The First Infantry Division and the U.S. Army Transformed
eBook - ePub

The First Infantry Division and the U.S. Army Transformed

Road to Victory in Desert Storm, 1970-1991

  1. English
  2. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  3. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

The First Infantry Division and the U.S. Army Transformed

Road to Victory in Desert Storm, 1970-1991

About this book

This fast-paced and compelling read closes a significant gap in the historiography of the late Cold War U.S. Army and is crucial for understanding the current situation in the Middle East.

From the author's introduction:
"My purpose is a narrative history of the 1st Infantry Division from 1970 through the Operation Desert Storm celebration held 4th of July 1991. This story is an account of the revolutionary changes in the late Cold War. The Army that overran Saddam Hussein's Legions in four days was the product of important changes stimulated both by social changes and institutional reform. The 1st Infantry Division reflected benefits of those changes, despite its low priority for troops and material. The Division was not an elite formation, but rather excelled in the context of the Army as an institution."

This book begins with a preface by Gordon R. Sullivan, General, USA, Retired. In twelve chapters, author Gregory Fontenot explains the history of the 1st infantry Division from 1970 to 1991. In doing so, his fast-paced narrative includes elements to expand the knowledge of non-military readers. These elements include a glossary, a key to abbreviations, maps, nearly two dozen photographs, and thorough bibliography.

The First infantry Division and the U.S. Army Transformed: Road to Victory in Desert Storm is published with support from the First Division Museum at Cantigny.

Frequently asked questions

Yes, you can cancel anytime from the Subscription tab in your account settings on the Perlego website. Your subscription will stay active until the end of your current billing period. Learn how to cancel your subscription.
No, books cannot be downloaded as external files, such as PDFs, for use outside of Perlego. However, you can download books within the Perlego app for offline reading on mobile or tablet. Learn more here.
Perlego offers two plans: Essential and Complete
  • Essential is ideal for learners and professionals who enjoy exploring a wide range of subjects. Access the Essential Library with 800,000+ trusted titles and best-sellers across business, personal growth, and the humanities. Includes unlimited reading time and Standard Read Aloud voice.
  • Complete: Perfect for advanced learners and researchers needing full, unrestricted access. Unlock 1.4M+ books across hundreds of subjects, including academic and specialized titles. The Complete Plan also includes advanced features like Premium Read Aloud and Research Assistant.
Both plans are available with monthly, semester, or annual billing cycles.
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1 million books across 1000+ topics, we’ve got you covered! Learn more here.
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more here.
Yes! You can use the Perlego app on both iOS or Android devices to read anytime, anywhere — even offline. Perfect for commutes or when you’re on the go.
Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app.
Yes, you can access The First Infantry Division and the U.S. Army Transformed by Gregory Fontenot in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in History & Military & Maritime History. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

CHAPTER ONE

COMING HOME

Your Army is on its ass.
—Major General Donn Starry to General Creighton W. Abrams
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 1970, dawned clear and cool, promising a glorious spring day. By midmorning the sun shone against a cloudless blue sky. Some six thousand soldiers stood on the tarmac of Marshall Army Air Field at Fort Riley, Kansas, to participate in a historic moment. In formation, facing north, the troops could see bleachers filled with eight thousand spectators. On a rise behind the spectators stood the native limestone buildings of the nineteenth-century cavalry post. Most of soldiers on the tarmac formed under the colors of the 24th Infantry Division (Mechanized). Divided vertically with blue and red, the 24 ID’s colors featured a taro leaf. Once known as the Hawaiian Division, it fought across the Pacific Ocean during World War II and the Korean War. More recently, it had returned from service in Germany. The commanding general, MG Robert R. Linville, presided over inactivating the 24 ID and renaming it the 1st Infantry Division (Mechanized). At the conclusion of this ceremony the soldiers on the field would belong to the 1st Infantry Division and the 24 ID would cease to exist. The 24 ID’s soldiers stood with the colors of her brigades and battalions in a manner similar to the legions of Rome. Adjacent to the 24th stood a smaller formation of soldiers from the 1st Infantry Division, also known as the Big Red One for the red numeral 1 on their olive drab shoulder patches. These soldiers, led by BG John Q. Henion, had just returned from Vietnam and stood with colors “cased.”1
Henion assumed command of the Division in Vietnam in March 1970 as an interim commander. He led a guard of honor that would return the Division’s colors home after five years of combat. The 347 soldiers represented every unit in the Division. They formed to return home on March 25, 1970, and conducted two departure ceremonies. They left Vietnam on April 5, 1970, and landed at Forbes Air Force Base, Topeka, Kansas, on April 6, 1970.2
With nearly perfect symmetry, the ceremony occurred exactly five years and one day since the Army had ordered a brigade of the 1st Division to Vietnam on April 14, 1965. The 2nd (Dagger) Brigade left San Francisco by sea on June 25, 1965. (The remaining two brigades, the division artillery and supporting units, followed in August and September.) In the intervening five years the Division served with distinction. Division units earned two Presidential Unit Citations and six Valorous Unit Awards. Fourteen units earned the Meritorious Unit Award, and nine of them received it twice. Twelve soldiers attained the nation’s highest award, the Congressional Medal of Honor.3 The Republic of Vietnam cited several for gallantry.
In the weeks before the ceremony, the commanders and staff in Vietnam worked to help soldiers at Fort Riley embrace their new identity. They sent gifts of unit patches, crests, and artifacts relating to the 1st Division. Everyone understood this transition was important. Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird, who spoke on behalf of President Richard Nixon, made it clear: “The return of the First Infantry Division from Vietnam to Fort Riley will be followed in the months immediately ahead by the redeployment [returning home] of additional thousands of American troops as our Vietnamization program marches forward.”4 The ceremony demonstrated that President Nixon fully intended to end US participation in the war. Although the ceremony had clear political implications, it was important on its own merits to those who served, including LTG Jonathan O. Seaman, who had taken the Division to Vietnam in 1965. LTG Seaman attended, as did a number of other general officers. It was important to the thousands of spectators including government officials from Kansas. The governor and the state’s congressional delegation attended, including the junior senator, Robert J. “Bob” Dole.5
This is a narrative of the 1st Division’s transition from a draftee light infantry division fighting insurgents and North Vietnamese regulars to a mechanized heavy division of the late Cold War. When the Division deployed to Vietnam, it left its two tank battalions and its armored personnel carriers behind and reverted exclusively to light infantry. In place of the two tank battalions, it received the 1st and 2nd Battalions, 2nd Infantry from the 5th Infantry Division. In Vietnam, nine infantry battalions comprised its maneuver force. They relied primarily on helicopters for mobility, but fought dismounted. LTG Seaman argued successfully for the 1st Squadron, 4th Cavalry (1-4 CAV) to retain its armored vehicles. The 1-4 CAV and a tank company attached from the 2nd Battalion, 34th Armor (2-34 AR) provided tactical mobility and mobile firepower.6 The story reflects both the post-Vietnam doldrums and the renaissance in the Army that occurred in the 1970s and 1980s. This first chapter assesses the state of the US Army in the early 1970s and the reforms that produced a unit fundamentally different from the one that fought in Vietnam.
In the two decades that followed Laird’s welcome home, the Army transitioned to an all-volunteer force, revising and revitalizing tactical and operational doctrine and the way it proposed to fight. To enable units to fight the Active Defense and AirLand Battle (the latter a complex operational doctrine that stressed attacking an enemy throughout its depth), the Army took advantage of new weapons and supporting systems. To prepare units to use those weapons, in accordance with new operational concepts, the Army revolutionized training. Live and constructive simulations replicated high-intensity combat against a well-equipped, well-trained, and well-led enemy. While it is true that this transformation stemmed in part from external stimulus, it is also true that the US Army took the need to change to heart. This chapter and the next follow the transformation of the 1st Division.
The Life of Riley
The Division that deployed to Desert Storm in 1990 bore little resemblance to the one that returned home from Vietnam in 1970. Even as the US Army drew down, the Soviet Union’s combat capability continued to grow. The Army returned from Vietnam with a host of problems quite apart from money. Reductions in force (RIFs) ravaged units. The drawdown affected all ranks. When the draftees went, so too did many officers who had hoped to make a career. The RIFs got mostly “chaff,” but also some of the “wheat.” Further, much of the Army’s equipment was obsolescent, if not obsolete, yet there was little money for acquisition. Tactical thinking about conventional war in Europe ossified while the force focused on fighting in Vietnam.
Bedraggled, underfunded, and reeling from social upheaval, the Army struggled in the early 1970s; within and without, it suffered criticism that often proved bitter. Richard A. Gabriel and Paul L. Savage, both Army officers and academics, wrote a scathing criticism of the Army, claiming “disintegration of unit cohesion had proceeded to such an extent that by 1972 accommodation with the North Vietnamese was the only realistic alternative to risking a military debacle in the field.”7 Their criticism was harsh and overdrawn, but nonetheless it was seconded by others. Briefing the results of a study on professionalism in the officer corps, LTC Walter F. Ulmer Jr. provided an equally critical assessment from within. In a briefing with senior officers he reported that “a scenario that was repeatedly described to us during our interviews for this study includes an ambitious transitory commander, marginally skilled in the complexities of his duties, engulfed in producing statistical results, fearful of personal failure, too busy to talk with or listen to subordinates, and determined to submit acceptably optimistic reports which reflect faultless completion of a variety of tasks at the expense of the sweat and frustrations of his subordinates.”8
The critiques and questions ranged from how the Army could have commissioned the officer who perpetrated the My Lai Massacre to institutional racism. Simultaneously, the Soviet Union seemed ascendant. While the United States was embroiled in Vietnam, the Soviets modernized their enormous Army. The initial success of the Soviet Union’s Arab clients in the 1973 Yom Kippur War against Israel suggested hitherto unappreciated capability of Soviet weapons and tactics; the US Army’s equipment, tactics, and soldiers, by contrast, seemed inadequate.
Then CPT Bob Killebrew attended the ceremony in 1970 as Linville’s aide-de-camp; that summer he would take command of a rifle company. Looking back on that time, Killebrew remarks that “people forget how unbearably screwed up the Army was in 1971, 1972, and 1973”;9 Racial unrest, drug abuse, and indiscipline plagued the Army and the Division. But Killebrew’s description applied beyond 1973: the Army struggled through much of the 1970s and 1980s. The Hollow Army, as GEN Edward C. Meyer, chief of staff for 1979–83, termed it, had much to overcome.10
After Laird concluded his remarks, the soldiers who began the morning as part of the 24th Infantry Division now passed in review as the 1st Infantry Division and resumed their mission as part of a “dual-based” formation. Under this concept the 1st and 2nd Brigades and most of the support units served at Fort Riley. The 3rd Brigade and a bit more than one-third of the supporting structure served with VII Corps in southern Bavaria. Meeting commitments in Vietnam, NATO, and the Republic of Korea while paying for President Lyndon B. Johnson’s Great Society initiatives alongside opposition to the war in Vietnam inevitably led to budget reductions. In 1970 the US Congress reduced the Army budget by 10 percent, reflecting these pressures and the logical consequence of drawing down in Vietnam. The United States could not afford to maintain the number of units it had stationed in Germany. Dual basing enabled the 1st Division to be assigned against the General Defense Plan (GDP) for Europe at reduced cost. It was a practical solution if the Division could return to Germany quickly. When the United States announced its intention to draw down troop strength in Europe, it promised to “[k]eep available substantial reinforcements to supplement a European mobilization.” With that proviso, several units returned to the United States in 1968.11
To enable rapid return, the Army positioned equipment in Europe sufficient for several US-based divisions, including the 1 ID, which would then deploy only their troops and light equipment. This led to an elaborate system of storage facilities that maintained equipment for use by units arriving from the United States. With perfect, if awkward, precision, the Army called it Prepositioning of Materiel Configured in Unit Sets, and further obfuscated the idea by referring to it as POMCUS. NATO and the United States agreed to exercise the Return of Forces to Germany annually; reduced to the acronym REFORGER, this overarching enterprise became crucial to the Division’s training regimen and culture.12
The 24th Infantry Division participated in the first REFORGER in January 1969; GEN Lyman L. Lemnitzer, Supreme Allied Commander for Europe, claimed the exercise demonstrated the utility of dual-based forces.13 Less than five months after the ceremony in April, the 1st Division went to Germany for REFORGER II. There it exercised against simulated enemy Orange forces portrayed by the European-based 3rd Infantry Division. In response to an attack by Orange, the Division crossed the Main River and counterattacked to restore the border between the hostile Orange country and the friendly Blue country. The exercise ended on October 23, 1969, when the Division seized Objective Junction City, named for the garrison town adjacent to Fort Riley. The troops then road-marched to Grafenwohr Training Area in southeast Bavaria, where they test-fired all the major weapons drawn from storage.14 Afterward, they prepared equipment for storage, returned it, and flew home.
The Army and Air Force provided the bulk of the American resources to REFORGER. Other NATO units and the German Territorial Army played important roles. These exercises rehearsed plans ranging from port operations to rear-area security. NATO executed REFORGER twenty-five times in twenty-four years. In 1973 the Division deployed to Germany twice: the first exercise began in January and the second in October.15 The program enabled and drove training during the lean budget years of the 1970s and early 1980s. It also drove a boom-and-bust cycle in operations. In the months before an exercise, the Army brought the Division up to strength. Money afforded preparation and training that led to a peak during the exercise. On returning home, the Division drew down as the Army reassigned soldiers to higher-priority units.
This cycle caused enormous turbulence at Fort Riley. CPT Killebrew, commander B Company, 1st Battalion, 2nd Infantry (1-2 IN) through two exercises, recalls that his company “would expand (getting ready to go) and contract (on return) like an accordion.” An “endless stream of guys coming back from Vietnam” joined his unit, adding to the turbulence.16 These veterans, mostly draftees with little time remaining on their two-year service obligation, arrived and served three or four months, then got out. Generally they had no experience with mechanized infantry, so serving at Fort Riley came as shock.
Nevertheless, deployments to Germany brought more advantages than disadvantages. REFORGER shifted dollars to the Division and provided focus. Maneuvering in Germany enabled units to train for their wartime mission, which required thinking through the not inconsequential matters of getting to Germany, drawing equipment rapidly, and getting into position. The benefit is clear from the Army historical summary for 1970, which notes, “Only in exercise REFORGER II was it possible for a full division to maneuver in the field.”17 Deploying to Germany on REFORGER served an essential purpose in the national strategy.
The Army took REFORGER seriously and undertook “Intensified personnel management actions . . . to prepare REFORGER units . . . for their annual exercises.”18 But the exercise was not merely about getting to Germany. The Division exercised its role in the GDP. In Kevlar Legions, BG John S. Brown asserts GDP “was not just stacks of papers locked in t...

Table of contents

  1. Cover Page
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright Page
  4. Dedication
  5. Contents
  6. List of Figures and Maps
  7. Foreword
  8. Acknowledgments
  9. Note to the Reader
  10. Author Notes
  11. Abbreviations
  12. Preface
  13. Introduction
  14. Chapter One - Coming Home
  15. Chapter Two - Victory in the Cold War
  16. Chapter Three - Saddam Hussein Moves South
  17. Chapter Four - Getting There: Planes, Trains, and the Jolly Rubino
  18. Chapter Five - Heading For the Badlands
  19. Chapter Six - Alarums and Excursions: First Contact with the Enemy
  20. Chapter Seven - Cue the Curtain: First Battles and Battlefield Preparation
  21. Chapter Eight - Once More into the Breach
  22. Chapter Nine - The March Up Country
  23. Chapter Ten - Fright Night: The Attack on Objective Norfolk
  24. Chapter Eleven - Go for the Blue: The Way Home
  25. Chapter Twelve - Safwan and Home
  26. Chapter Thirteen - Epilogue: You Left Your Mark
  27. Bibliography
  28. Index