1st Panzer Division (Bundeswehr)

52°22′11.31″N 9°46′11.77″E / 52.3698083°N 9.7699361°E / 52.3698083; 9.7699361

1st Panzer Division
1. Panzerdivision
1st Armoured Division insignia
Active1956–present
Country Germany
 Netherlands
BranchArmy
TypePanzer
Size19,000 soldiers
Part ofGerman Army
Garrison/HQOldenburg (Oldenburg)
Nickname(s)The first one
Die Erste
Motto(s)Roughly: Go! Let's tackle it!
Man drup - man to! (Low German)
AnniversariesJuly 1st 1956
EngagementsKosovo War
War in Afghanistan
Commanders
Current
commander
Generalmajor Heico Hübner
Notable
commanders
General Henning von Ondarza, COMAFCENT 1991–1994
General Helge Hansen, COMAFCENT 1994–1996
General Wolf-Dieter Langheld, COMJFC-B 2010–2012

The 1st Panzer Division (German: "1. Panzerdivision", short: "1. PzDiv") is an armoured division of the German Army. Its headquarter is based in Oldenburg.[1] In the course of the last reorganisation of the Bundeswehr it became part of the Heavy Forces.[2] The division is equipped and trained for high intensity combat operations against militarily organized enemies as well as peacekeeping missions. The majority of all German troops assigned to EU-Battlegroups and Nato Response Forces will come from this division.

The 43rd Mechanized Brigade of the Royal Netherlands Army is integrated into the 1st Panzer Division since 2016.[3]

History

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This division was formed on 1 July 1956, the day of the official inauguration of the Bundeswehr. It was the first fully operational unit of the new German Army. At first referred to as 1st Grenadier Division, it was reorganized in the 1980s and made fully armoured in 1981. During this period it was part of I Corps of the Bundeswehr Heer, in turn part of NATO's Northern Army Group, Allied Forces Central Europe.

1st Panzer Division has deployed to the Balkans, Afghanistan and to several peacekeeping operations. Troops of this division were also deployed to the support of civilian agencies during large natural disasters such as the Hamburg Floods of 1962, disastrous wild fires in Northern Germany in the 1970s and the 2002 Floods in Eastern Germany.

The division cultivates a partnership with the United States Army 28th Infantry Division.

In April 2019 the division headquarters took the role of exercise High Command (HICON) for Exercise "Allied Spirit X" at Hohenfels Training Area in Bavaria.[4] The exercise lead is routinely rotated among coalition/NATO partners. The exercise primarily involved the 21st Panzer Brigade, the Lithuanian Iron Wolf Brigade, and their subordinate units; 5,630 participants from 15 nations took part. The division already had Dutch, British and Polish officers within its ranks. The US Army's 2nd Battalion, 34th Armored Regiment, took part in the exercise.[5][6] Six engineering advisor teams from 1st Security Force Assistance Brigade provided hands-on experience and testing of secure communications between NATO allies and partners.[7][8][9]

Organization

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1st Panzer Division organization 2023 with integrated Dutch units

Geographic Distribution

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1 Panzer Division
 
1 Ops Sup.
 
610 Signal
 
901 Eng.
 
 
*
 
 
3 Recon
 
33 PzGren.
 
91 Jäger
 
130 Engineer
 
141 Supply
 
7 Recon
 
203 Panzer
 
1 Jäger
 
921 Jäger
 
1 Engineer
 
7 Supply
 
6 Recon
 
401 PzGren.
 
411 PzGren.
 
908 PzGren.
 
142 Supply
 
413 Jäger
 
803 Engineer
 
414 Panzer
Locations of 1st Panzer Division units:
Units:   Panzer   Panzergrenadier   Jäger (Rifles)   Reconnaissance   Artillery   Engineers   Signals   Logistics
*92 Panzergrenadier, 93 Panzer, 325 Artillery

References

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  1. ^ a b "1. Panzerdivision". www.bundeswehr.de (in German). 2024-10-09. Retrieved 2024-11-08.
  2. ^ "Starkes Rückgrat: Schwere Kräfte des Heeres". www.bundeswehr.de (in German). 2023-03-30. Retrieved 2024-11-08.
  3. ^ "43. Mechanisierte Brigade". www.bundeswehr.de (in German). 2024-01-04. Retrieved 2024-11-08.
  4. ^ Sgt. Christopher Stewart (April 8, 2019) Germany's 1st Armored Division Spearheads Allied Spirit X[permanent dead link]
  5. ^ "Exercise brings American firepower to European partners". www.army.mil. 2019-10-08. Retrieved 2024-11-08.
  6. ^ "Intel team proves its value in multinational exercise". www.army.mil. 2019-04-26. Retrieved 2024-11-08.
  7. ^ "Combat advisor teams sharpen skills in multinational exercise". www.army.mil. 2019-05-01. Retrieved 2024-11-08.
  8. ^ [A RIC-U might be used by a coalition partner to encrypt their individual networks, when interoperating with a US Army voice network.]
  9. ^ "3rd SFAB and Kurdish Peshmerga work side by side to defeat threats". www.army.mil. 2020-02-25. Retrieved 2024-11-08.
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