Australia Historically, the
Australian Army has fielded a number of divisions. During World War I, a total of six infantry divisions were raised as part of the all-volunteer
Australian Imperial Force:
1st,
2nd,
3rd,
4th,
5th and
6th. The 1st Division and part of the 2nd saw service during the
Gallipoli Campaign in 1915 before later taking part in the fighting on the
Western Front between 1916 and 1918 along with the 3rd, 4th and 5th. The 6th Division existed only briefly in 1917, but was disbanded without seeing combat to make up for manpower shortages in the other divisions. Another infantry division, known as the
New Zealand and Australian Division, was also formed from Australian and New Zealand troops and saw service at Gallipoli. Two divisions of
Australian Light Horse were also formedthe
Australian Mounted Division (which also included some British and French units) and the
ANZAC Mounted Divisionboth of which served in the
Sinai and Palestine Campaign during the war. , 22 January 1941 In the inter-war years, on paper the Australian Army was organised into seven divisions: five infantry (1st through to 5th) and two cavalry, albeit on a reduced manning scale. During World War II, the size of Australia's force was expanded to eventually include 12 infantry divisions: 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th,
7th,
8th,
9th,
10th,
11th and
12th. Of these, fourthe 6th, 7th, 8th and 9thwere raised as part of the all-volunteer
Second Australian Imperial Force, while the others formed part of the
Militia, and were maintained through a mixture of volunteers and
conscripts. In addition to the infantry divisions, three armoured divisions were formed:
1st,
2nd and
3rd. The Australian divisions were used in various campaigns, ranging from
North Africa,
Greece,
Syria and Lebanon, to the
South West Pacific. The Australian army currently has two divisions. The 1st Division is a skeleton organisation that acts as a deployable force headquarters, while the 2nd is a Reserve formation.
Bangladesh The
9th Infantry Division was raised on 20 November 1975 in
Dhaka as the first division of the
Bangladesh Army. Currently, Bangladesh Army has
ten infantry divisions under its command. Each infantry division consists of one artillery brigade, 3 or 4 infantry brigades/regiments. In addition, few divisions have one armored brigade each. The active infantry divisions are: •
7th Infantry Division, headquartered at
Sheikh Hasina cantonment,
Patuakhali •
9th Infantry Division, headquartered at
Savar Cantonment,
Dhaka •
10th Infantry Division, headquartered at
Ramu Cantonment,
Cox's Bazar •
11th Infantry Division, headquartered at
Bogra Cantonment,
Bogra •
17th Infantry Division, headquartered at
Jalalabad Cantonment,
Sylhet •
19th Infantry Division, headquartered at
Shahid Salahuddin Cantonment,
Tangail •
24th Infantry Division, headquartered at
Chittagong Cantonment,
Chittagong •
33rd Infantry Division, headquartered at
Comilla Cantonment,
Comilla •
55th Infantry Division, headquartered at
Jessore Cantonment,
Jessore •
66th Infantry Division, headquartered at
Rangpur Cantonment,
Rangpur Brazil The
Brazilian Army currently has five army divisions: the 1st Army Division based in
Rio de Janeiro and subordinated to the
Eastern Military Command, the 2nd Army Division, based in
São Paulo and subordinated to the
Southeastern Military Command and 3rd Army Division, based in
Santa MariaRS, the 5th Army Division based in
CuritibaPR, the 6th Army Division based in
Porto AlegreRS, the latter three being linked to the
Southern Military Command and the 7th Army Division based in
RecifePE subordinated to the
Northeastern Military Command. The other military forces of the Brazilian Army are subordinated directly to the area military commands, not having a commanding division. In this case, the employment of these troops is coordinated by the operations coordinating center of the area military commands.
Canada The first division-sized formation raised by the
Canadian military was the First Contingent of the
Canadian Expeditionary Force; raised in 1914, it was renamed the Canadian Division in early 1915 when it took to the field, and became the
1st Canadian Division when the
2nd Canadian Division took to the field later that year. Later, the
3rd Canadian Division and
4th Canadian Division saw service in France and
Flanders, while the
5th Canadian Division was disbanded in the United Kingdom and broken up for reinforcements. The four divisions (collectively under the command of the
Canadian Corps) were disbanded in 1919. Canada had nominal divisions on paper between the wars, overseeing the Militia (part-time reserve forces), but no active duty divisions. On 1 September 1939, two divisions were raised as part of the Canadian Active Service Force; the 3rd Division was raised in 1940, followed by the 1st Canadian Armoured Division and the 4th Canadian Division. The 1st Armoured was renamed the 5th Canadian (Armoured) Division and the 4th Division also became an armoured division. The 1st and 5th Divisions fought in the
Mediterranean between 1943 and early 1945; the 2nd, 3rd and 4th Divisions served in
Northwest Europe. The
6th,
7th and
8th Divisions were raised for service in Canada, with one brigade of the 6th Division going to
Kiska in 1943. By 1945, the latter three divisions were disbanded as the threat to North America diminished. The 3rd Canadian Division (Canadian Army Occupation Force) was raised in 1945 for
occupation duty in Germany, organized parallel to the combatant 3rd Division, and a 6th Canadian Division (Canadian Army Pacific Force) was undergoing formation and training for the
invasion of Japan when the latter country
surrendered in September 1945. All five combatant divisions, as well as the CAOF and CAPF, were disbanded by the end of 1946. The 1st Canadian Division Headquarters (later renamed simply 1st Division) was authorized once again in April 1946, but remained dormant until formally disbanded in July 1954. Simultaneously, however, another "Headquarters, 1st Canadian Infantry Division" was authorized as part of the Canadian Army Active Force (the Regular forces of the Canadian military), in October 1953. This, the first peacetime division in Canadian history, consisted of a brigade in Germany, one in
Edmonton and one at
Valcartier. This division was disbanded in April 1958. The 1st Canadian Division was reactivated in 1988 and served until the 1990s when the headquarters of the division was transformed into the
Canadian Forces Joint Headquarters and placed under the control of the
Canadian Expeditionary Force Command. The CFJHQ was transformed back into
Headquarters, 1st Canadian Division, on 23 June 2010, under command of the
Canadian Joint Operations Command. The unit is based at
Kingston. Canada currently has four other divisions and all these are under command of the
Canadian Army. •
1st Canadian Division, headquarters is located in Kingston. •
2nd Canadian Division, headquarters is located in Montreal. •
3rd Canadian Division, headquarters is located in Edmonton. •
4th Canadian Division, headquarters is located in Toronto. •
5th Canadian Division, headquarters is located in Halifax. The 1st Canadian Division has approximately 2,000 troops under its command, while the
2nd Canadian Division,
3rd Canadian Division,
4th Canadian Division, and
5th Canadian Division have approximately 10,000 troops each.
China People's Republic The
People's Liberation Army Ground Force (PLAGF) is divided into five
Theater Commands. The regular forces of the ground forces consist of 18 group armies: corps-size combined arms units each with 24,000–50,000 personnel. The group armies contained among them: • 25 infantry divisions • 9 armored divisions • 2 artillery divisions As of 2011, the PLA went from a division-dominated structure to a brigade-dominated one. Until 2017, there were a further three airborne divisions in the
15th Airborne Corps, but these were reformed into six airborne brigades and a special operations brigade as part of a reform program aimed at reorganizing all PLA divisions into brigades.
National Revolutionary Army The NRA Division () was a military unit of the
Republic of China. The original pattern of the infantry division organization of the early Republic was a
square division. It was formed with two infantry brigades of two infantry regiments of three infantry battalions, an artillery regiment of fifty-four guns and eighteen machineguns, a cavalry regiment of twelve squadrons, an engineer battalion of four companies, a transport battalion of four companies, and other minor support units. In the mid-1930s, the Nationalist government with the help of
German advisors attempted to modernize their army and intended to form sixty
Reorganized Divisions and a number of reserve divisions. Under the strains and losses of the early campaigns of the Second Sino-Japanese War, the Chinese decided in mid-1938 to standardize their Divisions as
triangular divisions as part of their effort to simplify the command structure and placed them under
Corps, which became the basic tactical units. The remaining scarce artillery and the other support formations were withdrawn from the Division and were held at Corps or Army level or even higher. During the Second Sino-Japanese War, the Chinese Republic mobilized at least 310 infantry divisions, 23 cavalry divisions, and one mechanized division (the
200th Division).
Colombia In the
Colombian Army, a division is formed by two or more brigades and is usually commanded by a major general. Today, the Colombian Army has eight active divisions: •
1st Division (
Santa Marta) – Its jurisdiction covers the Northern Region of Colombia in which there are the departments of Cesar, La Guajira, Magdalena, Sucre, Bolívar and Atlántico. •
2nd Division (
Bucaramanga) – Its jurisdiction covers the north eastern Colombia in which there are the departments of Norte de Santander, Santander and Arauca. •
3rd Division (
Popayán) – Its jurisdiction covers the South West of Colombia in which there are the departamentos of Nariño, Valle del Cauca, Cauca, Caldas, Quindio, part of Santander and the southern part of the Chocó. •
4th Division (
Villavicencio) – Its jurisdiction covers the eastern region of Colombia in which there are the departments of Meta, Guaviare, and part of Vaupés. •
5th Division (
Bogotá) – Its jurisdiction covers the Central Region of Colombia in which there are the departments of Cundinamarca, Boyaca, Huila and Tolima. •
6th Division (
Florencia) – Its jurisdiction covers the southern region of Colombia in which there are the departments of Amazonas, Caquetá, Putumayo and southern Vaupés. •
7th Division (
Medellín) – Its jurisdiction covers the western region of Colombia in which there are the departments of Cordoba, Antioquia, and part of the Chocó. •
8th Division (
Yopal) – Its jurisdiction covers the northeastern region of Colombia in which there are the departments of Casanare, Arauca, Vichada, Guainía, and the municipalities of Boyaca of Cubará, Pisba, Paya, Labranzagrande and Pajarito.
Egypt In the
Egyptian Army, a division has four or five brigades and is usually commanded by Major General, however, a Brigadier General can also command a division. Today the
Egyptian Army has 14 divisions (8 mechanized, 1 infantry, 4 armored, 1 Republican Guard). Mechanized divisions have more infantry and fewer tanks than armored divisions while armored divisions have less troops and more tanks than mechanized ones. •
2nd Infantry Division (Egypt)One of the oldest units in the Egyptian Army, formed in 1947 and currently part of the
Central Military Region (Egypt) the division was originally foot infantry but turned into mechanized in the late 1980s. •
3rd Mechanized Infantry Division (Egypt)formed in 1951 as foot infantry and was fully mechanized in 1972. Currently part of the
Northern Military Region (Egypt) alongside the 11th independent armored brigade. The division saw service in the Gulf War alongside the Egyptian 4th Armored Division during
Operation Desert Shield. • 7th Mechanized Infantry Divisionformed as foot infantry division in the mid-1960s (before
Six-Day War). Currently a part of the
Second Army (Egypt). • 16th Mechanized Infantry Divisionformed in 1972 and participated in
October 1973 War and currently part of the
Second Army (Egypt) • 18th Mechanized Infantry Divisionformed in 1972 and played a vital role in the
October 1973 War as it accomplished its task of storming the El Qantara fortified points of the
Bar Lev Line and liberating the town of El Qantara itself within 6/7 October and successfully halted & destroyed several Israeli counterattacks on its sector. Currently part of the
Second Army (Egypt) • 19th Infantry DivisionFormed in 1972 and participated in
October 1973 War and considered one of the most notable units of the
Egyptian Army due to its heroic actions during
October 1973 War where it was the only division to not lose a single battle. One of these battles was
Battle of Suez. Currently part of the
Third Army (Egypt). • 20th Palestinian/Gaza Division during
Suez Crisis. • 23rd Mechanized Infantry Divisionformed in 1972 and participated in the
October 1973 War. Currently part of the
Third Army (Egypt) • 33rd Mechanized Infantry Divisionformed in the early 2000s and currently part of the
Western Military Region (Egypt). •
4th Armoured Division (Egypt)the Division is considered one of the greatest, respected and oldest active formations in the
Egyptian Army. It was formed in 1956 and participated in all of Egypt's modern conflicts and because of that, the division is nicknamed the
Knights of Egypt and
Crown of the Third Army. Its most notable service was during
October 1973 War when the 3rd Armored Brigade advanced 12 kilometers deep into Sinai (over the actual sector) without the air, anti-tank and infantry support it requested. As the brigade surprise attacked the much larger Israeli forces, they gave them heavy casualties but since the Israeli units had air support, the brigade couldn't survive and lost its commander and most of its tanks in action. Still part of Third Army. • 6th Armored Divisionformed in the mid-1960s as a
Mechanized Division then by the late 1990s it was transformed into
Armored Division. Currently part of the
Second Army (Egypt). • 9th Armored Divisionformed in 1987 with the main objective of protecting Southern
Cairo and currently serves as part of the
Central Military Region (Egypt). •
21st Armored Divisionformed in the mid-1960s and participated in the
Six-Day War and
October 1973 War. Currently serving in the
Western Military Region (Egypt).
France On 1 July 1999, all French divisions were disbanded or converted into brigades. Four
Task force headquarters (
état-major de force) were created in order to oversee
NATO standard divisions in case of emergency. The divisional level (
niveau divisionnaire) was reintroduced on 1 July 2016. The
French Army has now two active combined divisions: •
1 division (HQ in
Besançon) •
3 division (HQ in
Marseille) Each division consists of 25,000 personnel and is made up of three brigades (one light, one medium, and one heavy). The 1st Division also included the French elements of the
Franco-German Brigade. There are also several "divisional level" (
niveau divisionnaire) specialized commands: •
Commandement des actions dans la profondeur et du renseignement (
Strasbourg) • ''Commandement de l'appui terrestre numérique et cyber'' (
Cesson-Sévigné) • ''Commandement de l'appui et de la logistique de théâtre'' (
Lille) •
Commandement des actions spéciales Terre (
Pau) • ''Commandement de l'entraînement au combat interarmes'' (
Mourmelon-le-Grand)
Germany The
German Army has three divisions: •
1st Panzerdivision, stationed in
Hannover. •
10th Panzerdivision, stationed in
Sigmaringen. •
Rapid Forces Division, stationed in
Veitshöchheim.
India An Indian Army division is intermediate between a corps and a brigade. Each division is headed by a
General Officer Commanding (GOC) holding the rank of
major general. It usually consists of 15,000 combat troops and 8,000 support elements. Currently, the Indian Army has 40 divisions: four RAPIDs ("Reorganised Army Plains Infantry Divisions"), 16 infantry, 14 mountain, three armoured, and three artillery. Each division consists of several brigades.
Indonesia The
Indonesian Army has 3 infantry divisions (
Indonesian:
Divisi Infanteri) within the
Kostrad strategic reserves command which plays a role for strategic defense operations. Aside from the infantry divisions, the Indonesian Army also hosts operational combat units from the territorial commands known as "
Kodams", which are equivalent to divisions and are similarly organized as infantry divisions. The infantry divisions from the
Kostrad are: •
1st Kostrad Infantry Division at
Depok,
West Java •
2nd Kostrad Infantry Division at
Malang,
East Java •
3rd Kostrad Infantry Division at
Gowa,
South Sulawesi The Kodam territorial commands are: •
I Military Regional Command/Bukit Barisan at
Medan,
North Sumatra •
II Military Regional Command/Sriwijaya at
Palembang,
South Sumatra •
III Military Regional Command/Siliwangi at
Bandung,
West Java •
IV Military Regional Command/Diponegoro at
Semarang,
Central Java •
V Military Regional Command/Brawijaya at
Surabaya,
East Java •
VI Military Regional Command/Mulawarman at
Balikpapan,
East Kalimantan •
IX Military Regional Command/Udayana at
Denpasar,
Bali •
XII Military Regional Command/Tanjungpura at
Kubu Raya Regency,
West Kalimantan •
XIII Military Regional Command/Merdeka at
Manado,
North Sulawesi •
XIV Military Regional Command/Hasanuddin at
Makassar,
South Sulawesi •
XV Military Regional Command/Pattimura at
Ambon,
Maluku •
XVII Military Regional Command/Cenderawasih at
Jayapura,
Papua •
XVIII Military Regional Command/Kasuari at
Manokwari,
West Papua •
Military Regional Command Jayakarta at
East Jakarta,
Jakarta •
Military Regional Command Iskandar Muda at
Banda Aceh,
Aceh The
Indonesian Marine Corps also operates 3 divisions which are: •
1st Marine Forces (Pasmar-1) at
Sidoarjo,
East Java •
2nd Marine Forces (Pasmar-2) at
Cilandak,
South Jakarta •
3rd Marine Forces (Pasmar-3) at
Sorong,
West Papua Kostrad infantry divisions are organized into two brigades of infantry (Raider qualified) and a field artillery regiment (the 3rd Division has no artillery regiment, instead it has artillery battalion, the 6th Field Artillery Battalion) as well as combat and service support elements. The regional commands' combat and combat support formations, organized operationally as infantry divisions, have one infantry brigade, an operational second brigade made up of battalions administratively under Military Areas and directly reporting infantry battalions under divisional command, and combat and service support battalions, plus an optional armoured cavalry reconnaissance troop. This organization may be adjusted to the individual needs of the regional commands,
Kodam Jayakarta's infantry division is made up of one infantry brigade, one armored cavalry brigade and one air defense artillery regiment, together with the support elements. The Marine Corps divisions are organized into an infantry brigade, an armored regiment (assault amphibian), an artillery regiment and a combat support regiment, plus an administrative regiment responsible for Marine Corps battalions deployed in support of naval bases and shipyards.
Israel The
Israeli Defense Forces operates 13 divisions of various sizes that are separated into three categories: regular, territorial and reserve. Regardless of type divisions are organized into brigades. Regular divisions: •
36th Armored Division •
98th Paratrooper Division •
162nd Armored Division Territorial divisions: •
80th Territorial Division (
Negev) •
91st Territorial Division (
Galilee) •
143rd Territorial Division (
Gaza) •
210th Territorial Division (
Bashan) •
877th Territorial Division (
Judea and Samaria) •
96th Infantry Division (Jordan Valley) Divisions in reserve: •
99th Infantry Division (
Reserve) •
146th Armored Division (
Reserve) •
252nd Armored Division (
Reserve)
Japan Japan Ground Self-Defense Force divisions are
combined arms units with infantry, armored, and artillery units, combat support units and logistical support units. They are regionally independent and permanent entities. The divisions strength varies from 6,000 to 9,000 personnel. The division commander is a
lieutenant general. JGSDF currently has nine active duty divisions (one armored, eight infantry): •
1st Division, in
Nerima •
2nd Division, in
Asahikawa •
3rd Division, in
Itami •
4th Division, in
Kasuga •
6th Division, in
Higashine •
7th Division (Armored), in
Chitose •
8th Division, in
Kumamoto •
9th Division, in
Aomori •
10th Division, in
Nagoya Pakistan An Army division in the
Pakistan Army is an intermediate between a corps and a brigade. It is the largest striking force in the army. Each division is headed by a General Officer Commanding (GOC) holding the rank of major general. It usually consists of 15,000 combat troops and 8,000 support elements. Currently, the Pakistani Army has 29 divisions: 20 infantry, two armoured, two mechanized, two air defence, two strategic and one artillery. Each division consists of several brigades.
Philippines The
Philippine Army is currently organized into 11 Infantry Divisions and 1 Mechanized Infantry Division across the Archipelago. A division is usually led by a
major general and comprises 3–4
Brigades of infantry or armor. •
1st Infantry "Tabak" Division •
2nd Infantry "Jungle Fighter" Division •
3rd Infantry "Spearhead Troopers" Division •
4th Infantry "Diamond" Division •
5th Infantry "Star" Division •
6th Infantry "Kampilan" Division •
7th Infantry "Kaugnay" Division •
8th Infantry "Storm Trooper" Division •
9th Infantry "Spear" Division •
10th Infantry "Agila" Division •
11th Infantry "Alakdan" Division •
Armor "Pambato" Division Russia USSR In the
Soviet Armed Forces, any of the armed services may have had formations termed 'division' (, ), which included subunits appropriate to the service such as regiments and battalions, squadrons or naval vessels. Almost all divisions, irrespective of the service branch, had the 3+1+1 structure of major sub-units, which were usually regiments. There is also a similarly named unit of military organization in Russian military terminology, called (). A is an artillery or cavalry battalion, a specific part of a ship's crew (, 'ship battalion'), or a group of naval vessels (). In Imperial Russia, infantry formations were designated as (), 'infantry'. But on 11 October 1918, all such formations in the new
Red Army were re-designated as (), 'rifle'. This was deliberately chosen as a means of breaking with the Imperial past, while also giving these troops a sense of being an elite; in the Imperial Army, the riflemen had been the best of the foot soldiers outside the Guards. The new designation also hearkened back to the
Streltsy of the 16th to early 18th centuries, which were also elite troops. All Soviet Army infantry, cavalry (until the 1950s) and tank divisions were organized in accordance with a ("state"; establishment): • Division HQ • 3 infantry, cavalry or tank regiments (with an additional infantry (motor rifle) or tank regiment depending on divisional specialization) • Divisional artillery brigade or later just one artillery regiment (horse artillery regiment and tachanka battalion for cavalry) • One light and one heavy howitzer field artillery regiment for brigades • Divisional tactical ballistic missile battalion • Divisional anti-air defense artillery regiment or battalion (air defense guns, later argumented by air defense surface to air missile battalions) • Divisional anti-tank artillery battalion • Combat and service support companies or battalions • CBRN defense • Combat engineers • Divisional reconnaissance • Medical company • Rear services (including transport) • Signals • Electronic warfare Artillery and
anti-aircraft artillery divisions were organized differently. Before the Second World War, besides the
mechanised corps, there were independent tank battalions within rifle divisions. These were meant to reinforce rifle units for the purpose of breaching enemy defences. They had to act in cooperation with the infantry without breaking away from it and were called tanks for immediate infantry support (). After 1945, some Red Army rifle divisions were converted to mechanised (infantry) divisions. From 1957, all rifle and mechanised divisions became "motor rifle divisions" (MRDs). These divisions usually had approximately 12,000 soldiers. During the Soviet era, 25 different MRD staffing and equipage tables existed to reflect different requirements of divisions stationed in different parts of the Soviet Union, the Warsaw Pact countries and Mongolia. From 1970 to 1983, a motor rifle regiment was added to tank divisions and an independent tank battalion to motor rifle divisions, and major increases in artillery, mortars, and
armoured personnel carriers, in line with the evolution of Soviet doctrine, which began to recognise the need for a conventional phrase, away from the previously expected purely nuclear operations. A typical tank division had some 10,000 soldiers, less than those of the infantry, with near identical organization. During the Soviet era, 15 different TD staffing and equipage tables existed to reflect different requirements of divisions stationed in different parts of the Soviet Union, the Warsaw Pact countries and Mongolia. The Soviet Union organised Machine-Gun Artillery Divisions of artillery, multiple rocket launchers, and static gun positions for use East of the Urals from 1989. Similar organizations of units were and still are a part of the
Russian Airborne Forces. A typical Soviet "frontal aviation division" consisted of three air regiments, a transport squadron, and associated maintenance units. The number of aircraft within a regiment varied. Fighter and fighter-bomber regiments were usually equipped with about 40 aircraft (36 of the primary unit type and a few utility and spares), while bomber regiments typically consisted of 32 aircraft. Divisions were typically commanded by colonels or major generals, or colonels or major generals of aviation in the Air Force. Soviet Naval Aviation and the Strategic Missile Forces divisions had either colonels or major generals as commanding officers while the ship divisions were led by captains 1st rank or captains 2nd rank.
Russian Federation After the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Russian tank and motor rifle divisions were reduced to near-cadre state, many being designated "bases for storage of weapons and equipment" (Russian acronym BKhVT). These bases, or "cadre" divisions, were equipped with all the heavy armaments of a full-strength motor-rifle or tank division, while having only skeleton personnel strength, as low as 500 personnel. The officers and men of a cadre division focus primarily on maintaining the equipment in working condition. During wartime mobilization, such a division would be reinforced up to full manpower strength; however, in peacetime, a cadre division is unfit for any combat. From 1989 the Soviet and Russian Ground Forces organized a total of eight Machine-Gun Artillery Divisions: the
18th Machine Gun Artillery Division; 122nd Guards Machine-Gun Artillery Division;
126th; 127th;
128th;
129th Guards;
130th; and 131st Guards Machine-Gun Artillery Divisions. A 1997 report said they were generally composed of four brigades with a total of 12 battalions, including a mechanized regiment in each brigade, though later data suggests this was inaccurate. Later data indicates that fortified areas were disestablished and converted to Machine-Gun Artillery Regiments which then joined the new MGADs. After the
2008 Russian military reforms, most active divisions were disbanded or converted into brigades. Since 2013, several divisions were reactivated. In 2024, the
Russian Ground Forces have 20 divisions: •
4th Guards Tank Division in
Naro-Fominsk •
47th Tank Division in Mulino •
90th Guards Tank Division in
Chebarkul •
2nd Guards Motor Rifle Division in
Moscow •
3rd Motor Rifle Division in
Valuyki •
6th Motor Rifle Division •
18th Guards Motor Rifle Division in
Kaliningrad •
18th Machine Gun Artillery Division in
Goryachiye Klyuchi •
19th Motor Rifle Division in
Vladikavkaz •
20th Guards Motor Rifle Division in
Volgograd •
27th Guards Motor Rifle Division in
Totskoye •
42nd Guards Motor Rifle Division in
Khankala •
47th Motor Rifle Division in
Sevastopol •
67th Motor Rifle Division •
69th Guards Motor Rifle Division •
70th Motor Rifle Division •
72nd Motor Rifle Division in
Karelia •
127th Motor Rifle Division in Sergeyevka,
Primorsky Krai •
144th Motor Rifle Division in
Yelnya •
150th Motor Rifle Division in
Novocherkassk The
Russian Airborne Forces have 5 divisions: •
7th Guards Mountain Air Assault Division in
Novorossiysk •
76th Guards Air Assault Division in
Pskov •
98th Guards Airborne Division in
Ivanovo •
104th Guards Airborne Division in
Ulyanovsk •
106th Guards Airborne Division in
Tula The
Strategic Missile Forces have 12 divisions: •
7th Guards Rocket Division at
Vypolzovo • 8th Rocket Division at
Pervomaysky, Kirov Oblast •
13th Red Banner Rocket Division at
Dombarovskiy • 14th Rocket Division at
Yoshkar-Ola •
28th Guards Rocket Division at
Kozelsk •
29th Guards Rocket Division at
Irkutsk •
35th Rocket Division at
Barnaul • 39th Guards Rocket Division at
Novosibirsk •
42nd Rocket Division at
Nizhniy Tagil •
54th Guards Rocket Division at
Teykovo • 60th Rocket Division at
Tatischevo •
62nd Rocket Division at
Uzhur In addition to the Army divisions, a division is currently on active duty within the ranks of the
National Guard of Russia: •
Operational Purpose Division in Moscow. Also, a number of
Aviation Divisions and Air Defense Divisions have been reactivated within the
Russian Air Force.
South Africa South Africa has fielded several infantry and armoured divisions in its military history: •
1 Infantry Division for battles waged in the North African theatre from 1940 to 1943. •
2 Infantry Division also for the engagements of North Africa from 1940 to 1942. •
6 Armoured Division for the Italian Campaign of 1943 to 1945. •
7 Infantry Division for the Border War fought in Southern Africa. It existed from 1965 to 1990 and consisted of three brigades. •
8 Armoured Division also for the Border War and existed from 1974 to 1997 and consisted of three brigades. •
9 Infantry Division was formed for geographical purposes but only existed for a short period from 1992 to 1997.
United Kingdom In the
British Army, a division is commanded by a
major general with a WO1 as the Command Sergeant Major and may consist of three infantry, mechanised and/or armoured brigades and supporting units. Currently, the British Army has two active divisions: •
1st (United Kingdom) Division •
3rd (United Kingdom) Division The British Army previously had four other divisions. •
2nd Division – Scotland and Northern England, headquartered at
Edinburgh •
4th Division – Southern England, headquartered at
Aldershot •
5th Division – Wales, English Midlands and Eastern England, headquartered at
Shrewsbury •
6th (United Kingdom) Division, headquartered at
Upavon Additionally, most of the infantry regiments of the British Army are organised for administrative purposes into a number of organisations called "divisions": •
Guards and Parachute Division – 2022–present •
Scottish, Welsh and Irish Division – 2017–present •
King's Division – 1968–present •
Queen's Division – 1968–present •
Scottish Division – 1968–2017 •
Prince of Wales' Division – 1968–2017 •
Light Division – 1968–present
United States A divisional unit in the United States Army typically consists of 17,000 to 21,000 soldiers, but can grow up to 35,000 to 40,000 with attached support units during operations, and are commanded by a
major general. Two divisions usually form a
corps and each division consists of three maneuver brigades, an aviation brigade, an engineer brigade, and division artillery (latter two excluded from divisional structure as of 2007), along with a number of smaller specialized units. In 2014, divisional artillery (DIVARTY) organizations began to re-appear, with some
fires brigades reorganizing to fill this role. The United States Army currently has eleven active divisions and one deployable division headquarters (7th Infantry Division): •
1st Infantry Division at
Fort Riley, Kansas •
1st Armored Division at
Fort Bliss, Texas •
1st Cavalry Division at
Fort Cavazos, Texas •
2nd Infantry Division at
Camp Humphreys, South Korea and in
Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Washington •
3rd Infantry Division at
Fort Stewart, Georgia and in
Fort Benning, Georgia •
4th Infantry Division at
Fort Carson, Colorado •
7th Infantry Division (Division Headquarters only) at
Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Washington •
10th Mountain Division (Light) at
Fort Drum, New York and in
Fort Johnson, Louisiana •
11th Airborne Division at
Joint Base Elmendorf–Richardson, Alaska •
25th Infantry Division at
Schofield Barracks, Hawaii •
82nd Airborne Division at
Fort Bragg, North Carolina •
101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) at
Fort Campbell, Kentucky The
Army National Guard has a further eight divisions: •
28th Infantry Division,
Fort Indiantown Gap, Pennsylvania •
29th Infantry Division,
Fort Belvoir, Virginia •
34th Infantry Division,
Rosemount, Minnesota •
35th Infantry Division,
Fort Leavenworth, Kansas •
36th Infantry Division,
Camp Mabry, Texas •
38th Infantry Division,
Indianapolis, Indiana •
40th Infantry Division,
Los Alamitos JFTB, California •
42nd Infantry Division,
Troy, New York There are further ten divisions within the
Army Reserve that are responsible for training and support operations: •
78th Division (Operations),
Joint Base McGuire–Dix–Lakehurst, New Jersey •
86th Division (Decisive Action),
Fort McCoy, Wisconsin •
87th Division (Training Exercise), at
Birmingham •
91st Division (Operations),
Fort Hunter Liggett, California •
94th Division (Force Sustainment),
Fort Gregg-Adams, Virginia •
95th Division (Entry Training),
Fort Sill, Oklahoma •
98th Division (Entry Training),
Fort Benning, Georgia •
100th Division (Operational Support),
Fort Knox, Kentucky •
102nd Division (Maneuver Support),
Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri •
104th Division (Leader Training),
Fort Lewis, Washington The
United States Marine Corps has a further three active divisions and one reserve division. They consist of a headquarters battalion, two or three infantry regiments, an artillery regiment, and a reconnaissance battalion. Additionally, all Marine divisions (MARDIV), except 3rd MARDIV, have an assault amphibian (AA) battalion, a reconnaissance battalion, a tank battalion, a light armored reconnaissance (LAR) battalion (two in 1st MARDIV), and a combat engineer (CE) battalion (two in 1st MARDIV). (3rd MARDIV has a combat assault battalion including one company each of AA, LAR, and CE. Tank support for 3rd MARDIV can be provided by tanks deployed with the
31st MEU or directly from one of the three divisional tank battalions under the
Unit Deployment Program.) •
1st Marine Division at
Camp Pendleton, California •
2nd Marine Division at
Camp Lejeune, North Carolina •
3rd Marine Division at
Camp Smedley D. Butler, Okinawa, Japan •
4th Marine Division (Reserve) with units located throughout the United States and headquartered in
New Orleans, Louisiana
South Korea Republic of Korea Army divisions are major tactical formations led by general officers. There are currently 39 Army and two Marine divisions. Of the 41 Army divisions, six are mechanized infantry divisions (combined arms formations centered around tanks, IFVs, APCs, and SPGs), 16 are infantry divisions (motorized divisions with various levels of mechanization), 12 are "Homeland Infantry Divisions" (향토보병사단, infantry divisions kept at a 40–50% manpower level, to be reinforced during national emergencies) and seven "Reserve Infantry Divisions" (동원보병사단, infantry divisions kept at 10–20% manpower level, to be reinforced during national emergencies). There are two Marine divisions organized similarly to their American counterparts. Though similarly formed, the 1st ROK Marine Division is specialized to perform amphibious landing operations while the 2nd ROK Marine Division performs more security operations and mans a sector of the DMZ facing the North Korean border. Republic of Korea Army divisions are typically smaller than their foreign counterparts. Mechanized infantry divisions are fully formed at around 9,900, infantry divisions are fully formed at about 11,500 men, and other types of divisions are smaller in size during normal operations according to their reserve manpower levels. There are very few articles discussing
ROK Marine Corps tactical organization, but an active duty force of 29,000 is divided into two divisions, two
brigades, and its supporting units. Mechanized infantry, infantry, Homeland Infantry, and Marine divisions are led by major generals, while Reserve Infantry Divisions are led by
brigadier generals. As a general rule no major ROKAF formation contains the number four in its name due to cultural
tetraphobia.
Venezuela The
Venezuelan Army is organized into 6 divisions, four of them infantry, one armored and one being armoured cavalry. All are organized into brigades or regiments, which in turn are organized into infantry battalions, cavalry squadrons, field artillery battalions, air defense artillery battalions and combat engineer battalions. They also contain any divisional service support elements. Usually there are two to five regiments or brigades per division. The divisions are: • 1st Infantry Division – with HQ in Maracaibo • 2nd Infantry Division – HQ San Cristobal • 3rd Infantry Division – HQ Caracas • 4th Armored Division – HQ Maracay • 5th Infantry Division (Jungle) – HQ Ciudad Bolívar • 9th Cavalry Division – HQ San Fernando de Apure == See also ==