7th Armoured Brigade (United Kingdom) explained

Unit Name:Light Armoured Brigade (Egypt)
7th Light Armoured Brigade
7th Armoured Brigade
Dates:1938–2014
Country: United Kingdom
Type:Armoured
Size:Brigade
Command Structure:7th Armoured Division
1st Armoured Division
Nickname:The Green Rats
The Desert Rats
Motto:"All of one company"
Battles:Western Desert campaign, Burma campaign, Italian campaign, Iraq War, War in Afghanistan
Light Armoured Brigade (Egypt)
Date:1938
Parent:Mobile Division (Egypt)
Subordinate:7th Queen's Own Hussars
8th (King's Royal Irish) Hussars
11th Hussars (Prince Albert's Own)
7th Armoured Brigade
Date:April 1940
Parent:7th Armoured Division
7th Armoured Brigade Group
Date:March 1942
Parent:Independent
Subordinate:7th Queen's Own Hussars
2nd Royal Tank Regiment
1st Battalion, West Yorkshire Regiment
414th Battery, RHA
'A' Battery, 95th Anti-Tank Regiment, RA
65th Company, RASC
13th Light Field Ambulance
7th Armoured Brigade Ordnance Field Park Workshops, RAOC
7th Armoured Brigade
Date:June 1945
Parent:I Canadian Corps
7th Armoured Brigade (from 22nd Armoured Brigade)
Date:1946
Parent:7th Armoured Division
7th Armoured Brigade (from Task Force Alpha)
Date:1981
Parent:1st Armoured Division
Subordinate:Royal Hussars
14th/20th King's Hussars
3rd Battalion, Queen's Regiment
7th Armoured Brigade
Date:1989
Parent:1st Armoured Division
Subordinate:Royal Scots Dragoon Guards
2nd Royal Tank Regiment
1st Battalion, Staffordshire Regiment
7th Armoured Brigade
Date:2014
Parent:1st (United Kingdom) Armoured Division
Subordinate:9th/12th Royal Lancers
Royal Scots Dragoon Guards
The Highlanders
3rd Battalion, Mercian Regiment
2nd Battalion, Royal Anglian Regiment
3rd Regiment, RHA
32 Engineer Regiment, RE
2nd Battalion, REME
2 Logistic Support Regiment, RLC
2 Medical Regiment
207 Signals Squadron

The 7th Armoured Brigade was an armoured brigade formation of the British Army. The brigade is also known as the "Desert Rats", a nickname formerly held by the 7th Armoured Division, of which the brigade formed a part during the Second World War until late 1941.[1]

History

The brigade was raised from garrison troops stationed in North Africa in 1938.[1] It was initially known as the Light Armoured Brigade which was part of the Mobile Division in Egypt.[2]

When the Mobile Division became 7th Armoured Division, the Light Armoured Brigade became the 7th Armoured Brigade in February 1940. The 7th Armoured Division had a red jerboa (a nocturnal rodent indigenous to North Africa) as its emblem and became known as "The Desert Rats". The 7th Armoured Brigade, meanwhile, had a green jerboa as its emblem. The 7th Brigade became known as the "Green Rats" or the "Jungle Rats" after it moved to Burma in 1942.

Second World War

The Second World War broke out in September 1939, with both Britain and France declaring war on Germany after the German Army invaded Poland. Italy launched an invasion of Egypt, then a British Protectorate, shortly after entering the war on Germany's side in June 1940. The brigade fought in many of the major battles in North Africa, including Operation Crusader in November, fighting at Sidi Rezegh to try to relieve the Commonwealth forces in the port of Tobruk, besieged by Axis forces.

It moved to fight in the Burma campaign in early 1942 just as the Imperial Japanese Army were pushing the Allies back. The brigade took part in the fighting retreat to India, successfully completed in May just before the monsoons would have cut them off.[1] The 7th Armoured Brigade returned to the Middle East in 1943, based in Iraq and later Egypt. With Axis forces defeated in North Africa, the brigade's time was a quiet one until it moved to the Italian Front in April 1944 where it remained for the duration of the Second World War; fighting as part of I Canadian Corps, itself part of the British Eighth Army.[1] The brigade, now composed of the 2nd, 6th and 8th Royal Tank Regiments, fought in the final stages of the Battle of Monte Cassino and later the Gothic Line and in Operation Grapeshot, the final offensive in Italy.

Post–Second World War

Reformation

Shortly after the end of the Second World War, the 7th Armoured Brigade was disbanded and the 22nd Armoured Brigade was re-designated as the 7th Armoured Brigade, based in Germany as part of the British Army of the Rhine (BAOR).

After the 7th Armoured Division was disbanded in 1958 the 7th Armoured Brigade adopted its insignia and nickname, perpetuating the history of the famed division.[1] It was one of two "square brigades" assigned to 1st (UK) Armoured Division when this was formed in 1976.[3] After being briefly converted to "Task Force Alpha" in the late 1970s, the brigade was reinstated in 1981,[4] assigned to the 1st Armoured Division again[5] and was based at Bournemouth Barracks in Soltau.[6]

Kuwait and Iraq

The 7th Armoured Brigade returned to the desert when it arrived in Saudi Arabia in October 1990 as part of Operation Granby, intended to protect Saudi Arabia from invasion by Saddam Hussein's Iraq. The brigade, commanded by Brigadier Patrick Cordingley, later took part in the Coalition of the Gulf War ground campaign to liberate Iraqi-occupied Kuwait on 24 February 1991 that began after a sustained air campaign.[7] The Desert Rats, along with the rest of the 1st Armoured Division, carried out a left-hook manoeuvre that swung round the Iraqi Republican Guard. The brigade advanced deep into Iraqi territory, encountering some armour of the Republican Guard. The ground campaign formally ended on 28 February with the liberation of Kuwait achieved.[8]

Balkans

The brigade moved to Campbell Barracks at Hohne in 1993.[9] From there the brigade deployed to Bosnia in May 1994 as part of the NATO IFOR peacekeeping organisation. The brigade returned for another tour-of-duty in April 1997, joining IFOR's NATO replacement known as SFOR. After the Kosovo War in 1999, the 7th Armoured Brigade returned to the Balkans for a tour-of-duty in Kosovo in 2000, based in the capital Pristina.[10]

Iraq

Just before Operation Telic began (Britain's contribution to the 2003 invasion of Iraq), the brigade, commanded by Brigadier Graham Binns, moved to Kuwait where it undertook extensive training and was "desertised" for service in the Middle East. The brigade, consisting of 112 Challenger 2 tanks, 140 Warriors and 32 AS-90 155 mm self-propelled howitzers, entered Iraq on 21 March. The main objective of the Desert Rats was to advance towards Iraq's second largest city, Basra, and help encircle and isolate it. The brigade, led by the 1st Fusiliers Battlegroup, made a rapid advance towards the city and soon reached its outskirts, securing Basra Airport and the critical bridges across the Shatt al-Arab. The advance by the brigade met sporadic though fierce resistance, with The Queen's Royal Irish Hussars, including an engagement between 14 Challenger 2s of the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards and 14 Iraqi tanks, all of the Iraqi tanks being destroyed. Initially the brigade was faced by very spirited but un-coordinated attacks from Basra and in the town of Az Zubayr. These attacks were initially orchestrated by members of the Iraqi secret police, who used violence and threats against family members to coerce men to attack the Desert Rats and other elements of the 1st Armoured Division. As their influence waned, so did the frequency and ferocity of the Iraqi attacks.[11]

The 1st Armoured Division, including 7th Brigade, then undertook a number of raids into the city against specific targets, but in a plan that was very patient bided their time on the outskirts of Basra. On 6 April the Desert Rats, led by Challenger 2s of the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards, Queen's Royal Lancers and 2nd Royal Tank Regiment with Warriors of the 1st Fusiliers, Irish Guards and Black Watch pushed into the city on 6 April and stayed. They met sporadic resistance from Iraqi soldiers and irregulars known as Fedayeen. Basra was, for the most part, now controlled by 1st Division though further engagements did take place. The war was officially declared over on 1 May. The Desert Rats remained in Iraq after the war, acting as peacekeepers and helping to rebuild the country while based in the British sector in the south of Iraq. The brigade began to leave in late June 2003, being replaced by 19th Mechanised Brigade.[12]

Between October 2005 and May 2006 the brigade deployed to Iraq again for Operation Telic 7 under the command of Brigadier Patrick Marriott.[13]

Afghanistan

In 2011, some elements of the brigade deployed to Afghanistan.[14] In October 2013, 7th Armored Brigade deployed to Afghanistan's Helmand Province, Kandahar, and Kabul.[15]

Reorganization

On 5 March 2013, the British Secretary of State for Defence, Philip Hammond, announced that the 7th Armoured Brigade would have its Challenger 2 tanks and heavy armoured battalions removed over the next decade. Although the brigade itself was re-designated as an infantry brigade, it retains its famed "Desert Rats" insignia.[16] It forms part of the Adaptable Force under Army 2020.[17] [18] The decision was met with regret by former 7th Armoured Brigade commander Patrick Cordingley, who said that the "changes would still dismay veterans and the general public".[19] On 14 November 2014, the brigade formally stepped out of its armour role into that of an infantry brigade as 7th Infantry Brigade.[20]

Brigade composition

Circa 2007

The composition was as follows:[21]

Brigade commanders

Commanders have included:[22]

See also

General sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.army.mod.uk/structure/9976.aspx 7th Armoured Brigade at www.army.mod.uk accessed on 21 Sep 09.
  2. Web site: History of the British 7th Armoured Brigade – Green Jerboa. 20 December 2014.
  3. Book: Watson, Graham. The British Army in Germany: An Organisational History 1947–2004. 95. Tiger Lily. 2005. 9780972029698.
  4. Watson, p. 76
  5. Web site: The Cold War Years. A Hot War in reality. Part 6.. Harvey. Black. 29 April 2014.
  6. Web site: Bournemouth Barracks. BAOR Locations. 31 October 2015.
  7. See Patrick Cordingley, "Eye of the Storm: Commanding 7th Armoured Brigade in the Gulf War."
  8. http://www.qdg.org.uk/pages/Gulf-War-122.php Queen's Dragoon Guards
  9. Web site: Campbell Barracks. BAOR Locations. 22 October 2015.
  10. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/2676525.stm Fact file: 7th Armoured Brigade
  11. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2003/apr/07/iraq.sarahcrown British troops move into Basra
  12. Web site: Allied Participation in Operation Iraqi Freedom. 120. Stephen A. . Carney. Center of Military History, United States Army. 30 September 2011.
  13. http://www.ukwhoswho.com/view/article/oupww/whoswho/U249461/ MARRIOTT, Major-General Patrick Claude
  14. Web site: 7th Armoured Brigade (United Kingdom). 20 December 2014.
  15. Web site: 7th Armoured Brigade to deploy to Afghanistan. 20 December 2014.
  16. Web site: Desert Rats 'will live on' . dead . https://archive.today/20130410153638/http://www.bfbs.com/news/germany/desert-rats-will-live-63034.html . 10 April 2013.
  17. Web site: Desert Rats to lose armoured role . . 6 March 2013. 23 November 2014.
  18. Web site: Desert Rats lose tanks in cutbacks . . 6 March 2013. 23 November 2014.
  19. Web site: Famed Desert Rats to lose their tanks under Army cuts . . 5 March 2013. 23 November 2014.
  20. Web site: Desert Rats formally leave armoured role . 14 November 2014 . 23 November 2014 . . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20141217143912/http://www.army.mod.uk/news/26711.aspx . 17 December 2014.
  21. Web site: 7th Armoured Brigade. https://web.archive.org/web/20080405145753/http://www.army.mod.uk/7bde/7th_brigade_units_.htm. dead. 5 April 2008. Ministry of Defence. 24 September 2018.
  22. http://www.gulabin.com/armynavy/pdf/Army%20Commands%201900-2011.pdf Army Commands