air Defense in January 1968 5 4 43 ADA defended Anchorage which would have included the battery at Site Summit while 2 562 ADA provided area defense around Fairbanks 4 43 ADA was redesignated as the 1st Battalion 43rd Air Defense Artillery in 1971 It was at that time that the 2 562 ADA was deactivated In March 1971 the Department of the Army announced its decision to close the remaining Fairbanks area missile sites of the 2 562 Artillery the 166th Ordnance and the 87th Artillery Group by the end of June 1971 USARAL s combat units officially reorganized in July 1963 into the 172nd Infantry Brigade Mechanized at Fort Richardson and the 171st Infantry Brigade Mechanized at Fort Wainwright The two brigades were re designated as Light Infantry Brigades in 1969 Home of the 6th Infantry Division editUSARAL was discontinued as a major subordinate command on 31 December 1972 and the 172nd Infantry Brigade Alaska headquartered at Fort Richardson assumed command and control reporting to U S Army Forces Command at Fort McPherson Georgia The 171st Infantry Brigade was inactivated in 1973 leaving the reorganized 172nd Infantry Brigade Separate as the principal combat formation split stationed at both Fort Richardson and Fort WainwrightThe 6th Infantry Division Light headquartered at Fort Richardson was activated in 1986 replacing 172nd Infantry Brigade Separate The 6th ID L Division headquarters moved to Fort Wainwright in 1990 The 6th 1D L maintained an Arctic focus in its unit training and was actively involved in training exercises in Japan and Thailand at the Joint Readiness Training Center in Arkansas and Louisiana and throughout Alaska until its inactivation in July 1994 At that time Army forces in Alaska reorganized under the command of U S Army Alaska USARAK headquartered at Fort Richardson with the 172nd Infantry Brigade as the principal combat formation split stationed at both Fort Richardson and Fort Wainwright 1993 onwards USARAK editUSARAK was headquartered at Joint Base Elmendorf Richardson and Fort Wainwright aligned as a major subordinate command of U S Army Pacific USARPAC USARAK provided trained and ready forces in support of worldwide unified land operations supports theater engagement in the Pacific Arctic and military operations in the Alaska Joint Operations Area in order to contribute to a stable and secure operational environment The 1st Stryker Brigade Combat Team 25th Infantry Division was headquartered at Fort Wainwright near Fairbanks along with Northern Warfare Training Center NWTC and U S Army Garrison Alaska 4th Brigade Combat Team Airborne 25th Infantry Division SFC Christopher R Brevard Noncommissioned Officer s Academy and selected units of the 17th Combat Support Sustainment Battalion were stationed at Joint Base Elmendorf Richardson 6 Following the commands reflag to the 11th Airborne all active duty subordinate units were absorbed into the new division Structure edit nbsp US Army Alaska order of battle nbsp Staff Sgt Timothy Bennett a cavalry scout with Blackjack Troop 1st Squadron 40th Cavalry Regiment 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team Airborne 25th Infantry Division packs his parachute up after a night airborne training jump at Joint Base Elmendorf Richardson Alaska 8 December 2015 Active component units within United States Army Alaska included 7 Units based at Fort Wainwright hosted by US Army Garrison Alaska 1st Brigade Combat Team 25th Infantry Division Arctic Wolves 8 5th Squadron 1st Cavalry Regiment Black Hawk 1st Battalion 5th Infantry Regiment Bobcat 1st Battalion 24th Infantry Regiment Legion 3rd Battalion 21st Infantry Regiment Gimlet 2nd Battalion 8th Field Artillery Regiment Automatic 70th Brigade Engineer Battalion Kodiak 65th Ordnance Company EOD 9 25th Brigade Support Battalion Opahey Arctic Support Command Provisional 17th CSSB elements at Fort Wainwright 539th Transportation Company Composite 10 subordinate to 17th CSSB at JBER 574th Quartermaster Company 11 Composite Supply subordinate to 17th CSSB at JBER 626th Quartermaster Company Field Feeding subordinate to 17th CSSB at JBER 28th MP Detachment Law Enforcement subordinate to 17th CSSB at JBER 549th MP Detachment Military Working Dog Northern Warfare Training Center 1st Battalion 52nd Aviation Regiment General Support subordinate to 16th CAB at JBLM 1st Battalion 25th Aviation Regiment Attack Reconnaissance subordinate to CAB 25th ID at Wheeler AAF Company D 25th Aviation Regiment Gray Eagle subordinate to CAB 25th ID at Wheeler AAF MEDDAC AlaskaUnits based at Joint Base Elmendorf Richardson JBER hosted by the 673rd Air Base Wing HQ US Army Alaska 4th Brigade Combat Team Airborne 25th Infantry Division Spartans 1st Squadron 40th Cavalry Regiment Denali 1st Battalion 501st Infantry Regiment 1 Geronimo 3rd Battalion 509th Infantry Regiment 3 Geronimo 2nd Battalion 377th Field Artillery Regiment Spartan Steel 6th Brigade Engineer Battalion Arctic Sappers 716th Ordnance Company EOD 725th Brigade Support Battalion Centurion 241st Quartermaster Company Brigade Aerial Delivery Arctic Support Command elements at JBER 17th Combat Support Sustainment Battalion subordinate to Arctic Support Command at Fort Wainwright 4th Quartermaster Company Theater Aerial Delivery 109th Transportation Company 205th Ordnance Detachment Modular 98th Maintenance Company Support 486th Movement Control Team 95th Chemical Company 545th MP Detachment Law Enforcement 9th Army Band SFC Brevard NCO Academy Army Field Support Battalion Alaska subordinate of the 402nd Army Field Support Brigade 59th Signal Battalion Network Enterprise Center subordinate unit of the 516th Signal Brigade Headquarters amp Headquarters Detachment 507th Signal Company 12 Fort Greely Company C 307th Signal Battalion Expeditionary 13 Reserve component units located throughout the state included Alaska Army National Guard Joint Force Headquarters 207th Multi Function Training Regiment Recruiting and Retention Battalion Medical Detachment 38th Troop Command 1st Battalion 207th Aviation Regiment General Support 1st Battalion 297th Infantry Regiment 49th Missile Defense Battalion 297th Regional Support Group 297th Military Police Company 208th Construction Management Team 207th Engineer Detachment Utility 134th Public Affairs Detachment 49th Personnel Detachment United States Army Reserve 2nd Battalion 196th Infantry Brigade Company B 411th Engineer BattalionSee also editCold weather warfare List of Nike missile locations for USARAL missile locations in 1950sReferences edit a b Special Unit Designations United States Army Center of Military History 21 April 2010 Retrieved 12 July 2010 U S Army in Alaska Homepage Archived from the original on 6 September 2021 Retrieved 22 July 2021 Army Creating Second Paratrooper Division as Service Forges New Identity for Arctic Troops Military com 5 May 2022 Retrieved 5 May 2022 U S Army Alaska Nike Operations in Alaska Chapter 4 Woodman Duty Station Northwest Vol 111 p 154 cited at http nikealaska org 87th 87th html History United States Army in Alaska home army mil Retrieved 24 September 2021 Joint Base Elmendorf Richardson gt Units gt Army www jber jb mil Retrieved 23 July 2019 HEADQUARTERS AND HEADQUARTERS COMPANY 1st BRIGADE COMBAT TEAM 25th INFANTRY DIVISION U S Army Center of Military History Lineage and Honors Information 539th Transportation Company 574th QUARTERMASTER COMPANY Lineage and Honors Information U S Army Center of Military History 507th Signal Company 319th Signal Battalion External links editUnited States Army Alaska Official homepage United States Army Alaska Nike Operations in Alaska Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title United States Army Alaska amp oldid 1195424319, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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