Page:John Banks Wilson - Maneuver and Firepower (1998).djvu/214

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192
MANEUVER AND FIREPOWER

TABLE 14

Divisions Activated in 1943

Component Division Date Location
RA 2d Cavalry 25 February Fort Clark, Tex.
AUS 11th Airborne 25 February Camp Mackall, N.C.
OR 9th Infantry 25 February Camp Swift, Tex.
AUS 20th Armored 15 March Camp Campbell, Ky.
AUS 106th Infantry 15 March Fort Jackson, S.C.
AUS 17th Airborne 15 April Camp Mackall, N.C.
AUS 66th Infantry 15 April Camp Blanding, Fla.
AUS 75th Infantry 15 April Fort Leonard Wood, Mo.
AUS 69th Infantry 15 May Camp Shelby, Miss.
AUS 63d Infantry 15 June Camp Blanding, Fla.
AUS 70th Infantry 15 June Camp Adair, Oreg.
AUS 42d Infantry 14 July Camp Gruber, Okla.
AUS 10th Light 15 July Camp Hale, Colo.
AUS 16th Armored 15 July Camp Chaffee, Ark.
AUS 71st Light 15 July Fort Benning, Ga.
AUS 13th Airborne 13 August Fort Bragg, N.C.
AUS 65th Infantry 16 August Camp Shelby, Miss.

56th Cavalry Reconnaissance Troop, Mechanized, but did not see combat. The former brigade's cavalry regiments went on to fight in the Pacific and China-Burma-India theaters.[1]

With ongoing manpower shortages, the Army continually examined the relationship between the total military force and the manpower pool available for military service. That relationship was constantly balanced against the manpower required to maintain the productive capacity of industry, which remained vital to the overall Allied war effort. As the war progressed, staff studies suggested that the number of divisions mobilized could be cut. Soviet armies had checked the German advance, and it appeared that the Allies would gain air superiority over Europe. Therefore, shortly before the invasion of northern France in 1944, the War Department approved a troop basis that contained 90 divisions rather than 100 within a total Army strength of 7,700,000. The French were to raise ten divisions, and the United States was to equip them, which created equipment shortages. That troop basis called for 1 light, 2 cavalry, 5 airborne, 16 armored, and 66 infantry divisions. With the inactivation of the 2d Cavalry Division in May 1944, the number of divisions in the troop basis was reduced by one and the number of divisions raised during World War II remained at eighty-nine. The decision to limit the number of divisions haunted War Department planners during the remainder of the war for they feared that mobilization had not gone far enough. Marshall, however, held to the eighty-nine divisions in the troop basis.[2]

  1. MacGregor, Integration of the Armed Forces, p. 33; Ltr, TAG to CGs, AGF and North African Theater of Operations, 11 Apr 44, sub: Inactivation and Disbandment of Units, AG 322 (8 Apr 44) OB-I-GNGCT-M, AG file, DAMH-HSO; Hinds, Second Cavalry Division, pp. 64–67: Ltr, TAB to CGs, Fourth Army and Southern Defense Command, 24 Apr 44, sub: Assignment, Reorganization and Redesignation of Certain Cavalry Units, AG 322 (22 Apr 44) OB-I-GNGCTM, AG Reference files, DAMH-HSO; Mary Lee Stubbs and Stanley Russell Connor, Armor-Cavalry Part II: Army National Guard, Army Lineage Series (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1972), pp. 167–87.
  2. Greenfield et al., Organization of Ground Combat Troops, table, "Ground Forces in the Army, Dec 41–Apr 45," and pp. 163–81; Maurice Matloff, "The 90-Division Gamble," Command Decisions, Kent R. Greenfield, ed. (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1960), pp. 365–81.