Formation reconnaissance regiment
The Formation Reconnaissance Regiment is a fighting unit provided by the Royal Armoured Corps or Household Cavalry. Previously it was known as a Armoured Reconnaissance Regiment.
Formation reconnaissance regiments are intended to provide
Current use
Under
- Household Cavalry Regiment
- The Royal Lancers - formed 2 May 2015 by the amalgamation of the 9th/12th Royal Lancers and the Queen's Royal Lancers
- The Royal Dragoon Guards- re-roled from a heavy armoured regiment to formation reconnaissance
Organisation
For the late 1990s to early 2000s: A regiment was organised into four reconnaissance squadrons, each with three reconnaissance troops of four
Reconnaissance Squadron composition
- Squadron Headquarters Troop
- Two Land Rovers, Two FV105 Sultan command vehicles and FV104 Samaritan armoured ambulance
- Three Reconnaissance Troops
- Four FV107 Scimitars
- Guided Weapons Troop
- Four FV102 Striker anti-tank guided missile vehicles (withdrawn from service)
- Support Troop
- Four FV103 Spartan armoured personnel carriers
- Mechanical Engineer Section
- FV103 Spartan and FV106 Samson armoured recovery vehicle
In addition to these three squadrons, a regiment also contained a Regimental Headquarters squadron, with six Sultans, a Spartan, a Samaritan and two medium utility trucks, and a
In wartime, a regiment would have been increased to four reconnaissance squadrons by the activation of reserve personnel and
History
During the early 1980s, there were four "Type A" armoured reconnaissance regiments as part of the
By 1986, two regular regiments were permanently stationed in Germany, and titled as Armoured Reconnaissance Regiment (Tracked) (BAOR); these had four medium reconnaissance squadrons with Scimitars, each also having an integral guided-weapons troop of Strikers. Each of these would operate with one of BAORs armoured divisions. The third armoured division had its reconnaissance regiment based in England, equipped as a Armoured Reconnaissance Regiment (Tracked) (UK); this formation had three medium reconnaissance squadrons of Scimitars and Scorpions, and a fourth guided-weapons squadron of Strikers. A fourth regiment was also equipped to this standard, and based in the UK to support NATO mobile forces. There was a third organisation for regular forces, the Armoured Reconnaissance Regiment (UK), which had two tracked reconnaissance squadrons of Scorpions and one wheeled reconnaissance squadron of Foxes. In the Territorial Army, there were two organisations, two Yeomanry Reconnaissance Regiment (BAOR) and three Yeomanry Reconnaissance Regiment (UK). The former were equipped with three or four reconnaissance squadrons of Foxes, and intended for reinforcing units based in West Germany; the latter had three or four reconnaissance squadrons of unarmoured civilian Land Rovers, and were intended solely for home defence.[2]
The 1993 Options for Change review cut the number of regular armoured reconnaissance regiments to two, with a third being created in 1995 by converting the Royal Armoured Corps training regiment.[3] At this point, the regiments were quoted as a combat strength of 48 Scimitars and 12 Strikers; this is comparable to the current regimental structure, but for a four-squadron regiment.[4]
A fourth was created in the 1998
The force was increased to five regiments by the 2003 Defence White Paper, again by re-roling an armoured regiment; it is about this time that the designation Formation Reconnaissance Regiment appeared.
Five regular army regiments were equipped for the formation reconnaissance role:
- Household Cavalry Regiment
- 1st The Queen's Dragoon Guards
- Light Dragoons
- 9th/12th Royal Lancers
- Queen's Royal Lancers
The
Notes
References
- ^ Heyman, Charles. The British Army: a pocket guide. R&F, 1980
- ^ Gander, Terry. The Modern British Army. Patrick Stevens, 1986 (3rd edition).
- ^ Hansard: "Front Line First" speech, Malcolm Rifkind. 14 July 1994
- ^ Hansard: Nicholas Soames, written answer, 27 April 1995
- ^ Commons research paper 98/91; the Strategic Defence Review white paper
- ^ Hansard: Select Committee on Defence, interviewing General Sir Roger Wheeler. 21 July 1998