Dictionary Definition
battalion
Noun
1 an army unit usually consisting of a
headquarters and three or more companies
2 a large indefinite number; "a battalion of
ants"; "a multitude of TV antennas"; "a plurality of religions"
[syn: large
number, multitude,
plurality, pack]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
Translations
army unit
any large body of troops
Extensive Definition
A battalion is a military
unit of around 500-1500 men usually consisting of between two
and six companies
and typically commanded by a Lieutenant
Colonel. Several battalions are grouped to form a regiment or a brigade.
The nomenclature varies by nationality and by
branch of arms, for instance, some armies organize their infantry into battalions, but
call battalion-sized cavalry, reconnaissance, or tank units a
squadron or a regiment instead. There may
even be subtle distinctions within a nation's branches of arms,
such as a distinction between a tank battalion and an armored
squadron, depending on how the unit's operational role is perceived
to fit into the army's historical organization.
A battalion is generally the smallest military
unit capable of independent operations (i.e. not attached to a
higher command), although many armies have smaller units that are
self-sustaining. The battalion is usually part of a regiment, group or a
brigade, depending on
the organizational model used by that service. The bulk of a
battalion will ordinarily be homogeneous with respect to type (e.g.
an infantry battalion or a tank battalion), although there are many
exceptions. Every battalion will also include some sort of combat
service support, typically organized within a combat
support company.
The term is Italian
in origin, appearing as battaglione. The French changed the
spelling to bataillon, whereupon it directly entered into German.
British Army
The term battalion is used in the infantry, Royal Army Medical Corps, Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers and Intelligence Corps only. It was formerly used for a few units in the Royal Engineers (before they switched to regiments), and was also used in the now defunct Royal Army Ordnance Corps and Royal Pioneer Corps. Other corps usually use the term regiment instead.An infantry battalion is numbered ordinally
within its regiment (e.g. 1st Battalion, The Rifles,
usually referred to as 1st Rifles). It normally has a Headquarters
Company, Support Company, and three Rifle Companies (usually, but
not always, A, B and C Companies). Each company is commanded by a
Major, the
Officer Commanding (OC), with a Captain
or senior Lieutenant as
Second-in-Command
(2i/c). The HQ company contains signals,
quartermaster,
catering, intelligence,
administration, pay, training, operations and medical elements. The
support company usually contains anti-tank,
machine
gun, mortar,
pioneer
and reconnaissance platoons.
Mechanised units usually have an attached Light
Aid Detachment (LAD) of the Royal Electrical and Mechanical
Engineers (REME) to perform field repairs on vehicles and
equipment.
Important figures in a battalion headquarters
include:
- Commanding Officer (CO) (invariably a Lieutenant-Colonel)
- Second-in-Command (2i/c) (usually a Major)
- Adjutant (Captain or Major)
- Quartermaster (QM) (Captain or Major)
- Regimental Medical Officer (RMO) (Army Medical Services Captain or Major)
- Regimental Administrative Officer (RAO) (Adjutant General's Corps Captain or Major)
- Padre (Royal Army Chaplains Department Chaplain 4th or 3rd Class)
- Regimental Intelligence Officer (RIO) (Intelligence Corps Lieutenant or Captain)
- Regimental Signals Officer (RSO) (Royal Corps of Signals Lieutenant or Captain)
- Regimental Sergeant Major (RSM) (Warrant Officer Class 1)
- Regimental Quartermaster Sergeant (RQMS) (Warrant Officer Class 2)
Battalions of other corps are given separate
cardinal numbers within their corps (e.g. 101 Battalion
REME).
United States Army and Marine Corps
In the United States Army and United States
Marine Corps, a battalion is a unit composed of a headquarters and
two or more batteries, companies or troops. They are normally
identified by ordinal numbers (1st Battalion, 2nd Squadron, etc.)
and normally have subordinate units that are identified by single
letters (Battery A, Company B, Troop C, etc.). Battalions are
tactical and administrative organizations with a limited capability
to plan and conduct independent operations and are normally organic
components of brigades, groups, or regiments.
A United
States Army battalion includes the battalion commander
(Lieutenant Colonel), his staff, and headquarters, the Command
Sergeant Major (CSM), and usually 3-5 companies, with a total
of 300 to 1,200 soldiers. A regiment consists of between two and
six organic battalions, while a brigade consists of between three
and seven separate battalions.
During World War II, most infantry regiments
consisted of three battalions (a 1st, 2nd, and 3rd) with each
battalion consisting of four companies. That is, companies A, B, C,
and D were part of the 1st battalion, companies E, F, G, and H
constituted the 2nd battalion, and I, K, L, and M in the 3rd. There
was no J company. [The letter J was traditionally not used because
in 18th and 19th century old style type the capital letters I and J
looked alike and were therefore too easily confused with one
another.] It wasn't uncommon for a battalion to become temporarily
attached to a different regiment. For example, during the confusion
and high casualty rates of both the Normandy
landings and the Battle
of the Bulge, in order to bolster the strength of a depleted
infantry regiment, battalions and even companies were moved around
as necessary.
From the 1960s through approximately 2005, a
typical maneuver (infantry or tank) battalion has had four
companies:
Headquarters and Headquarters Company (HHC) and A, B, and C
Companies. In addition to the battalion staff, the HHC also
included a scout platoon and a mortar platoon.
In this older structure, United States Army
mechanized
infantry battalions and tank
battalions, for tactical purposes, cross-post companies to each
other, forming a battalion-sized task force
(TF).
Starting in 2005-2006 with Transformation, US
Army mechanized and tank battalions were reorganized into Combined
Arms Battalions (CABs). Tank battalions and mechanized infantry
battalions no longer exist. These new combined arms battalions are
modular units, each consisting of a headquarters company, two
mechanized infantry companies, two armor companies, an engineer
company, and a forward support company. This new structure
eliminated the need to cross-post (or as it is more commonly
referred to, cross-attach) companies between battalions; each
combined arms battalion was organically composed of the requisite
companies. At a higher level, each heavy brigade is composed of two
CABs, an armored reconnaissance squadron, a fires battalion (field
artillery), a special troops battalion (STB), and a brigade support
battalion (BSB).
A
United States Marine Corps battalion includes the battalion
headquarters, consisting of the commanding officer (usually a
lieutenant Colonel, sometimes a colonel), an executive officer (the
second-in-command, usually a major), the Sergeant
Major, and the executive staff (S-1 through S-8). The battalion
headquarters is supported by a Headquarters and Service Company
(Battery). A battalion usually contains 2-5 organic companies
(batteries in the artillery), with a total of 500 to 1,200 Marines
in the battalion. A regiment consists of a regimental headquarters,
a headquarters company (or battery), and two to five organic
battalions (Marine infantry regiments - three battalions of
infantry; Marine artillery regiments - three to five battalions of
artillery; Marine logistics regiments - two or more logistics
battalions). In the US Marine Corps the brigade designation is used
only in "Marine Expeditionary Brigade" (MEB). A MEB is one of the
standard Marine Air-Ground Task Forces (MAGTF), is commanded by a
brigadier or major general, and consists of command element, a
ground combat element (usually one reinforced Marine infantry
regiment), an air combat element (a reinforced Marine Air Group),
and a service support element (a Marine Logistics group, which
includes Naval Construction Force (SEABEEs) and naval medical
elements).
In the US Marine Corps an infantry or “rifle”
battalion typically consists of a Headquarters and Service Company
(H&S Co.), three rifle, or “line,” companies (designated
alphabetically A through M depending upon which battalion of the
parent regiment to which they are attached) and a weapons company.
Weapons companies do not receive a letter designation. Marine
infantry regiments use battalion and company designations as
described above under WW II, with company letters D, H, and M not
normally used but rather held in "reserve" for use in augmenting a
fourth rifle company into each battalion as needed.
United States Marine Corps infantry battalions
are task organized into Battalion
Landing Teams (BLT's) as the Ground
Combat Element (GCE) of a Marine
Expeditionary Unit (MEU). A "standard"
Marine
infantry battalion is typically reinforced with an artillery
battery and a platoon each of tanks, amphibious assault
vehicles, light armored reconnaissance vehicles, reconnaissance
Marines, and combat engineers. The battalion structure is designed
to readily expand to include a fourth rifle company, if required,
as described above under battalion organization.
During the American
Civil War, an infantry or cavalry battalion was an ad hoc
grouping of companies from the parent regiment (which had ten
companies, A through K, minus J as described above), except for
certain regular infantry regiments, which were formally organized
into three battalions of six companies each (numbered 1 - 6 per
battalion vice sequential letter designations). After 1882, cavalry
battalions were renamed squadrons and cavalry companies were
renamed troops. Artillery battalions typically comprised four or
more batteries, although this number fluctuated considerably.
Tactical operations
Tank and mechanized infantry battalion task
forces apply their combat power to—
- Conduct sustained combat operations in all environments with proper augmentation and support.
- Conduct offensive operations.
- Conduct defensive operations.
- Accomplish rapid movement and limited penetrations.
- Exploit success and pursue a defeated enemy as part of a larger formation.
- Conduct security operations (advance, flank, or rear guard) for a larger force.
- Conduct stability operations and support operations as part of a larger force.
- Conduct operations with light infantry forces.
Tactical telecommunications
Communications at the tactical level is essential in succeeding in full spectrum operations on the modern battlefield. Tactical communications means the sharing of information between small combat units (typically the squad, platoon, company, and battalion). The efficient sharing of information sharing enables small units to locate and target the enemy quickly and accurately. At the battalion level, the ability to share information links shooters (the fire team leader and his men) and the battalion commander and his staff.The Army’s maneuver battalions employ wired and
wireless systems to communicate tactically and maintain command and
control. Typically, wired systems are used in static or defensive
positions. Conversely, radio systems are generally used in mobile
and offensive operations. Army communications systems at all levels
must be secure and have a low probability of intercept and
attack.
Prior to the mid-1990s, tactical communications
were normally transmitted "in the clear." Communications security
was achieved by applying the standards of brevity and a signal
operating instruction. The
signal operating instructions (SOI) was a manual carried by
leaders and radio operators that standardized small unit
frequencies, call-signs, and code-words (for rudimentary
encryption). Units maintained 2 copies of the SOI: a training
version and a "go-to-war" version. Since the fielding of the
SINCGARS system, however, the SOI has generally faded from Army
use.
The following is a brief overview of systems
currently available to the typical Army maneuver battalion:
TA-1 field telephone
The TA-1 is a lightweight, sound powered field
telephone and does not require batteries. The user signals by
squeezing a pump button on the handset which generates signaling
current. The TA-1 is a half duplex (push to talk, release to
listen) system. Signal (65-80Vac @ 20 Hz) and voice transmission
(300-4000 Hz) range is approximately
4 miles (6 km) with WD-1/TT wire. This
phone is intended to be used in a field wire network connected
directly to other phones or through a battery powered
switchboard.
TA-312 field telephone
The TA-312 field telephone can be used in a
point-to-point wire system or in any two-wire ring-down subscriber
position of a telephone communications system. The TA-1 is a half
duplex (push to talk, release to listen) system. Can be used in
common battery, local battery, or common-battery signaling
operation modes. Signal (90-100Vac @ 20 Hz) and voice transmission
(300-3200 Hz) range is approximately
22 miles (35 km) with WD-1/TT wire.
Requires two BA-30 batteries or an external 3Vdc power
source.
AN/PRC-148 Multiband Inter/Intra Team Radio
(MBITR)
Replaces the AN/PRC-126 and ICOM squad radios and
gives small unit leaders (team, squad, and platoon leaders) ability
to communicate securely (via frequency hopping and encryption) with
larger, primarily vehicle mounted systems (SINCGARS platforms). The
MBITR, at 30.6 oz, is a compact, lightweight, hand-held radio. The
MBITR operates between 30-512 MHz.
After the fielding of the SINCGARS but prior to
the arrival of the MBITR, communications at platoon level and below
were generally unsecure. Therefore, brevity and codewords
(signaling operating instruction or SOI) were employed to deter the
enemy’s ability to eavesdrop and triangulate. With the arrival of
the MBITR, a dismounted platoon leader was now able to securely
communicate with both his company commander and his squad
leaders.
Single Channel Ground Airborne Radio System
(SINCGARS)
Currently, the Single Channel Ground Airborne
Radio System (SINCGARS) is the cornerstone of Army battalion and
below (platoon and company) tactical communications infrastructure.
Prior to the fielding of the MBITR, the AN/PRC-119F was the
smallest frequency hopping radio available to the Army maneuver
battalion. The SINCGARS radio set is capable of operating either in
single channel or frequency hopping mode. The latest version of
this radio in use by the Army is the Advanced Lightweight SINCGARS
SIP (ASIP) RT-1523(E). The SINCGARS system of radios is highly
modular and can be configured in many different ways: AN/PRC-119F
(manpack), AN/VRC-89 (one short range, one long range radio),
AN/VRC-92 (dual long range radios), and many others.
The ASIP version of the venerable SINCGARS radio
contains several major improvements. The most significant of these
improvements is the reduction in size and weight, both extremely
important characteristics at the small unit level. The ASIP radio
is a 50% smaller and 33% lighter version (9 lb with battery,
handset, and antenna) of its predecessor.
SINGCARS systems are used in the maneuver
battalion’s combat vehicles including the HMMWV, M1A2SEP tank, and
Bradley Fighting Vehicle variants. SINCGARS radios use frequency
modulation in the VHF band (30 to 87.975 MHz). The SINCGARS radio
is capable of both voice and data transmission (up to 16kbit/s).
Voice transmission range varies between 0 and 40 km depending on
power source and amplification.
Headquarters personnel
The commanding officer of a battalion is usually a lieutenant colonel, although a major can be selected for battalion command in lieu of an available lieutenant colonel. A typical tour of duty for this assignment is twenty-four to thirty-six months.A battalion command is the first unit command
position at which the commanding officer is given an appreciably
sized headquarters and staff to assist him or her in commanding the
battalion and its subordinate company
units. The typical staff usually includes:
- a battalion executive officer, usually a major
- a battalion command sergeant major
- a personnel officer (S1), usually a captain
- an intelligence officer (S2), usually a captain
- an operations officer (S3), usually a major
- a logistics officer (S4), usually a captain
- a communications officer (S6), usually a captain
- a medical officer, usually a captain
- a JAG (legal) officer, usually a captain
- a battalion chaplain, usually a captain
In addition, the headquarters will include
non-commissioned
officers and enlisted support personnel in
the occupational specialties of the staff sections; these personnel
will ordinarily be assigned to the battalion's
headquarters and headquarters company.
References
External links
- French Infantry of the Napoleonic Wars
- The Battalion Commander's Handbook, 1996, By Major General Richard A. Chilcoat, US Army War College, Carlisle Barracks, Pennsylvania
battalion in Arabic: كتيبة (وحدة عسكرية)
battalion in Bengali: ব্যাটালিয়ন
battalion in Belarusian: Батальён
battalion in Bulgarian: Батальон
battalion in Catalan: Batalló
battalion in Danish: Bataljon
battalion in German: Bataillon
battalion in Estonian: Pataljon
battalion in Spanish: Batallón
battalion in Esperanto: Bataliono
battalion in Persian: گردان
battalion in French: Bataillon
battalion in Galician: Batallón
battalion in Croatian: Bojna
battalion in Indonesian: Batalyon
battalion in Icelandic: Herfylki
battalion in Italian: Battaglione
battalion in Hebrew: גדוד
battalion in Javanese: Batalyon
battalion in Georgian: ბატალიონი
battalion in Lithuanian: Batalionas
battalion in Hungarian: Zászlóalj
battalion in Malay (macrolanguage):
Batalion
battalion in Dutch: Bataljon
battalion in Japanese: 大隊
battalion in Norwegian: Bataljon
battalion in Norwegian Nynorsk: Bataljon
battalion in Low German: Bataillon
battalion in Polish: Batalion
battalion in Portuguese: Batalhão
battalion in Russian: Батальон
battalion in Slovenian: Bataljon
battalion in Serbian: Батаљон
battalion in Serbo-Croatian: Bataljon
battalion in Finnish: Pataljoona
battalion in Swedish: Bataljon
battalion in Turkish: Tabur
battalion in Ukrainian: Батальйон
battalion in Chinese: 营
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
KP, age
group, army, army group,
band, battery, battle group, bevy, body, brigade, bunch, cabal, cadre, cast, clique, cohort, column, combat command, combat
team, company, complement, contingent, corps, coterie, covey, crew, crowd, detachment, detail, division, faction, field army, field
train, file, fleet, flying column, gang, garrison, group, grouping, groupment, in-group, junta, kitchen police, legion, maniple, mob, movement, organization, out-group,
outfit, pack, party, peer group, phalanx, platoon, posse, rank, regiment, salon, section, set, squad, squadron, stable, string, tactical unit, task
force, team, train, tribe, troop, troupe, unit, wing