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"Captured Japanese Pilot's View"
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On 04 December 1943, as the 1st Cavalry Division was dismounted and
processed for overseas movement to the Southwest Pacific as foot soldiers,
the Military Police Platoon, 1st Cavalry Division was redesignated as the
Military Police Platoon, 1st Cavalry Division (Special).
After six months of training in Australia, the division got its first taste of
combat. On 29 February 1944, the men of the division sailed for the Admiralty
Islands and stormed ashore in an amphibious landing at Los Negros Island.
After a fierce campaign in which the enemy lost some 7,000 combat soldiers,
the division could look with pride on its first combat test of World War II.
The next action for the Cavalry troopers was on the Philippine Island of
Leyte. The division fought tirelessly against the Japanese fortification. With
the last of the strong-holds eliminated, the division moved on to Luzon, the
main island of the Philippines.
One of the First Team's most noted feats was accomplished during the fighting
for Luzon. On 31 January 1945, General Douglas MacArthur issued the order,
"Go to Manila, free the prisoners at Santo Tomas, take Malacanan Palace and
the legislative building." The next day, the "flying column," as the element
came to be known, jumped off to slice through 100 miles of Japanese territory.
Hours later, the 1st Cavalry Division was in Manila and the prisoners were
freed.
As the war came to a sudden end, MacArthur selected the First Team for the
honor of leading the Allied Occupational Army into Tokyo. During the
occupation of Japan, on 25 March 1949, the Military Police Platoon was
reorganized and redesignated as the 545th Military Police Company and remained
assigned to the 1st Cavalry Division (Infantry).
"The Pusan Perimeter"
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It happened before dawn on 25 June 1950. Less than 5 years after the
terrible devastations of World War II, a new war broke out from a distant
land whose name means "Morning Calm". On 18 July the 1st Cavalry Division
was ordered to Korea. Initially scheduled to make an amphibious landing at
Inchon, it was redirected to the southeastern coast of Korea at Pohang-dong
a port 80 miles north of Pusan. The North Koreans were 25 miles away when
elements of the 1st Cavalry Division swept ashore to successfully carry out
the first amphibious landing of the Korean War. Its initial mission was to
establish the Pusan Perimeter. By 22 July, all regiments were deployed in
battle positions; in itself a remarkable logistical achievement in the
face of Typhoon Helene that pounded the Korean coastline.
The landing at Pohang-dong helped halt the North Korean war machine at the
Pusan perimeter. The division broke out of the perimeter in mid-September and
started north. Crossing the 38th Parallel on 09 October 1950, the troopers of
the 1st Cavalry Division crashed into Pyongyang, capturing the capital city of
North Korea on 19 October. The sudden intervention of Communist Chinese forces
dashed hopes of a quick end to the war. First Team troopers fought
courageously in the see-saw campaigns that followed, and successfully defended
the city of Seoul. By January 1952, the division, after 18 months of
continuous fighting, rotated back to Hokkaido, Japan.
On 15 October 1957, the 545th Military Police Company was Inactivated and
relieved from assignment to the 1st Cavalry Division who returned to Korea
where they were given the mission of patrolled the Demilitarized Zone. Their
inactivity was short lived as on 15 July 1963, the unit was reassigned to the
1st Cavalry Division and activated in Korea on 01 September 1963. In June
1965, the 545th Military Police Company accompanied the 1st Cavalry Division
in the rotation back to the United States along with other units of the 1st
Cavalry Division.
"Air Cavalry Unit"
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The 1st Cavalry Division went home, but only long enough to be reorganized
and be prepared for a new mission. On 03 July 1965, in Doughboy Stadium at
Fort Benning, Georgia the colors of the 11th Air Assault Division (Test)
were cased and retired. As the band played the rousing strains of
GarryOwen, the colors of the 1st Cavalry Division were moved onto the
field. As part of the reorganization, the 11th Air Assault Military Police
Company was redesignated as the 545th Military Police Company, 1st Cavalry
Division (Airmobile).
An advance party of military police elements departed by air in mid August
while the remainder of the Company were shipped out by troop transports and
aircraft carriers from Charleston, VA in August 1965. The military police
acted as the Provost Marshal section for each ship, including guarding
prisoners who had attempted to go AWOL. As their ships arrived in Vietnam
beginning 12 September, the 545th Military Police Company set up operations
and began to expedite traffic.
Once an adequate traffic control system was established, the troops were flown
by helicopters or accompanied convoys from Qui Nhon up Highway 19 to the
Division base camp at An Khe. Arriving at Camp Radcliff they commenced the
construction of their company area while providing security and carrying out
Division Military Police duties. Beginning in mid September several Infantry
battalions supported the 1st Brigade of the 101st Airborne Division.
On 01 October Operation Shiny Bayonet (the First Team's first Brigade-size
airmobile action) commenced with the Military Police providing convoy
security; traffic control points; guards for captured materials and weapons;
forward collection points and in some instances 24 hour bridge security
along Highway 19 from Qui Nhon through the An Khe Pass and Mang Yang Pass
where four thousand French soldiers lost their life.
By mid October an MP desk with traffic and criminal investigation division
(CID) sections were established in the division base areas. A second MP desk
was operated in the Village of An Khe. In late October thru November the Plei
Me - Pleiku Campaign kept assigned MP platoons of the 1st, 2nd and 3rd
Brigades busy. The Security platoon accompanied the Division Forward
Headquarters. By the end of 1965 the MPs had established and operated key
roadblocks with the assistance of the Vietnam National Police.
Starting on 25 January 1966, the 545th MP Company supported operations
"Masher/White Wing" by providing guards for captured materials and weapons and
operated an enclosure for detained VC suspects. The MPs aided Military
Intelligence Teams whenever they became involved in sweeps of populated areas
- guarding, searching, detaining, protecting and detecting. Mps regularly
accompanied civil affairs personnel to secure them while they operated in
areas of tactical operations of the division.
In late March, during operations "Lincoln" and "Mosby", convey escorts from An
Khe to the forward CP of the 1st Brigade were provided. In October 1966,
forward collection points were set up where brigades were operating. All
military age males and detainees were sent by the maneuver battalions to the
collection point supporting its brigade. There, confirmed enemy were
interrogated for immediate tactical information then evacuated through regular
prisoner of war channels. Other detainees were held at forward collection
points for questioning by military intelligence., the national police or
hamlet cadre in order to classify them as friendly or enemy.
In June 1967, the MPs launched into operations with the Police Field Force
(PFF). These were combined operations, mainly with the Vietnam 222nd
Battalion, Combat National Police. The mode of operation was to cordon a
village at dawn. The Vietnamese police searched houses and questioned people
as they moved through.
After the 1st Cavalry Division moved south to III Corps, the MPs continued
their missions of Theater Of Combat (TOC) security and convey control. They
also began combined operations with the Vietnamese National Police in traffic
control and "populace and resource control". The progress of the war meant
an increase, rather than a decrease,in the duties of the MPs. There were fewer
prisoners to care for and fewer hostile hamlets to search, but the relative
peace of 1969 increased the need for traffic control on the roads and maintain
tranquility in the civil and military rear areas.
On 05 May 1971, the colors of the 1st Cavalry Division, minus those of the 3rd
Brigade, were moved from Vietnam to Fort Hood, Texas. Using the assets and
personnel of the 1st Armored Division, the 1st Cavalry Division was
reorganized, reassigned to III Corps and received an experimental designation
of the Triple-Capability (TRICAP) Division. Its mission, under the direction
of Modern Army Selected Systems Test, Evaluation and Review (MASSTER) was to
carry on a close identification with and test forward looking combined armor,
air cavalry and airmobile concepts.
The Division consisted of the 1st Armored Brigade, the 2nd Air Cavalry Combat
Brigade (ACCB) the 4th Airmobile Infantry Brigade. Division Artillery provided the fire support, Support Command provided normal troop
support and service elements and Division Troops supplied the specialty
units, consisting of a composite sub set of operating elements organic to the
Division. As part of the Division Troops reorganization, the 501st Military
Police Company, 1st Armored Division was redesignated as the 545th Military
Police Company, 1st Cavalry Division (Tricap).
"USNS Capella, RollOn RollOff Vessel"
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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 Ft.
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 545th Military Police
Company joined in the operations to perform its security missions and fight.
They served proudly in the Persian Gulf War, helping the 1st Cavalry Division
and other coalition forces crush the Iraqi Army. The company then redeployed
to Fort Hood, Texas with the "First Team" in April 1991.
On 14 November 2001, the 5th Platoon, 545th Military Police Company deployed
to Camp Doha, Kuwait in support of Task Force BLACKJACK THUNDER, Operation
DESERT SPRING 03-01. While undergoing their training exercises, on 15 December
they were redeployed and assigned to HQ-ARCENT located at Bagram, Afghanistan
in support of Operation Enduring Freedom. The Afghan Military Forces (AMF)
were holding up to 4,500 detainees throughout the Coalition Joint Operational
Area (CJOA) Afghanistan who required interrogation and documentation of
Personal Identification Data (PID).
The purpose of collecting PID is to create a better database for identifying
potential enemy threats and to screen these individuals to determine if they
meet the criteria to be treated as detainees. If an individual meets the
specified criteria, they are taken into custody in a detainee status and
secured for further processing.
In their new assignment in Afghanistan, the 545th Military Police Platoon
collected Personal Identification Data (PID) on potential Taliban and al-Qaeda
members in an effort to identify America's newest enemies. In their role that
covered the collection of personnel data, to the security of detainees during
the operations, and subsequent aerial escort missions back to the collection
points, the 545th Military Police Platoon proved to be a true combat
multiplier in Afghanistan.
On 11 February, the Platoon their operations in Afghanistan completed,
returned to Kuwait and continued their training and support of Task Force
Blackjack. They returned to Ft. Hood, TX at the end of March while the rest of
Task Force Blackjack came back in April.
The 545th of today continues to provide the same solid MP support that the 1st
Cavalry Division has learned to expect. The 545th is trained ready to assist
and protect in garrison and provide complete tactical MP support. The 545th
Military Police Company has always and always will continue to be "The First
Team's Finest".
Training, maintaining readiness and staying on the leading edge of today's
technology continue to be priorities, while the First Team takes great
strides to preserve its pride filled heritage and to live the legend its
forefathers created.
Revised 19 Aug '04