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On 27 September 1951, the battalion was redesignated as the 23rd Signal
Construction Battalion and allocated to the Regular Army. On 02 November the
battalion was assigned to the Eighth Army and activated in Korea where it
earned five battalion streamers. On 15 May 1953, the battalion was inactivated
in Korea. In parallel, the 191st Counter Intelligence Corps Detachment (a
predecessor unit of Company "B") was constituted in the Regular Army on 25
September 1950, activated in Korea and attached to support the 1st Cavalry
Division.
On 19 May 1955, the battalion was converted and redesignated the 312th
Communications Reconnaissance Battalion, activated on 25 June and assigned to
Bad Aibling Kaserne, Germany. On 01 July 1956, the battalion was redesignated
as the 312th Army Security Agency Battalion.
Two elements of the battalion, Company "A", formally designated as Company "C"
313 Army Security Agency Battalion (later redesignated as 371st Army Security
Agency Company) and Company "B", formally the 11th Air Assault Military
Intelligence Detachment which was redesignated as the 191st Military
Intelligence Detachment (later designated as Company) were deployed to Vietnam
with the 1st Cavalry Division (Airborne) in July 1965.
The mission of the 371st Army Security Agency Company was to provide combat
information to the Division Commander in pursuit of his mission. The company
served well and faithfully, earning two Presidential Unit Citations, four
Meritorious Unit Commendations, and one Valorous Unit Award. It was redeployed
to Fort Hood, Texas with the division in 1971 were it served with pride until
deactivation in October, 1981, with its mission turned over to Company "A",
312th Military Intelligence Battalion upon activation.
The 191st Military Intelligence Company (MIC) had the mission to perform all
specialized intelligence and counter intelligence functions requiring the
employment of special skills or foreign languages.
The 191st Military Intelligence Company consisted of a company headquarters
and four functionally organized operational sections; Order of Battle (OB),
Interrogation of Prisoners of War (IPW), Imagery Interpretation (IP) and
Counter Intelligence (CI). The company provided tactical commanders, at all
levels, with timely intelligence to meet the changing situations created by
the mobility of the 1st Cavalry Division.
On 07 January 1967, a 1st Cavalry Division Long Range Reconnaissance Patrol
(LRRP) (Provisional) unit was formed under the wing of the 191st Military
Intelligence Company. On 02 Feburary, the provisional status was dropped and
they were opconned as a Detachment to the Division G2. The information
gathered from their first mission was valuable and revealed new locations of
the enemy, trails and map correction data. As time passed, the detachment grew
in number, including members of the Rhade Tribe Unit and Vietnamese Scouts.
In April, they were redesignated as a company level operation and set up camp
just west of An Khe. On 20 December, the unit was redesignated as "E" Co,
52nd Infantry and released from the 1st Cavalry Division,
Early in 1968, when the Skytroopers moved to the Northern I Corps, the 191st
had its work cut out. All commanders had to be familiarized with the new
battle situation. Within two days after the division headquarters made the
move, a comprehensive Order of Battle Book of some 100 pages and a
distribution of more than 300 copies was made for the U.S. Troops.
One of the primary information of sources for the Information specialist was
the Imagery Interpretation section. This section read photographs and data
from missions of reconnaissance aircraft. The image interpretators identified
numerous enemy targets from aerial photographs. The enemy bunkers and
trenches detected were reported to the combat arms for "appropriate action".
The analysists also had the capability to interpret infrared and sidelooking
airborne radar.
The Counter Intelligence (CI) section teams questioned all prisoners, Hoi
Chanh and civilians each month. In July 1969, a debriefing of a Hoi Chanh
furnished the division with the information on an enemy plan to attack the
Quan Loi basecamp. Data provided the division with the time and routes of
attack, units involved and routes of withdrawal. The CI section performed
security inspections, validated security clearances and established a net for
early warning collection.
On 15 August 1972, having served the 1st Cavalry well, the 191st Military
Intelligence Company was inactivated in Vietnam.
With the division stand down in Vietnam, the 371st Army Security Agency
Company was redeployed to Fort Hood, Texas with the division in 1971 were it
served with pride until deactivation in October, 1981, with its mission
turned over to Company "A", 312th Military Intelligence Battalion upon
activation.
On 21 June 1975, the 191st Military Intelligence Company was reactivated at
Fort Hood, Texas and on 02 July 1977, it was reassigned to the 1st Cavalry
Division. It continued to perform its intelligence mission until 01 October
1981, when it was consolidated with the newly activated Company "B" of the
312th Military Intelligence Battalion.
On 06 April 1977, the 312th Military Intelligence Battalion (Provisional) was
organized as part of the 1st Cavalry Division. On 01 October 1981, the
battalion discontinued its provisional status and became the 312th Military
Intelligence Battalion, a separate battalion in support of the 1st Cavalry
Division.
On 07 August 1990, a deployment order for the Southwest Asia operations was
issued. The order called for the division to be attached to the XVIII Airborne
Corps to reinforce Saudi Arabia and organize for combat operations. Plans
calling for the division to deploy by 15 September extended the work day to
14, 16 and in some cases 24 hours. On schedule, by mid September over 800
heavy loaded vehicles were loaded at the Fort Hood railhead to make the trip
to the seaports of Houston and Beaumont. An additional 4,200 vehicles formed
road conveys that left every two hours, around the clock.
On 16 September, an Air Force C5A Galaxy, carrying the advanced headquarters
staff, left Fort Hood Robert Gray Army Airfield. The 312th Military
Intelligence Battalion then fought and served proudly in the Persian Gulf War,
helping the 1st Cavalry Division and other coalition forces crush the Iraqi
Army. The battalion then redeployed to Fort Hood with the "First Team" in
April 1991.
Upon return of the 312th Military Intelligence Battalion, it began an
extensive program of recovery and modernization. In the past four years, the
Battalion has revolutionized tactical intelligence operations for the Army.
Since Desert Storm, the battalion has deployed soldiers seven times to the
National Training Center, four times to Kuwait, six times in support of JTF-6
counter-narcotics missions, twice to Somalia, once to Twenty-nine Palms for a
joint Army/Marine Exercise, and just recently "Silent Warriors" deployed to
Idaho in support of forest fire-fighting.
The 312th reorganized for the "A" Series Military Table of Organization and
Equipment (MTOE) on 16 November 1995. The battalion currently consists of a
headquarters and headquarters company, a general support company, and three
direct support companies.
In 1995, the 1st Cavalry Division and Control Element (ACE) was formed upon
the merger of the All Source Production Section (ASPS) from the Division
Headquarters and the Tactical Control and Analysis Element (TCAE) from the
312th Military Intelligence Battalion. The 1st Cavalry Division quickly built
a reputation for tactical and technical proficiency in support of contingency
missions for the 1998-1999 Bosnian-Herzegovina Stabilization Force (SFOR).
On 15 October, upon return from Bosnia, the ACE Detachment, 312th Military
Intelligence was formed. Today the Ace Detachment. 312th Military Detachment,
using state of the art processors and links to the Division, Corps, Theater
and National Intelligence information, provides intelligence support to the
Commander 1st Cavalry Division for worldwide contingency operations.
"Tactical Unmanned Aerial Vehicle"
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On 20 September 2003, "C" Company, 312th Military Intelligence Battalion
was attached to the 1st Brigade, 1st Infantry Regiment, 18th Airborne
Corps and deployed in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. The company,
normally part of the 1st Calvary Division, has been temporarily assigned
to the 82nd Airborne Division, which is presently stationed at Happaniyah,
Iraq. The team recently received Shadow Tactical Unmanned Aerial Vehicles
(TAUAV) for for use in training the 82nd, which is currently calling the
Al Anbar province home. The addition of the vehicles expands the overall
capability of the battalion to gather intelligence from high altitudes and
allows it to remain mostly imperceptible to enemy detection.
The 312th Military Intelligence Battalion is one of the most decorated
intelligence unit in the Army. As in the past, the Silent Warriors of the 1st
Cavalry Division remain ready to answer the nation's call, anytime, any place
and under any circumstances.
Revised 19 Aug '04