Barak Armored Brigade
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Barak Armored Brigade | |
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Insignia for Barak Brigade |
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Active | 1948- |
Country | Israel |
Branch | Army |
Type | Armor |
Part of | Northern Command |
Battles/wars | Operation Hiram, Golan (1973) |
The Barak Armored Brigade is today an Israeli tank brigade and one of the regular armored brigades of the Northern Command. The symbol of the Barak Armored Brigade is a shield with a red border, blue and white Haifa coastline background and a sword on it. The brigade has a long history and was even a part of the Yishuv's forces in Palestine before the state of Israel was declared.
In the mid-1990s, the brigade became the first to adopt the Merkava mark-III main battle tank and the older Centurion tanks were phased out.
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[edit] History
During the 1948 Arab-Israeli war the brigade was known as the Carmeli Brigade because it was led by Moshe Carmel. It was an infantry brigade which fought in the northern part of Palestine. The brigade played an important role in Operation Hiram.
After IDF was created the Carmeli Brigade became the 18th Brigade.
During the Sinai Campaign in 1956 the brigade was stationed along the Jordanian border, in case the Jordanians decided to open a second front, and was thus not involved in combat.
It was then added with armored units and became the 45th Armored Brigade, known as the "Barak Armored Brigade". It consisted of one tank battalion, two armored infantry battalions, a mortar battalion and reconnaissance units. The changeover was completed in 1962.
During the Yom Kippur War, it played an important role defending Israel's border against the Syrian attack in the southern Golan Heights. 112 soldiers were killed in action there, including the brigade commander. The brigade was almost completely destroyed.
During the battle, Lieutenant Zvika Greengold, who had arrived unattached to any unit, fought off attacks with his single tank until help arrived. "For the next 20 hours, Zvika Force, as he came to be known on the radio net, fought running battles with Syrian tanks—sometimes alone, sometimes as part of a larger unit, changing tanks half a dozen times as they were knocked out. He was wounded and burned but stayed in action and repeatedly showed up at critical moments from an unexpected direction to change the course of a skirmish."[1]
In the 1982 Lebanon War, it fought in Beirut and participated in the capture of the airport.
[edit] List of Israeli military operations in the 1948 Arab-Israeli war that the Carmeli Brigade participated in
- Operation Dekel (one battalion)
- Operation Hiram
- Operation Misparayim
[edit] List of villages and towns captured by the Carmeli Brigade in the 1948 Arab-Israeli war
- Al-Nahr
- Al-Ghabisiyya
- Al-Sumayriyya
- Al-Tall
- Al-Kabri
- Al-Mansura
- Haifa (the Arab quarters)
- Umm al-Faraj
[edit] References
- ^ "Shattered Heights: Part 1," Jerusalem Post, September 25, 1998 (accessed June 9, 2005).