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retiredgysgt February 23rd, 2020 05:06 PM

Regiment
 
Is a Regiment the basic size of a Bn or Brigade or In different Countries armies one might be true and in other the other true?

zovs66 February 23rd, 2020 05:55 PM

Re: Regiment
 
Generally it goes like this.

Soldier/Marine
Squad
Platoon
Company
Battalion
Regiment/Brigade
Division
Corps
Army
Army Group

So 'generally' a:
squad is 8-12 men
platoon is 2-4 squads
company is 2-4 platoons
battalion is 2-4 companies
regiment is 2-4 battalions
brigade is 2-6 or 8 battalions
division is 2-3 regiments or 2 brigades
corps is 2-4 divisions
army is 2-4 corps
army group is 2-4 armies

generally,

Mobhack February 23rd, 2020 06:22 PM

Re: Regiment
 
A regiment is a collection of batallions.

In some armies, the regiment is the deployable unit (the continental or unitary regimental system) and in others the batallions are the deployable units (e.g. the British system). The latter seems to be taking over from the unitary system worldwide.

In some armies, the regiment (a large one of 4 batallions) takes the place of the brigade, some armies deploy 2 regiments to form a brigade, and the British system appoints 3-4 batallions (not often ones from the same parent regiment) to a brigade. The US system of WW2 was to add divisional support units to a regiment to form a Regimental Combat Team - thier equivalent of a brigade.

zovs66 February 23rd, 2020 06:48 PM

Re: Regiment
 
My post (#2) was generally for WW2 combatants, plus Korea and to some extent Vietnam. But as Andy points out from around Vietnam onwards most countries have made (due to the changing nature of combat and warfare) combat units more manageable and flexible.

Sort of like using both combined arms but a lot smarter now with the changing nature of warfare (counter terrorism).

The USMC has free stuff on the Iraq War and Afghanistan War which has some very detailed and useful info on how the US and USMC in particular deploy now.

Mobhack February 23rd, 2020 06:56 PM

Re: Regiment
 
Some French units are still termed "demi brigades" - a term that took off after the revolution as a replacement for regiment which was seen as being tained with the old monarchism. In thier case, 2 regiments formed a brigade, hence the name demi-brigade. For some reason, some regiments have kept that revolutionary title up to the present day.

retiredgysgt February 23rd, 2020 06:59 PM

Re: Regiment
 
On NATO Symbols is the 2 slashes over a unit a battalion? The reason I ask is because I looked at South Africa's order of battle and it has some named Battalions and some named regiments.

Mobhack February 23rd, 2020 07:10 PM

Re: Regiment
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NATO_J...tary_Symbology

retiredgysgt February 23rd, 2020 07:15 PM

Re: Regiment
 
So a common wealth regiment is the same as everyone else's battalion.

Mobhack February 23rd, 2020 07:23 PM

Re: Regiment
 
A commonwealth regiment could be one batallion or maybe 3 - depending on recruitment in its cachement area. Plus as well as regular bns, there were sometimes Territorial bns of weekend volunteers.

In the 2 world wars, then there were 1st, 2nd, 3rd etc regiments of say the Black Watch created - each regiment being around 3 bns. Shrunk back to the original size post war.

But the individual batallion is what was deployed - not the entire regiment, unlike the Continentals.

retiredgysgt February 23rd, 2020 07:31 PM

Re: Regiment
 
The south African "regiments" are Battalions as shown on the graphic display for the unit structure. They are 2 slashes over the combat symbol. Thanks for the help.

Aeraaa February 23rd, 2020 07:34 PM

Re: Regiment
 
In Greece, the regiment is practically a weak brigade, approximately 50-60% of the latter's strength. For example, the 21st regiment in NE Greece is composed of 2 infantry battalions(one mechanized)+a tank company+ artillery company+HQ and signals company. A brigade has normally two infantry battalions+tank battalion+artillery battalion+logistics battalion+other stuff (HQ, signals,engineers etc.)

Mobhack February 23rd, 2020 07:53 PM

Re: Regiment
 
Also remember that cavalry is different (naturally!).

Commonwealth cavalry units of batallion size are called "Regiments" - and unlike the infantry, were not expanded in wartime.

The Royal Tank Regiment is an exception, not classified as cavalry, and formed of several regiments (1/RTR, 2/RTR etc).

The artillery is a Regiment which contains regiments, a batallion sized group of 3-4 batteries being termed a regiment as with the cavalry.

FASTBOAT TOUGH February 23rd, 2020 09:59 PM

Re: Regiment
 
These might help as you're looking into SANDF.
www.dod.mil.za
www.army.mil.za

(For the last click on "structure" and "formations & brigades"

Anyway always willing to help a Marine!?!

Back on Vaca.

Regards,
Pat
:capt:

retiredgysgt February 23rd, 2020 10:34 PM

Re: Regiment
 
I want info on 1966 to 1989 as that is when Border war occurred. Mostly 1975 to 1989 as in the game that is when Angola is present which gives me two of the foes Angola and Cuba.


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