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[[Category:Norwegian Army]]
[[Category:Norwegian Army]]

Revision as of 02:03, 15 April 2007

Tysklandsbrigaden (Germany Brigade)
Active1947 -1953
CountryNorway
BranchArmy

Tysklandsbrigaden was a Norwegian expeditionary force stationed first in the Hannover area and from 1948 to 1953 in the Schleswig Holstein area of Germany as part of the British occupying force after World War II.

Background

British authorities and the Norwegian government-in-exile in London during World War II initiated discussions about contributing a Norwegian force to the occupation of Germany after the war. In a letter to the European Advisory Commission dated September 2, 1944 the government expressed its intention but with several reservations, including political approval by the Norwegian parliament once it reconvened, as well as financial resources and staff availability.

The British government initially asked for a "small division" of about 12,000 soldiers. But estimates of the available conscription classes meant this would be far more than the manpower available at the time, and the Brigade contingents were, for all brigades, around 4400 men all told. In total about 50 000 Norwegians served in the brigades.[1]

After the social democrat Norwegian government returned to Norway after the German capitulation, the matter was put on hold for some time. But after a visit by the lieutenant general Ole Berg to the United Kingdom in January of 1946, there was a renewed effort to live up to the earlier commitment. The planning process was further complicated by the 1945 parliamentary elections that resulted in a Labour government that reorganized the military leadership of Norwegian defense forces.

In May of 1946 the government published its three-year plan that sought to both build a homeland defense force and provide a force for the occupation of Germany.

The Brigades

Each Brigade served for aproximately 6 months in Germany (though discrepancys exist, particularly after the start of the Korean War when the service time was lengthened), starting with Brigade 471. The numbering of the Brigades was derived from the year (first two digits) and the contingent for that year (third didgit), so Bde. 471 means 1st contingent 1947.

  • Brigade 471
  • Brigade 472
  • Brigade 481
  • Brigade 482
  • Brigade 491
  • Brigade 492
  • Brigade 501
  • Brigade 502
  • Brigade 511
  • Brigade 512
  • Brigade 521
  • Brigade 522

Weapons and Equipment

The post-war armament situation in Norway can be simply described by the term "quartermasters nightmare". The armed forces had and used a wide assortment of Norwegian weapons recaptured from the Germans, captured German weapons, British weapons as issued to Norwegian units trained in Britain, some Swedish weapons that came with the Police force concisting of Norwegian refugees trained and equipped in Sweden during the war and finally British and American weapons from air drops to the resistance.

Tysklandsbrigaden however was supplied by the British and were armed and equipped with British weapons, wore British webbing and British uniforms. But the difficult situation needed a solution, and after testing and debate the decission was made around 1950 to adopt and standardize the weapons then in use by the Unites states for the regular armed forces (the Home Guard (Heimevernet) kept the captured Mauser K98's and other German weapons, most converted to fire the .30-06 round to standardize ammunition supply). This decission also covered Tysklandsbrigaden and its weapons.

Starting with some parts of Brigade 512, the transformation was finished during Bde. 521's contingent. This however had a advertent effect on the training of the personell in Bde. 521 and all the ensuing Brigades, before this a fairly large ammount of ammunition allocated for training purpouses had ensured excellent results through rigourous training. The change from .303 caliber Lee Enfield rifles, Bren LMG's and Vickers Machine guns to .30-06 caliber M1 Garand rifles, BAR LMG's and Browning M1919 Machine guns ( this is only the main infantry weapons in use, the change included just about every type of weapon in use) meant the British could no longer supply Tysklandsbrigaden. The considerable drop of available ammunition showed up clearly, when Bde. 521 had to report that due to lack of ammunition for training, the Brigade was not fit for combat.[1]

This was a very serious situation in deed, as not only had the Brigades mission been changed from pure occupation, to first-line defender against a soviet invasion of Western Europe; There was at this time serious talks about sending troops to the Korean war, and the most convenient troops to send were Tysklandsbrigaden. Luckily for the troops, none were ever sent to Korea, and with the precarious situation a deployment to Korea could easily have ended in disaster.

See also

Sources and Notes

  1. ^ a b Tysklandsbrigadenes Veteranforening (Germany Brigades Veterans association [1]