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Military unit From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The 7th Division (第7師団, Dai-Nana Shidan) is one of nine active divisions of the Japan Ground Self-Defense Force. The division is the only armored division of the Japan Ground Self-Defense Force. It is subordinated to the Northern Army and is headquartered in Chitose, Hokkaidō. Its responsibility is the defense of North Hokkaidō against potential conflicts, mostly from Russia.
7th Division | |
---|---|
Active | 15 August 1962 – present |
Country | Japan |
Branch | Japan Ground Self-Defense Force |
Type | Armored division |
Size | ~ 6500 soldiers |
Part of | Northern Army |
Garrison/HQ | Camp Higashi Chitose, Chitose, Hokkaidō |
Commanders | |
Current commander | Lt. Gen. Makiya Ōta |
The division was raised on 15 August 1962 as the 7th Mechanized Division. In 1981 it was merged with the 1st Armor Brigade to become the 7th Armored Division. As of 1987 it consisted of a headquarters, headquarters company, 7 regiments (3 armor, 1 motorized infantry, 1 artillery, 1 air defense artillery and 1 logistical support regiment), and 3 battalions (namely Reconnaissance, Combat Engineer, and Signals).
An armor regiment consisted of 5 tank squadrons with Type 10. A motorized infantry regiment had 6 motorized infantry companies and 1 mortar company. The artillery regiment contained 4 155-mm self-propelled howitzer battalions (10 guns in each).
In all, the armored division had about 6,500 men, 230 tanks, about 350 Type 89 and Type 73 armored personnel carriers, 40 self-propelled howitzers, 48 mortars (81-mm and larger), 40 35- and 40-mm self-propelled air defense systems, along with other armament and support systems, making it the most well-armed Japanese division.
7th Division consists of a division headquarters, three tank regiments, one mechanized infantry regiment, one mechanized artillery regiment, one air defense regiment, one logistics support regiment and other support and service battalions and companies. In the field, the division task organizes these elements into combined arms "combat teams".[1] For example, attaching an infantry company, artillery battery, air defense battery and service units to a tank regiment to form a Tank Combat Team.[2]
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