, Belgium, 23 December 1944 fires its modified M5 guns outside of the
U.S. Capitol, during the
2009 Presidential Inauguration In October 1943, the first towed battalion – the
805th – arrived in Italy. Subsequently, the M5 saw combat in the
Italian Campaign and in the
Northwest Europe. One of the most notable engagements came during the German
counterattack on Mortain in August 1944. The 823rd Tank Destroyer Battalion, attached to the
30th Infantry Division, played a key role in the successful defence of
Saint Barthelemy, destroying fourteen tanks and a number of other vehicles, though at the price of losing eleven of its guns. In addition to the anti-tank role, the gun was often used to supplement divisional field artillery or to provide direct fire against enemy fortifications (e.g. a combat report from the
614th TD mentioned a two-gun section firing 143 shells at an enemy post, achieving 139 hits). Although the M5 easily outperformed older anti-tank guns in the US service, it was large and heavy – making it hard to manhandle into position – and its anti-armor characteristics were found to be somewhat disappointing. An
APDS round was never developed for the M5; The greatest test of the TD battalions and their M5 guns came during the
Battle of the Bulge. In this battle, towed tank destroyer units fought much less successfully and suffered much higher losses than self-propelled ones. In the
First U.S. Army, tank destroyer losses were 119, of which 86 were 3-inch guns. In defensive actions against German tank attacks, self-propelled tank destroyers succeeded 14 times out of 16, while 3-inch guns did so only 2 out of 9 times. The ratio of friendly to enemy losses was 1:1.3 in towed units, but a much better 1:6 in self-propelled units. A report from the aforementioned 823rd Tank Destroyer Battalion said that "tank destroyer guns were one by one flanked by enemy tanks and personnel driven from guns by small arms and machine gun fire". Taking the recent combat experience into account, on 11 January 1945, the
War Department confirmed a request to convert the towed TD battalions to the self-propelled form. This decision meant the gradual removal of the M5 from frontline service, a process that continued until the end of the war in Europe. Today, the M5 is utilized by the US Army for
ceremonial purposes. The
Presidential Salute Guns Platoon of
The Old Guard currently maintains a battery of ten M5s at
Fort Myer for service mainly in the
National Capital Region. ==Ammunition==