7th Signal Brigade (United States) explained

Unit Name:7th Signal Brigade
Dates:24 February 1970 – 16 May 2014
Country:United States
Allegiance:United States Army
Type:Signal brigade
Size:Brigade
Command Structure:5th Signal Command
Identification Symbol Label:Distinctive Unit Insignia

The 7th Signal Brigade was a military communications brigade of the United States Army subordinate to the 5th Signal Command located in Germany.

By the end of 1965, all USAREUR communications duties, and even the position of USAREUR Deputy Chief of Staff for Communications–Electronics had been transferred to the STRATCOM-Europe sub-command. The Signal transformation trend continued through the 1970s; 7th Signal Brigade was activated in 1970 from assets of the deactivated Seventh Army communications command. STRATCOM-Europe assumed operational control of the brigade in June 1972 and was redesignated as Army Communications Command-Europe (ACC-E) in October 1973.[1]

During the summer of 1974, when ACC-E reorganized as Headquarters, 7th Signal Brigade remained under 5th Signal Command's operational control. In 1981, it was officially assigned to 5th Signal Command. The 7th Signal Brigade comprised the 1st Signal Battalion (Deactivated and cased colors at Kleber Kaserne on 1 April 1993), the 26th Signal Battalion, 44th Signal Battalion and 72nd Signal Battalions.[1]

Since the 1990s, 7th Signal Brigade has maintained a consistently high operational tempo. During Desert Shield and Desert Storm, 5th Signal Command deployed elements of 7th Signal Brigade to the Persian Gulf.

The 268th Signal Company from the 72d Signal Battalion, a subordinate of 7th Signal Brigade also deployed and were attached to VII Corps93rd Signal Brigade. In July 1991, the 7th Signal Brigade supported the humanitarian relief and protection efforts for the Kurds during Operation Provide Comfort.[1]

From January through December 2004, Headquarters, 7th Signal Brigade and 72nd Signal Battalion deployed to Kuwait and Iraq in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom 2, providing tactical communications in support of Combined Forces Land Component Commander in Doha, Kuwait. In March 2005, 7th Signal Brigade deployed Task Force Lightning, comprising elements of 44th and 509th Signal Battalions, to Afghanistan for Operation Enduring Freedom in support of the Southern European Task Force.[1]

On 4 November 2016 it was announced that 5th Signal Command would be decommissioned.[2]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: United States Army 5th Signal Command (Theater). U.S. Army Network Enterprise Technology Command. en. 23 June 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20161123140659/http://www.5sigcmd.army.mil/history.html. 23 November 2016. dead.
  2. Web site: 5th Signal Command inactivates, 2nd Strategic Signal Brigade restructures. U.S. Army Europe. en. 4 November 2016.