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3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment (3ACR) (US)

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  • #16
    Exactly. Rumours.
    Many might even put those rumours into the same basket as alien landings,
    Michael Jackson being white, or black man having a snowflakes chance in hell of becoming US President!
    If it moves, shoot it, if not push it, if it still doesn't move, use explosives.

    Nothing happens in isolation - it's called "the butterfly effect"

    Mors ante pudorem

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    • #17
      Keep in mind James that many of the units in the US Army by 2000 would have contingents in them, per canon, of non-US soldiers already- perhaps the 3rd ACR already had so many Germans and Brits and other NATO troops in it that Europe was really its home now and not the US

      The excellent article that was posted a few weeks ago on Germany shows how the US troops that were left behind could have reformed themselves under the US HQ units that stayed behind,especially after DIA agents helped bring several of them back over to being under US operational control.

      You are right in that we do have different ideas of how bleak it is in Twilight 2000 - and my view by the way is hardly sunny - but its defintiely not as pitch black as Howling Wilderness and Kidnapped portrays it.

      Comment


      • #18
        Originally posted by Olefin View Post
        ...not as pitch black as Howling Wilderness and Kidnapped portrays it.
        "The Road" is pitch black. HW and K are just slightly overcast summer days by comparison!

        T2K mostly certainly could have been MUCH bleaker than it is. Could be a world similar to Post Nuke http://www.postnukecomic.com/comic_p...issue=1&page=0
        If it moves, shoot it, if not push it, if it still doesn't move, use explosives.

        Nothing happens in isolation - it's called "the butterfly effect"

        Mors ante pudorem

        Comment


        • #19
          Originally posted by Legbreaker View Post
          T2K mostly certainly could have been MUCH bleaker than it is. Could be a world similar to Post Nuke http://www.postnukecomic.com/comic_p...issue=1&page=0
          Such a pity that the author never came back from his hiatus. I used to get so excited waiting for each new page. Oh well.
          sigpic "It is better to be feared than loved" - Nicolo Machiavelli

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          • #20
            Only typos I saw were that picture 6 is captioned as soldiers from 1st Troop, which should be 1st Squadron, I assume. The 2004 organization shows a C Squadron that would be C Company (as a tank pure unit) or C Troop under US usage. Not sure if the Germanification of the plays a role in the nomenclature by that point.

            On the Etranger 2300AD group, "Panzerkavellerie Regiment" passed muster among German members as an acceptable German rendering of the American term for 11th and 107th ACR and portions of 1st Cav Div which remained on the books with the German military in the 24th century, with those units being pretty tradition-bound and flashy components of the Bavarian military before reunification.

            Thanks. My main aim for the reasoning behind the non-evacuation was to show some of the possible reasons for not evacuating.
            I think the US units left behind in Germany and Poland are probably a mix of it being logistically unfeasible to get back (obvious for the real outliers like 8th ID and 2nd MarDiv, but likely a big issue for many others) and units that were war weary enough and settled in enough in their cantonments that they preferred their present circumstances to the unknown. Part of it may be German and other non-American recruits making their sentiments felt, but I suspect a bunch of it is American veterans who by 2000 have German wives and other roots in their cantonment areas and more loyalty to their immediate unit than any higher headquarters after the world fell apart.

            Very good work - really brings the regiment to life. However I dont agree with the 3rd ACR staying in Germany because it didnt want to go home and fight CivGov units - for one with the Russians and Mexicans still occupying US territory there are lots of foreign enemies for them to fight still.

            I think it was more that they didnt agree with the decision to leave a US ally in the lurch - i.e. the Germans and British troops who were still fighting the Soviets - and also the fact that there were US troops still cut off in Poland.
            American units mutinying against higher headquarters and defecting to foreign armies because they were motivated and eager to keep bashing on the Russians seems improbable to me. First, I don't think anyone by 2000 is especially eager for action -- pretty much everyone on the ground in Europe at that point is very much an old soldier and natural selection will have culled the hell out of anyone who was especially eager to rush into battle. The veterans by 2000 will be, or have become, pragmatists and realists. Second, I'd think any units that were really eager scrappers by that point, if any existed, would also tend to be loyal to higher HQs.

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            • #21
              Oh I agree with you Horse Soldier - I am not saying they are eager beavers ready to get out there and kick Ivan's butt. But I can see men who have fought for years and dont want any part of being seen as running away while the war is still officially on staying instead of going on the Bug Out Fleet.

              Especially those with close ties to German or British units who see leaving as selling out their allies and dont want to leave until its really over. And the Russians still having troops on the ground in Germany itself is hardly saying we won, lets go home.

              Plus there is a strong feeling in the US military that we dont leave buddies behind - and there are a lot of US troops still cut off in Poland that I can see people rankling a lot at the decision to write them off. Possibly to the point that they tell their higher ups to go to hell, we arent going anywhere till everyone goes home and staying.

              That could be the reason so many HQ troops stayed - i.e. they wont leave without the Marines, the 8th and everyone else still on enemy territory but still very much alive and intact as units.

              Actually thats one group that for sure would have stayed - there is no way any Marines still on German, Norwegian or UK soil would have gone home with the 2nd still cut off in Poland. Marines do not abandon their buddies - ever.

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              • #22
                Originally posted by James Langham View Post
                Please, spelling is never my strongest point.
                Can you PM me your email address, so I can send you my markups

                Originally posted by HorseSoldier View Post
                The 2004 organization shows a C Squadron that would be C Company (as a tank pure unit) or C Troop under US usage.
                Question for the cavalry troopers and TO&E nuts here. I was aware that the troops of the regiment would be lettered consecutively, were the Tank companies and artillery batteries included That is, I'm sure 1st Squadron had A, B, C Troops, are the tanks D Company, and the artillery E I'm speaking more to the prewar and wartime organizations, not necessarily the German one.

                One of my wargaming friends commanded an artillery battery in the 107th ACR in the '70s, he said that his battery had a Field Artillery regimental affiliation (i.e. 3-92 FA), so they would have been outside the 3rd's numbering/lettering. FWIW, that was when there was only one battery for the whole regiment, IIRC.
                Last edited by Adm.Lee; 01-09-2013, 03:13 PM.
                My Twilight claim to fame: I ran "Allegheny Uprising" at Allegheny College, spring of 1988.

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                • #23
                  Question for the cavalry troopers and TO&E nuts here. I was aware that the troops of the regiment would be lettered consecutively, were the Tank companies and artillery batteries included That is, I'm sure 1st Squadron had A, B, C Troops, are the tanks D Company, and the artillery E I'm speaking more to the prewar and wartime organizations, not necessarily the German one.
                  I believe under the Reagan-era derived MTOEs GDW used for USAVG the artillery batteries were under a separate battalion headquarters and numbered internally to it, outside the troop lettering system. The tank companies were organic squadron assets and lettered sequentially as the fourth troop/company in each squadron.

                  Wiki seems to indicate the same practice in effect with the current US Army reduction of armored cavalry regiments, including 3rd, to bad jokes. (As a cavalry scout I can only hope there will be some sort of divine retribution visited in this life or the next on the decision makers who committed the mortal sin of transforming the ACRs into Stryker infantry brigades and the NTC OPFOR. Just disgraceful.)

                  One of my wargaming friends commanded an artillery battery in the 107th ACR in the '70s, he said that his battery had a Field Artillery regimental affiliation (i.e. 3-92 FA), so they would have been outside the 3rd's numbering/lettering. FWIW, that was when there was only one battery for the whole regiment, IIRC.
                  May also relate to how the National Guard was organizing things in that unit at that specific time, especially if the unit was organized across state lines and such.

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    Originally posted by Targan View Post
                    Such a pity that the author never came back from his hiatus. I used to get so excited waiting for each new page. Oh well.
                    He posted an update on his status just a few weeks ago.
                    If it moves, shoot it, if not push it, if it still doesn't move, use explosives.

                    Nothing happens in isolation - it's called "the butterfly effect"

                    Mors ante pudorem

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      by the way Legbreaker I totally agree with you on "The Road" - thats about as pitch black as it gets

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        Originally posted by Adm.Lee View Post
                        Can you PM me your email address, so I can send you my markups

                        Question for the cavalry troopers and TO&E nuts here. I was aware that the troops of the regiment would be lettered consecutively, were the Tank companies and artillery batteries included That is, I'm sure 1st Squadron had A, B, C Troops, are the tanks D Company, and the artillery E I'm speaking more to the prewar and wartime organizations, not necessarily the German one.

                        One of my wargaming friends commanded an artillery battery in the 107th ACR in the '70s, he said that his battery had a Field Artillery regimental affiliation (i.e. 3-92 FA), so they would have been outside the 3rd's numbering/lettering. FWIW, that was when there was only one battery for the whole regiment, IIRC.
                        For the Time Frame of Twilight, the break down would be

                        First Squadron
                        A, B, and C Troops= these are the cavalry troops
                        D Company= this is the tank company
                        How Battery, 1st Squadron=this would be the squadrons attached artillery battery

                        Second Squadron
                        E, F, G troops
                        H Company
                        How Battery, 2nd Squadron

                        Third Squadron
                        I, K, L troops
                        M Company
                        How Battery, 3rd Squadron

                        Fourth Squadron
                        N, O, P= scout helicopter troops
                        Q, R = attack helicopter troops

                        In the USAREUR regiments (2nd and 11th), the squadron How Batteries were consolidated at the regimental level, this became How-2nd ACR, the state side units, for much of the Cold War period, kept the batteries at the squadron level, although I've heard that the 3ACR adopted USAREUR practice.

                        Now enters the National Guard.

                        They march to the beat of a different rock band!

                        Regimental numbers are allocated to the state, this is a carry over from World War II. The states are not required to man all of their allocated bloc of numbers, but many states have adopted the practise of honoring previous units. This would most likely be what happened with the 107th ACR.
                        The reason that the American Army does so well in wartime, is that war is chaos, and the American Army practices chaos on a daily basis.

                        Comment


                        • #27
                          Originally posted by dragoon500ly View Post
                          For the Time Frame of Twilight, the break down would be

                          First Squadron
                          A, B, and C Troops= these are the cavalry troops
                          D Company= this is the tank company
                          How Battery, 1st Squadron=this would be the squadrons attached artillery battery

                          Second Squadron
                          E, F, G troops
                          H Company
                          How Battery, 2nd Squadron

                          Third Squadron
                          I, K, L troops
                          M Company
                          How Battery, 3rd Squadron

                          Fourth Squadron
                          N, O, P= scout helicopter troops
                          Q, R = attack helicopter troops

                          In the USAREUR regiments (2nd and 11th), the squadron How Batteries were consolidated at the regimental level, this became How-2nd ACR, the state side units, for much of the Cold War period, kept the batteries at the squadron level, although I've heard that the 3ACR adopted USAREUR practice.
                          The 3rd, at least when I was there a decade ago, How Bats was assigned at the squadron level, and when we went to the sandbox, they rolled with the squadron they was assigned to.
                          Member of the Bofors fan club! The M1911 of automatic cannon.

                          Proud fan(atic) of the CV90 Series.

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                          • #28
                            Originally posted by Olefin View Post
                            by the way Legbreaker I totally agree with you on "The Road" - thats about as pitch black as it gets
                            Nothing gets as pitch-black as Threads.
                            I'm guided by the beauty of our weapons...First We Take Manhattan, Jennifer Warnes

                            Entirely too much T2K stuff here: www.pmulcahy.com

                            Comment


                            • #29
                              Originally posted by dragoon500ly View Post
                              In the USAREUR regiments (2nd and 11th), the squadron How Batteries were consolidated at the regimental level, this became How-2nd ACR, the state side units, for much of the Cold War period, kept the batteries at the squadron level, although I've heard that the 3ACR adopted USAREUR practice.

                              Now enters the National Guard.

                              They march to the beat of a different rock band!
                              This was the '70s, after all.

                              Regimental numbers are allocated to the state, this is a carry over from World War II. The states are not required to man all of their allocated bloc of numbers, but many states have adopted the practise of honoring previous units. This would most likely be what happened with the 107th ACR.
                              I figured it was more an issue of the Field Artillery considering it one of their own.
                              I don't think it was a historic-to-Ohio number, either, as the WW1-WW2 era Ohio FA regiments were in the 130's. Somewhere, I have files on as many Ohio NG units as I could find (long, boring nights manning the phones at the Columbus library's history desk).

                              Anyway, you answered my question.
                              My Twilight claim to fame: I ran "Allegheny Uprising" at Allegheny College, spring of 1988.

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                              • #30
                                Update

                                A few extra bits added and minor edits to clarify/expand.
                                Attached Files

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