7th North African Infantry Division explained

Unit Name:7th North African Infantry Division
Country: France
Type:Division
Branch:Terre
Dates:16 March – 25 June 1940
Specialization:Infantry
Battles:World War II

The 7th Infantry Division North African (7 e DINA) was an infantry division of the French Army that participated in the Second World War.

Combat history

The Division formed at Camp Valdahon from March 16 to April 20, 1940, as part of the General Headquarters Reserve.[1] The 97th Reconnaissance Group was a motorized cavalry unit composed of members of the French Foreign Legion.[2] The regiments of Tirailleurs were infantry formed from native North Africans led by French officers.

At the end of May the division was attached to the 1 Army Corps, 7 Army [3] The 7th Army, itself newly formed, was intended fill a gap on the flank of the long German penetration, and perhaps take advantage of the apparent vulnerability of the panzer divisions, which, so far ahead of their other units might be attacked in the flank and rear.[4] However its forces were assigned from the reserve and other areas that were some distance from the new army sector, and would take some time to arrive. The time lag was compounded by French staffs, who fearing panzer raids where units were unloading, moved retraining points 'absurd distances' from potential jump off points. The 7 na began arriving by train on 20 May, with two battalions alighting at St Just en Chausee, 40 km from Amiens, and other units even further. Its assembly was not complete until four days later, by which time the Panzers along the Somme had been replaced by Motorised Infantry, and the German marching infantry were not far behind.

On 9 June, attempting to cover the retreat of the division, the 97th Reconnaissance Group defended the village of Quesnel, and launched repeated counterattacks against German armour, but in the process lost half their vehicles and suffered serious casualties. By the end of June the unit had lost half of its officers and two thirds of its men.[5]

By 25 June the division had suffered such high losses that it was disbanded.[1]

Commanders

Composition

Notes and References

  1. Pettibone, THE Organization and Order of Battle of Militaries in World War II: VOLUME VI ITALY and FRANCE, p 429
  2. Book: Geraghty, Tony. March or Die. 1986. Grafton Books. London. 0-246-11975-6. 183.
  3. Grandes Unités Françaises, Vol. I, pp. 69-71
  4. Chapman, Why France fell, p 190
  5. Lepage, The French Foreign Legion: An Illustrated History, p 143