V Army Corps (Italy)
The V Army Corps was one of three corps the Italian Army fielded during the Cold War. Based in the regions of Veneto and Friuli-Venezia Giulia the corps was the army's main combat force. The 5th Army Corps was arrayed close to the Yugoslavian border and tasked with meeting any Warsaw Pact forces that crossed the border. On the left flank of the corps the 4th Alpine Army Corps was tasked with blocking the Alpine passes and in the rear of the corps the 3rd Army Corps served as operational reserve. After the end of the Cold War the corps was reduced in size and on 1 October 1997 it became the 1st Defence Forces Command. In 2013 the COMFOD 1° was disbanded and its function and brigades taken over by the 20th Infantry Division Friuli in Florence.
History
Origins
The history of the 5th Army Corps begins with Garibaldis Expedition of the Thousand. After Garibaldi scored victory after victory in his conquest of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, the Victor Emmanuel II of Sardinia decided to march south to secure the conquered territory for himself and thus unite Italy. The V Army Corps was raised and marched south with the main Army where it fought in the battles of San Giuliano on 26 October 1860 and Garigliano on 29 October 1860 and participated in the siege of Gaeta.After the war the corps was garrisoned in Florence, the capital of the newly united Italy. It commanded two elite divisions: the 1st Division of the Line in Florence and the 15th Division of the Line in Perugia. Both divisions were made up by Grenadier regiments.
At the outbreak of the third Italian war of independence the V Army Corps remained at first in Florence, but when the main Italian army failed to break through the Austrian Quadrilatero fortress system south of Lake Garda in the Battle of Custoza, the corps marched six divisions over the Apennine mountains, joined up with General Enrico Cialdinis eight divisions of the IV Army Corps in the Romagna and crossed the lower Po and Adige rivers in force on 11 July 1866. Bypassing the Austrian fortresses and main army on his left flank Cialdini marched his army all through the Veneto, dispatching one division under Giacomo Medici to invade Trentino and cut the Austrian line of retreat and three divisions under Raffaele Cadorna to march at speed to the city of Trieste. Cialdinis army reached the Isonzo river on 24 July 1866.
World War I
After the Italian declaration of war against the Austrian Empire on 23 May 1915 the V Army Corps under Lieutenant General Florenzio Aliprandi as part of the 1st Army advanced into Trentino. On the corps left flank the III Army Corps advanced through the Valtellina, Camonica Trompia and Chiese valleys and along the Western shore of Lake Garda. The ultimate goal of the 1st Army was to reach the city of Trento. Although numerically superior the corps failed to reach the city of Trento and its advance through the Adige and Valsugana valleys and over the Asiago plateau soon bogged down in determined Austrian resistance. The corps consisted of the 9th and 15th Division of the Line, the 34th Territorial Division, the 2nd, 4th and 8th Bersaglieri regiments and the 6th Alpini Regiment. All soldiers of the 6th Alpini Regiment had been recruited from valleys in the area of operations and thus fought in a territory they knew perfectly well. However the 6th Alpini Regiment was never employed as a whole, but single companies or battalions were given specific mountain summits, ridges or passes to conquer and hold.- V Army Corps
- * 9th Division of the Line
- ** Brigade of the Line "Puglie"
- *** 71st Line Infantry Regiment
- *** 72nd Line Infantry Regiment
- ** Brigade of the Line "Roma"
- *** 79th Line Infantry Regiment
- *** 80th Line Infantry Regiment
- ** 29th Territorial Field Artillery Regiment
- ** 12th Sapper Company / 1st Engineer Regiment
- ** Divisional Service units
- * 15th Division of the Line
- ** Brigade of the Line "Abruzzi"
- *** 57th Line Infantry Regiment
- *** 58th Line Infantry Regiment
- ** Brigade of the Line "Venezia"
- *** 83rd Line Infantry Regiment
- *** 84th Line Infantry Regiment
- ** 19th Field Artillery Regiment
- ** 1st Sapper Company / 2nd Engineer Regiment
- ** Divisional Service units
- * 34th Territorial Division
- ** Brigade of the Line "Treviso"
- *** 115th Line Infantry Regiment
- *** 116th Line Infantry Regiment
- ** Brigade of the Line "Ivrea"
- *** 161st Line Infantry Regiment
- *** 162nd Line Infantry Regiment
- ** 2x squadrons of the 22nd "Cavalleggeri di Catania" Cavalry Regiment
- ** 41st Territorial Field Artillery Regiment
- ** 9th Sapper Company / 2nd Engineer Regiment
- ** Divisional Service units
- * 2nd Bersaglieri Regiment
- * 4th Bersaglieri Regiment
- * 8th Bersaglieri Regiment
- * 6th Alpini Regiment
- * "Feltre" and "Val Cismon" Alpini battalions from the 7th Alpini Regiment
- * 22nd "Cavalleggeri di Catania" Cavalry Regiment
- * I Guardia di Finanza Frontier Battalion
- * V, VII, IX, XVII, XVIII Guardia di Finanza Coastal Battalion
- * 5th Field Artillery Regiment
- * II Group "Torino-Aosta" / 1st Mountain Artillery Regiment
- * VII Group "Vicenza" / 2nd Mountain Artillery Regiment
- * IX Group "Oneglia" / 3rd Mountain Artillery Regiment
- * X Group "Genova" / 3rd Mountain Artillery Regiment
- * 3x tunnelling engineer companies
- * 16th Sapper Company / 1st Engineer Regiment
- * 16th Sapper Company / 2nd Engineer Regiment
- * 11th Telegraph Engineers Company
- * Army Corps Service units
After the end of the Austrian offensive the corps remained in the same area of operation until the end of the war.
World War II
After the war the V Army Corps was garrisoned in Trieste and consisted of the 12th Infantry Division "Timavo" in Trieste and the 15th Infantry Division "Bergamo" in Pula. At the outbreak of World War II the corps was guarding the border with Yugoslavia. Headquartered in Pivka it consisted of the 12th Infantry Division "Sassari", 15th Infantry Division "Bergamo" and 57th Infantry Division "Lombardia".On 6 April 1941, under command of Riccardo Balocco, it participated in the Axis invasion of Yugoslavia. After the end of combat operations the corps took up garrison duties along the Dalmatian coast, but found itself quickly fighting Yugoslav partisans. The corps was garrisoned in Crikvenica at the time and consisted of the 153rd Infantry Division "Macerata" in Delnice, 154th Infantry Division "Murge" in Sinj and the XIV Coastal Brigade in Crikvenica.
After Germany invaded Italy following the Italian-Allied armistice in September 1943 the corps was disbanded by the Germans.
WWII Commanders
- Italo Gariboldi
- Carlo Geloso
- Carlo Vecchiarelli
- Riccardo Balocco
- Renato Coturri
- Alessandro Gloria
- Antonio Scuero
Cold War
On 1 May 1952 the V Territorial Military Command was renamed as V Army Corps and as the West-East confrontation became more dire the Ariete tripled in size and became the Armored Division "Ariete" on 1 October 1952. division also exchanged its Sherman tanks for more powerful M26 Pershings. On 30 September the corps 1953 moved to Vittorio Veneto and ceded command of the Julia to the new Carnia-Cadore Troops Command, which covered the V Army Corps left flank.
Over the next years the corps added further units to keep up with the geopolitical situation of the Cold War: the Ariete was further increased and received M47 Patton tanks and M113 armored personnel carriers, as well as one artillery group armed with M44 self-propelled howitzers and one artillery group armed with M110 self-propelled howitzers. The Mantova and Folgore infantry divisions were each increased by one infantry regiment and both received a tank battalion with M47 Patton tanks. In Trieste the 151st Infantry Regiment "Sassari" and the 14th Field Artillery Regiment formed the Trieste Troops Command tasked with defending the city. At the same time the Lagunari regiment in Venice grew to three amphibious battalions and one tank battalion with M47 Patton tanks. In Gorizia on 1 January 1959 the mechanized Cavalry Brigade "Pozzuolo del Friuli" activated with two mechanized, one tank battalion and one self-propelled artillery group, to replace the Mantova, which had moved its headquarters to Udine.
The most significant addition to the corps was the III Missile Brigade. The brigade activated on 1 October 1959 in Vicenza and initially consisted of one missile artillery regiment with two missile groups, each of which was armed with eight Honest John missile launchers. The MGR-1 Honest John was a nuclear-capable surface-to-surface missile intended to destroy the large Warsaw Pact armored formations. By the 1963, when the brigades headquarters was moved to Portogruaro, the brigade contained four missile groups and one group with M115 howitzers.
The corps - along with the 3rd Army Corps and 4th Army Corps was part of NATOs Allied Land Forces Southern Europe Command in Verona.