Hundreds of
Kampfgruppen are documented to have taken part in operations ranging from a few days to over a year during the war. They left a significant impact in the popular culture and the picture of the Second World War. Famous examples include: •
Kampfgruppe Peiper was a mechanised
brigade-sized formation formed under the command of SS-Standartenführer
Joachim Peiper, which took part in the 1944
Battle of the Bulge. KG Peiper was to be the striking arm of the
1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler. •
Kampfgruppe Das Reich was a
regiment-sized formation formed from the remaining combat-ready elements of the
2nd SS Panzer Division Das Reich, which was encircled in the
Kamenets-Podolsky pocket in early 1944. •
Kampfgruppe 1001 Nacht was a German
Kampfgruppe formed on the
Oder front during the final German offensive of the Second World War. The formation is most notable for its unusual title, referring to the medieval Persian
book of 1,001 Nights, a collection of tales and fables. • During the
Allied invasion of France, Major
Hans von Luck took command of the 125th Panzergrenadier Regiment of the
21st Panzer Division, stationed near
Caen,
France.
Panzerkampfgruppe (late war) A
Panzerkampfgruppe was effectively the main striking force of a
Panzer division. The usual
Panzerkampfgruppe organization consisted of one tank battalion, one
Panzergrenadier battalion, and one self-propelled artillery battalion, for a well rounded mobile fighting force. A mobile engineer company was often attached to the
Panzerkampfgruppe.
Other services While the original concept of
Kampfgruppe is usually reserved to the
land warfare, some German
tacticians and
strategists applied it also for
naval warfare. The most obvious change was the design (units were usually earmarked for operation in advance instead of being organized
ad hoc) and the type of units involved (instead of combined arms, different classes of naval vessels were employed). One example is German
Kampfgruppe 5 employed during
Operation Weserübung. This unit consisted of the
heavy cruiser Blücher, the heavy cruiser
Lützow, the
light cruiser Emden, three
torpedo boats, and eight
minesweepers carrying 2,000 troops to
Oslo. During the Second World War, the
Kampfgeschwader bomber units of
Luftwaffe consisted of several
Kampfgruppen, which, in terms of size, were somewhere between
squadrons and
groups of
Anglo-American air forces. ==Post-war influence==