III Corps (India)

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
(Redirected from Indian III Corps)
Jump to: navigation, search
III Corps
Active 1915–?, 1941–42, 1980s-Present
Country India
Branch Indian Army
Type Army Corps
Role Counter insurgency
Size Corps
Part of Eastern Command Indian Army
Garrison/HQ Dimapur
Commanders
Current
commander
Lieutenant General Abhay Krishna

The III Corps was a formation of the Indian Army during World War I formed in Mesopotamia. Prior to the reorganization of the British and Indian forces in Mesopotamia, it was designated as the Tigris Corps. It is located in the state of Nagaland of India in the city of Dimapur. The military station is known as Rangapahar Military Station.

A new III Corps was formed in the Second World War for service in South East Asia.[1]

Indian Army Corps (1947 - Present)
Previous Next
II Corps IV Corps

First World War

Initially formed in December 1915, it was split into two in November 1916 to form the I Corps.[2] Under Frederick Stanley Maude it took part in the Mesopotamian campaign.

Among its component divisions during World War I were the Cavalry Division, 3rd (Lahore) Division, 6th (Poona) Division, 7th (Meerut) Division, 12th Indian Division, 14th Indian Division, 17th Indian Division, and 18th Indian Division.

Second World War

The British Indian III Corps was the primary ground formation that took part in the Battle of Malaya in 1942. It was commanded by Lieutenant-General Sir Lewis "Piggy" Heath. The Corps also included a Gurkha regiment, 1 Gorkha Rifles.

III Corps was formed in mid-1941 as part of the Malaya Command when the increase in tension in the Far East necessitated the dispatch of large reinforcements to the area to deter Japan. On 7 December 1941 the Corps consisted of the Indian 9th Infantry Division, commanded by Major-General Barstow, the Indian 11th Infantry Division, commanded by Major-General Murray-Lyon, a Lines of Communication Area, and the Penang Fortress.[3] Due to the rapid expansion of the British Indian Army, many of the formations in the Indian divisions were ill-trained and lacked large enough cadres of experienced troops.

The British had plans – Operation Matador and Operation Krohcol – to move forward into the south of Siam to forestall Japanese advances. However, lack of forewarning, combined with caution over upsetting Japan needlessly with precipitate actions, prevented the plans from being implemented. This put the garrison on the defensive, a position from which it never recovered.

III Corps was pushed down the Malayan peninsula by Japanese units, who employed novel tactics. When confronted with an Allied strong point on a road, the Japanese troops would leave a screen in front of the position, and then send infiltrators round through the jungle to outflank the position. Having been surrounded, positions were usually relatively easy to take. III Corps and the rest of the Allied land forces were pushed back to Singapore itself by February 1942. There they endured a short siege before the island surrendered at the direction of Lieutenant-General Arthur Percival. Some of the prisoners taken from Indian III Corps subsequently joined the Indian National Army.

Post independence

After the independence of India, a new III Corps was raised by the Indian Army in the 1980s. It is based at Dimapur in north east India, and contains mountain formations and is tasked for use in any future Indian war against China. Jane's estimates that it consists of:[4]

Reference list

  1. Ramakrishna
  2. Listing of British Corps, accessed July 2010
  3. Orbat.com/Niehorster, III Indian Corps, 7 December 1941
  4. Jane's World Armies, Issue 19, 2006
  5. 5.0 5.1 Conboy, Elite Forces of India and Pakistan, p.8
  6. http://chhindits.blogspot.com/2009/11/armys-first-mountain-division-for-china.html, 11 November 2009
  7. Globalsecurity.org, 17 July 2010
  8. http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/india/57-div.htm
  9. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links


Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.