Ian R -> RE: British X Corps TO&E (4/6/2017 1:23:11 PM)
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ORIGINAL: US87891 According to JWE, this part of the database was a speculative exercise by Andy Mac. It can be safely ignored, deleted, whatever. Gents, I can't speak for Andymac, but dismissing these ground units as "speculative" seems harsh. Maybe JWE was a bit grumpy when he typed that. The late war arriving "British" forces include not only those forming part of the X Commonwealth Corps, but also some formations that were being deployed for Operation Zipper - the landings in Malaya scheduled for "not before" December 1945, to be followed by Operation Mailfist, an overland advance on Singapore. When Japan toweled it Zipper was brought forward, in reduced form, as an administrative landing, and the RM units landed and took the surrender of Penang, among other things. Many British/Indian forces earmarked for Zipper/Mailfist were already in theatre, but the Royal Marines (the division was more of an administrative entity) brigades ("commandos") were going to be beefed up, and additionally the 32nd Amoured Bde (previously of Hobart's 79th Div) was allegedly to be shipped out. That brigade would come mounted in Churchill gun tanks, Churchill howitzer tanks, Crocodiles, Petard tanks, flails, AVREs, etc. IIRC the RM division would control an LVT brigade. All the good stuff you want to assault a beach. I have also seen a fresh UK armoured, or army tank, brigade mooted for Mailfist. The UK 1st Airborne Division was disbanded late in the war, when it was all over bar the shouting. However, the 5th Parachute Brigade of the 6th Div was sent to India to form the nucleus of a para division, which, with the 44th Indian Airborne Division, would form an airborne corps for Zipper/Mailfist. It's inclusion is in no way speculative, although the division designation may have been 6th rather than 1st. X Corps - which in UK histories is usually described as "British", but mostly wasn't, was the mooted CW follow-on reinforcement for Coronet. Its order of battle was never finally settled, but would have at least included, according to Polmar and Allen- 3rd British Division. 6th Canadian Division. 10th Australian Division AIF. Two follow up UK divisions on Y+40 (* but I understand these were dropped along the way.) Non divisional elements likely included a tank brigade (?Canadian), and combat engineering and other elements, along with a British AGRA. MacArthur didn't want them. Some of the obstacles put in the path of this unit's deployment included: MacArthur vetoed the original UK proposal that they would provide upwards of 10 (CW) divisions - and see next entry. MacArthur vetoed any Indian army formations outright. The reasons for doing so are ... unconvincing. MacArthur then refused the "white" units on the basis they made logistics difficult. When Blamey pointed out that Australia had an adequately functional sealoc going north, which could easily be extended to a port in Japan and supply all the corps' ordnance needs (food and fuel is food and fuel in anyone's currency), and we've been doing it since 1942 and sorted out the kinks, MacArthur told him there weren't enough ships, and anyway the US sealocs to Honshu were going to run direct from the CONUS and it was unlikely a port could be made available. When the corps was forced on Mac by his political masters he claimed that they would all have to not only be armed with US hardware, but also be re-organised on US TOEs. The British agreed that last point. The Canadian war cabinet agreed on 17th May 1945 to approve that a new 6 Div would use United States Army equipment and, except for uniforms, be reorganized along United States Army lines, be trained in the United States under the over-all supervision of the United States Army Ground Forces, and be supplied as a normal United States Army division and based in accordance with operational plans. (The home defence division of this designation had been disbanded in December 1944.) The US JCS had earlier approved that additionally it might have a supporting armoured element, which on US TOE would indicate one or more attached independent tank/tank destroyer battalions. In my own mod I added the 2nd btn/1st Armoured Regiment (The Royal Canadian Dragoons), and the 2nd armoured regt, Lord Strathcona's Horse (Royal Canadians). General Crerar, like Blamey, was unhappy with the concept (and criticised it in a conference with General Murchie on 22 May), but was waved off; formation of the division commenced by July 1945, with about 1700 personnel organised into a US division HQ structure and attending courses run by US instructors; they in turn would retrain the division as it formed. According to the Canadian official history, the preference was for this unit to operate directly under US Army command, without the British inserted in the middle. Blamey remained resistant. Sutherland talked him round, to the point he had agreed by July 45 that the proposed Australian division would use US tanks and artillery, at least. The new 10th division was to be formed as an AIF unit, drawing from the existing three AIF divisions and more recent volunteers, while the rest of the army was reduced to the minimum needed for, in effect, POW camp guard duties in the Solomons and PNG. This unit is not in the standard OOB. I have added this unit to my mod, arriving on the US West Coast, with one of each device. It needs to fill out from US pools, and the only way to get enough squads for it is disband some other unit/s. The other point is that when the IGS informed everyone else that Sir Charles Keightly would be GOC, it met with resistance in these parts. The suggestion was made - strongly - that while Sir Charles was no doubt a gifted officer and a rising star, his combat command experience, mainly in Italy, was ill suited to what the IJA would have in mind. The Australian government demanded that the post go to Morshead, who not only had been fighting the IJA for 3 years, but worked well within the American command structure while he was at it. This imbroglio was never resolved. If the British had continued to insist on Keightly, there was a prospect that the Canadian & Australian Divisions would have been made available to fight assigned to US corps, and X corps would never have formed - something MacArthur could probably have more easily accepted. Edit - early proposals included an NZ brigade group. This is not mentioned by Polmar & Allen. IF you would like to know more, I suggest reading (these are both available free on line): - pages 513-518, Canadian Official History, 'Six Years of War' Chapter XVI: Pacific Plans and Enterprises, 1943-1945). - Australia in the War of 1939–1945. Series 1 – Army, Volume VII, chapter 23. (by Gavin Long) which you will find at the AWM website. https://www.awm.gov.au/collection/RCDIG1070206/
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