Post–World War II The 82nd Airborne division returned to the United States on 3 January 1946 on the . The 82nd initially was staged at
Camp Shanks, New York, where they drilled for the coming
Victory Parade, to be held in New York City on 12 January 1946. In 1947 the
555th Parachute Infantry Battalion was assigned to the 82nd and was reflagged as the 3d Battalion,
505th Parachute Infantry Regiment, redesignated as the 505th Airborne Infantry Regiment effective 15 December 1947. Instead of being demobilized, the 82nd found a permanent home at
Fort Bragg, North Carolina, designated a Regular Army division on 15 November 1948. The 82nd was not sent to the
Korean War, as both presidents
Truman and Eisenhower chose to keep it in strategic reserve in the event of a
Soviet ground attack anywhere in the world. Life in the 82nd in the 1950s and 1960s consisted of intensive training exercises in all environments and locations, including
Panama, the Far East, and the
continental United States.
Pentomic organization In 1957, the division implemented the
pentomic organization, officially Reorganization of the Airborne Division (ROTAD), to better prepare for
tactical nuclear war in Europe. Five battle groups, each with a headquarters and service company, five rifle companies and a mortar battery, replaced the division's three regiments of three battalions each. The division's battle groups were: • 1st Airborne Battle Group (ABG), 187th Infantry (reassigned from the 24th Infantry Division on 8February 1959)(1) • 1st ABG, 325th Infantry • 2nd ABG, 501st Infantry • 1st ABG, 503d Infantry (reassigned from the 24th Infantry Division on 1July 1958)(2) • 2nd ABG, 503rd Infantry (reassigned to the 25th Infantry Division on 24 June 1960) • 2nd ABG, 504th Infantry (assigned effective 9May 1960)(1) • 1st ABG, 505th Infantry (reassigned to the 8th Infantry Division on 15 January 1959) ::(1) 1st ABG, 504th Infantry and 1st ABG, 505th Infantry were reassigned to the 8th Infantry Division in central
West Germany to provide airborne capability in Germany; in turn, 1–187th and 1-503d were reassigned from the 24th Infantry Division in southern Germany to the 82nd Airborne Division ::(2) 2nd ABG, 503rd Infantry was reassigned to the 25th Infantry Division and stationed in
Okinawa to provide airborne capability in the Pacific on 24 June 1960. This ABG was reassigned to the 173d Airborne Brigade on 26 March 1963. • Battery D, 320th Artillery • Battery E, 320th Artillery • Battery B, 377th Artillery • additional division elements consisted of: • 82nd Medical Company • 82nd Signal Battalion • 82nd Aviation Company • Troop A, 17th Cavalry • 307th Airborne Engineer Battalion • 407th Supply and Transportation Battalion (The 82nd Quartermaster Parachute Supply and Maintenance Company [activated 1March 1945] was reorganized and redesignated as Company B, 407th S&T Battalion.) • 782nd Maintenance Battalion The pentomic organization was unsuccessful. In 1964, the division reorganized into three brigades of three battalions, the
Reorganization Objective Army Division (ROAD) organization.
Dominican Republic and Vietnam deployments In April 1965, the "All-Americans" invaded the
Dominican Republic. Spearheaded by the 3rd Brigade, the 82nd deployed in
Operation Power Pack. , February 1968 , 6 March 1968. During the
Tet Offensive, which swept across
South Vietnam in January/February 1968, the 3rd Brigade was en route to
Chu Lai within 24 hours of receiving its orders. The 3rd Brigade performed combat duties in the
Huế –
Phu Bai area of the I Corps sector. Later the brigade moved south to
Saigon, and fought in the
Mekong Delta, the
Iron Triangle and along the Cambodian border, serving nearly 22 months. While the 3rd Brigade was deployed, the division created a provisional 4th Brigade, consisting of 4th Battalion, 325th Infantry; 3d Battalion, 504th Infantry; and 3d Battalion, 505th Infantry. An additional unit, the
3d Battalion, 320th Artillery, was activated under Division Artillery to support the 4th Brigade. The units assigned and attached to the 3d Brigade of the 82nd Airborne Division were as follows: • Brigade Infantry: • 1st Battalion (Airborne), 505th Infantry • 2nd Battalion (Airborne), 505th Infantry • 1st Battalion (Airborne), 508th Infantry • Brigade Artillery: • 2nd Battalion (Airborne), 321st Artillery (105mm) • Brigade Aviation: • Company A, 82nd Aviation Battalion • Brigade Reconnaissance: • Troop B, 1st Squadron (Armored), 17th Cavalry • Company O (Ranger), 75th Infantry • Brigade Support: • 82nd Support Battalion • 58th Signal Company • Company C, 307th Engineer Battalion (Airborne) • 408th Army Security Agency Detachment • 52nd Chemical Detachment • 518th Military Intelligence Detachment • 307th Medical (Airborne) Headquarters and Alpha Company The deployment of the 3rd Brigade took place with significant problems and controversy. In
The Rise and Fall of an American Army: US Ground Forces in Vietnam, 1965–1973, author Shelby L. Stanton describes how, other than the 82nd, only two under-strength Marine and four skeletonized Army divisions were left stateside by the beginning of 1968. The
U.S. Military Assistance Command, Vietnam (MACV), desperate for additional manpower, wanted the division to deploy to Vietnam, and the Department of the Army, wishing to retain its "sole readily deployable strategic reserve, the last real vestige of actual Army divisional combat potency in the United States left to the Pentagon," compromised by sending the 3d Brigade. As Stanton wrote: The division had been so rushed to get this brigade to the battlefront that it ignored individual deployment criteria. Paratroopers who had just returned from Vietnam now found themselves suddenly going back. The howl of soldier complaints was so vehement that the Department of the Army was soon forced to give each trooper who had deployed to Vietnam with the 3d Brigade the option of returning to Fort Bragg or remaining with the unit. To compensate for the abrupt departures from home for those who elected to stay with the unit, the Army authorized a month leave at the soldiers' own expense or a two-week leave with government aircraft provided for special flights back to North Carolina. Of the 3,650 paratroopers who had deployed from Fort Bragg, 2,513 elected to return to the United States at once. MACV had no paratroopers to replace them, and overnight the brigade was transformed into a separate light infantry brigade, airborne in name only.
Urban riots in 1967–68 1967 Detroit riot On 24 July 1967, shortly before midnight, President
Lyndon B. Johnson ordered the US military to occupy Detroit. At 1:10 a.m., 4,700 paratroopers of the 82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions, under the command of Lieutenant General
John L. Throckmorton, arrived in Detroit and began working in the streets, coordinating refuse removal, tracing persons who had disappeared in the confusion, and carrying out routine military functions, such as the establishment of mobile patrols, guard posts, and roadblocks. Although Army paratroopers exercised some restraint on
firepower due to being racially integrated, as well as their combat experience in Vietnam (as opposed to the mainly white and inexperienced National Guard troops), the 82nd was directly responsible for at least one death. On 29 July, two days after the riot officially ended, 82nd Captain Randolph Smith fatally shot Ernest Roquemore, a 19-year-old black man carrying a transistor radio. Three other individuals were injured by shotgun fire from police in the same incident. The Army and Detroit Police were on a joint patrol to recover looted items within the vicinity. On 30 July, the 82nd and the 101st completely left Detroit and moved back to
Selfridge for redeployment to their home stations, a process that continued gradually until 2 August.
1968 riots in Washington, D.C., and Baltimore The 82nd was called in to tackle
civil disturbances in Washington, D.C., and
Baltimore in the wake of the
nationwide riots following the
assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. on 4 April 1968. In Washington, D.C., the first of 21 aircraft carrying the
1st Brigade Combat Team of the 82nd landed at
Andrews Air Force Base on 6 April, with the 82nd's 2nd Brigade Combat Team joining up later. More than 2,000 82nd paratroopers were among the 11,850 federal troops to assist the
Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Columbia and the
D.C. Army National Guard in Washington. On 12 April, orders were issued for federal troops and National Guardsmen stationed in both cities to return to their home stations. The 1st Brigade was among the federal forces that left Baltimore by midnight the same day and three days later, the 2nd Brigade went into an assembly area at
Bolling Air Force Base, where they eventually departed back to Fort Bragg sometime later.
Post-Vietnam Operations From 1969 into the 1970s, the 82nd deployed paratroopers to
South Korea and
Vietnam on more than 180DBT (Days Bad Time) for exercises in potential future battlegrounds. The division received three alerts. One was for
Black September in 1970. Paratroopers were on their way to
Amman, Jordan when the mission was aborted. In May 1971, they helped national guard and
Washington DC police to round up and arrest protestors. During the
Wounded Knee uprising in 1973, the 82nd was brought to the
Pine Ridge reservation under the direction of plain-clothed Colonel Volney Warner in the field and, from the Pentagon, General Alexander Haig. In the fall of 1973, war in the Middle East brought the 82nd to full alert. In August 1980, the 1st Battalion (Airborne), 504th Infantry was alerted and deployed to conduct civil disturbance duty at
Fort Indiantown Gap,
Pennsylvania, during the Cuban refugee internment. President
Gerald Ford put the unit on high alert in case the administration decided to intervene in the
Boston desegregation busing crisis. In May 1978, the division was alerted to a possible drop into
Zaire. In November 1979, the division was alerted for a possible operation to rescue the
American hostages in Iran. The division formed the nucleus of the newly created
Rapid Deployment Forces (RDF), a mobile force at a permanently high state of readiness.
Invasion of Grenada – Operation Urgent Fury , 1983 s during Operation Urgent Fury, November 1983 On 25 October 1983, elements of the 82nd conducted an Airland Operation to secure
Point Salines Airport following an airborne assault by the
1st and
2nd Ranger Battalions who conducted the airfield seizure just hours prior. The first 82nd unit to deploy was a task force of the 2d and 3d Battalions (Airborne), 325th Infantry. On 26 October and 27, the 1st Battalion (Airborne), 505th Infantry, and the 1st and 2nd Battalions (Airborne), 508th Infantry, deployed to
Grenada with support units. 2-505 deployed as well. Military operations ended in early November (Note: that C/2-325 did not deploy due to being a newly formed COHORT unit, in its place B/2-505 deployed, landing at Point Salines. The 82nd expanded its missions from the airhead at Salines to weed out
Cuban Revolutionary Armed Forces and
Grenadan People's Revolutionary Army soldiers Each proceeding battalion pushed a single company forward with A/2-504 deploying only one company out of the entire brigade. The operation was flawed in several areas and identified areas needing attention to enhance the United States RDF doctrine. Newly issued Battledress Uniforms (BDUs) were not designed for the tropical environment; communication between Army ground forces and Navy and Air Force aircraft lacked interoperability and even food and other logistic support to ground forces were hampered due to communication issues between the services. The operation proved the division's ability to act as a rapid deployment force. The first aircraft carrying troopers from the 2–325th touched down at Point Salines 17 hours after H-Hour notification. In March 1988, a brigade task force made up of two battalions from the 504th Infantry and 3d Battalion (Airborne), 505th Infantry, conducted a parachute insertion and air/land operation into
Honduras as part of
Operation Golden Pheasant. The deployment was billed as a joint training exercise, but the paratroopers were ready to fight. The deployment caused the
Sandinistas to withdraw to
Nicaragua. Operation Golden Pheasant prepared the paratroopers for future combat in an increasingly unstable world.
Panama: Operation Just Cause , showing major points of attack On 20 December 1989, the "All-American", as part of the
United States invasion of Panama, conducted their first combat jump since World War II onto
Torrijos International Airport, Panama. The goal of the 1st Brigade task force, which was made up of the 1–504th and 2–504th INF as well as 4–325th INF and Company A, 3–505th INF, and 3–319th FAR, was to oust
Manuel Noriega from power. They were joined on the ground by 3–504th INF, which was already in Panama. The invasion was initiated with a night combat jump and airfield seizures. The 82nd conducted follow-on combat air assault missions in
Panama City and the surrounding areas of the Gatun Locks. The operation continued with an assault of multiple strategic installations, such as the Punta Paitilla Airport in Panama City and a
Panamanian Defense Forces (PDF) garrison and airfield at
Rio Hato, where Noriega also maintained a residence. The attack on La Comandancia (PDF HQ) touched off several fires, one of which destroyed most of the adjoining and heavily populated El Chorrillo neighborhood in downtown Panama City. The 82nd Airborne Division secured several other key objectives such as Madden Dam, El Ranacer Prison, Gatun Locks, Gamboa and Fort Cimarron. Overall, the operation involved 27,684 US troops and over 300 aircraft, including C-130 Hercules, AC-130 Spectre gunship, OA-37B Dragonfly observation, and attack aircraft, C-141 and C-5 strategic transports, F-117A Nighthawk stealth aircraft and AH-64 Apache attack helicopters. The invasion of Panama was the first combat deployment for the AH-64, the HMMWV, and the F-117A. In the six years since the
Invasion of Grenada, Operation Just Cause demonstrated how quickly the US Armed Forces could adapt and overcome the mistakes and equipment interoperability issues to conduct a quick and decisive victory. In all, the 82nd Airborne Division suffered six of the 23 fatalities of the operation. The paratroopers began redeployment to Fort Bragg on 12 January 1990. Operation Just Cause concluded on 31 January 1990, 42 days (D+42) after the invasion started.
Organization 1989 At the end of the
Cold War the division was organized as follows: •
82nd Airborne Division,
Fort Bragg, North Carolina • Headquarters & Headquarters Company •
1st Brigade • Headquarters & Headquarters Company • 1st Squadron,
17th Cavalry (Reconnaissance) • 1st Battalion,
82nd Aviation (Attack) • 2nd Battalion, 82nd Aviation (General Support) •
Division Artillery • Headquarters & Headquarters Battery •
1st Battalion,
319th Field Artillery (18 ×
M102 105 mm towed howitzer) • 3rd Battalion,
73rd Armor • 3rd Battalion,
4th Air Defense Artillery • 307th Engineer Battalion • 82nd Military Police Company • 21st Chemical Company • 82nd Airborne Division Band
Persian Gulf War , with the 82nd Airborne Division positioned at the left flank Seven months later the paratroopers of the 82nd Airborne Division were again called to war. Four days after the
Iraqi invasion of Kuwait on 2August 1990, the 4th Battalion (Airborne), 325th Infantry was the Division Ready Force1 (DRF-1) and the initial ground force invaded Iraq on the orders of President
George Bush Sr. after his "
Line in the sand" speech to
Saddam Hussein part of the largest deployment of American troops since Vietnam as part of "
Operation Desert Shield." The 4–325th INF immediately deployed to
Riyadh and Thummim,
Saudi Arabia. Their role was to guard the
royal family as part of the agreement with
King Fahd to station troops in and around the kingdom. The DRF2 and3 (1–325 and 2-325 INF, respectively) began drawing the "line in the sand" near al Jubail by building defenses for possible retrograde operations. Soon after, the rest of the division followed. There, intensive intelligence operations began in anticipation of desert fighting against the heavily armored
Iraqi Army. On 16 January 1991,
Operation Desert Storm began when American war planes attacked Iraqi targets. As the air war began, 2nd Brigade of the 82nd initially deployed near an airfield in the vicinity of the
Saudi Aramco oil facilities outside
Abqaiq, Saudi Arabia. While 1st Brigade and 3d Brigade consolidated at the Division HQ (CHAMPION Main) near
Dhahran in Coinciding with the start of the air war, three National Guard Light-Medium Truck companies, the 253d (NJARNG), 1122d (AKARNG), and the 1058th (MAARNG) joined 2d Brigade of the 82nd. In the coming weeks, primarily using the 5-Ton cargo trucks of these NG truck companies, the 1st Brigade moved north to "tap line road" in the vicinity of
Rafha, Saudi Arabia. Eventually, these National Guard truck units effectively "motorized" the 325th Infantry, providing the troop ground transportation required for them to keep pace with the French
Division Daguet during the invasion. Extensive ground operations began almost six weeks later. The 2–325th INF was the division's spearhead for the ground war who took positions over the Iraqi border 24 hours in advance of U.S.-led forces at 8:00 am, 22 February 1991, on Objectives Tin Man and Rochambeau. On 23 February, 82nd Airborne Division paratroopers protected the
XVIII Airborne Corps flank as fast-moving armor and mechanized units moved deep inside south-western Iraq. After the second day, the 1st Brigade moved forward to extend the Corps flank along with 3d Brigade. The 82nd drove deep into Iraq and captured thousands of Iraqi soldiers and tons of equipment, weapons, and ammunition. During that time, the 82nd's band and MP company processed 2,721 prisoners. After the liberation of
Kuwait and the surrender of the Iraqi Army, the 82nd redeployed to Fort Bragg.
Hurricane Andrew In August 1992, the 82nd Airborne deployed a task force to the hurricane-ravaged area of
South Florida to provide humanitarian assistance following
Hurricane Andrew. For more than 30 days, troopers provided food, shelter and medical attention to the Florida population as part of the US military Domestic Emergency Planning System. The 82nd was part of over 20,000 Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine, Coast Guard and an additional 6200 National Guard troops deployed for the disaster. They also provided security and a sense of safety for the victims of the storm who were without power, doors, windows and in many cases roofs. == Post–Cold War ==