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532nd
Military Intelligence Battalion
Seventh Army
Looking for more information from military/civilian
personnel assigned to or associated with the U.S. Army
in Germany from 1945 to 1989. If you have any
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History |
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19..
- 1962 |
532nd MI Battalion DI |
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(Source: INSCOM website) |
532nd Military Intelligence Battalion ("Black Horse")
The 532nd Military Intelligence Battalion was first constituted on 16 February 1951 at Stuttgart, Federal Republic of Germany, as the 532nd Military Intelligence Company.
The unit was reorganized and designated a battalion on 25 June 1958. The “BLACK HORSE” motto and unit crest are a daily reminder of this lineage.
During the period June 1958 through 1962, the battalion gained strength and additional capability through the integration of the 521st Military Intelligence Company and the 427th Counterintelligence Corps Detachment.
Finally, after nearly 11 years of service in support of United States Army, Europe (USAREUR) and Seventh Army, the 532nd Military Intelligence Battalion was deactivated on 1 June 1962.
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532nd MI Bn's
Role in Border Operations
1950s
In accomplishing the border security mission, an integrated 3-sided
team had evolved (by the early 1950s) composed of the armored cavalry
regiments, the German border police agencies, and US Army military
intelligence units, which provided liaison between the first two,
screened refugees who entered the US Zone, and patrolled along the
border in order to keep East German and Czechoslovak border security
installations under observation. The foreign language capability of
the units -- they had Russian, German, Czechoslovak, French, Polish,
Hungarian, Bulgarian, and Rumanian linguists -- that was necessary
for the accomplishment of their peacetime mission would be fully utilized
in wartime when they would accomplish much the same mission -- liaison
and interrogation. The units gathered most of their positive intelligence
information about East Bloc countries through almost daily liaison
with the three German border police agencies and interrogation of
refugees.
Actually, they normally only screened the refugees and referred approximately
5-6 percent to other agencies for more intensive interrogations. (Refugees
-- as used in this section -- includes defectors and illegal border
crossers.) During an average year in the 1950s they screened between
20,000 and 30,000 refugees, depending on the flow from the east, and
generated from 2,000 to 10,000 reports in response to Seventh Army
and USAREUR collection requirements. It should be noted that they
only screened approximately 18-20 percent of the refugees, pointing
up their dependence on the German agencies to direct likely sources
to them. |
1. Major
subordinate elements,
1953-54
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The
Seventh Army's 532d Military Intelligence
Battalion (it had shortened its name from 532d Military
Intelligence Service Battalion sometime between 1951 and the
first part of 1953) provided intelligence support for US Army
units operating along the border. It deployed platoon- and team-size
elements throughout the border area, and during the 1950s maintained
between 26 and 29 separate installations and screened refugees
at 23 refugee camps (see Figure 2). Its strength during the
mid-1950s was 125 officers and 329 enlisted soldiers. To facilitate
the flow of information, order of battle, editorial, and photo
interpreter specialist teams were attached to the unit so that
it could interface directly with the Seventh Army headquarters
G-2 section. |
2. Unit
locations, FY 1955
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Overall
control of the intelligence function along the border was somewhat
confused, but seemed to work well. On the local level, the regimental
border patrols fed intelligence information gathered during
their patrolling directly into the regiment's S-2 Border Operations
Section. Since these soldiers also often received intelligence
information directly from local German border police personnel,
it was essential that there was close liaison between the regiments
and the 532d MI Battalion elements, which seemed to be the case.
However, the chain of communications between these two and Seventh
Army was different; the 532d worked directly for Seventh Army's
G-2, while the regiments reported through the corps to Seventh
Army.
The 427th Counter Intelligence Corps (CIC)
Detachment and the 66th CIC Group
still operated in the area, furnishing their serviced headquarters,
Seventh Army and USAREUR respectively, with still more information.
This resulted in some intelligence overlapping and would lead
to a major reorganization of the intelligence structure in the
early 1960s.
1960s
An extensive intelligence effort in the form of border surveillance
and interrogation of illegal border crossers and refugees was
an important part of the border operations mission. There were
several significant changes this area during the 1960s and a
major reorganization of the command's intelligence structure
that had a direct impact on border operations. |
3. Bn
organization, 1959
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In
September 1957, USAREUR, USAFE, and the Federal Republic's Intelligence
Service had signed an agreement that refugees would be interviewed
at Federal Republic interrogation centers jointly manned by
US military intelligence personnel. In 1959 this agreement was
expanded into a quadrinational agreement between the Federal
Republic, France, Great Britain, and the United States that
called for establishing combined or joint interrogation centers
throughout the Federal Republic. By the end of 1960, eight of
these combined interrogation centers -- stretching from Hamburg
to Munich -- were in operation, with two more in the planning
stage. In the US area of operations they were called Joint
Interrogation Centers (JICs), and in 1960 US Army
personnel worked in JICs located at Stuttgart,
Munich, Nuernberg,
Kassel, and Frankfurt,
with an additional center being programmed for the Mainz area.
Refugees -- especially ethnic Germans who settled in the Federal
Republic -- and illegal border, crossers (IBCs) who were potential
intelligence sources were invited to visit one of the JICs where
in-depth interrogations in their native language could be carried
out. The 532d Military Intelligence Battalion's Company
"A" furnished the bulk of the interrogators for this
"overt" intelligence mission; however, they were supplemented
by linguistic elements of the corps and division MI detachments.
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4. Team
Offices, 1959
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In
addition to furnishing personnel for the JICs, the 532d MI Battalion
also manned 12 offices along the eastern border, referred to
variously in different histories as Team Officers, Team Offices,
Resident Offices, and Field Offices. Among other missions, these
offices maintained liaison with the German border agencies and
the armored cavalry regiments as well as performing early screening
of IBCs. In the early part of the 1960s, offices were located
at Bad Hersfeld, Eschwege, Fulda, Bad Neustadt, Coburg, Kronach,
Hof, Marktredwitz, Altenstadt, Cham, Berchtesgaden, and Passau.
Another example of German-American cooperation on the border
occurred in 1962 when the Bavarian Border Police began passing
perishable tactical intelligence information directly to the
armored cavalry regiments. VII Corps had requested on 9 May
1962 that the BBP be integrated into the US tactical warning
system so that it could pass the perishable tactical intelligence
directly to the armored cavalry regiments in an expeditious
manner and at the lowest levels (border camps). Coordination
was completed in October between Seventh Army, VII Corps, and
the BBP Presidium, and the new system went into effect on 1
November 1962. |
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US military
intelligence resources on the border were strengthened in 1961 under
the Roundout program, when four military intelligence detachments
were assigned to the 532d MI Battallion and attached to the armored
cavalry regiments. Their unit designations, attachments, and locations
were as follows:
172d MI Detachment was attached to the
2d ACR and located at Merrell Barracks, Nuernberg.
501st MI Detachment was attached to the
11th ACR and located at Mansfield Barracks, Straubing.
541st MI Detachment was attached to the
14th ACR and located at Downs Kaserne, Fulda.
181st MI Detachment was attached to the
3d ACR and located at Baumholder Kaserne, Baumholder.
(Note: The 501st MI Detachment at Straubing was replaced by
the 45th MI Detachment on 19 March 1962.)
Now that the armored cavalry regiments had dedicated intelligence
resources, on 17 January 1962 their border surveillance mission was
expanded to include intelligence evaluation, with an emphasis still
being placed on early indications of the imminence of hostilities.
The attachment of MI detachments to the armored cavalry regiments
was to be a short-lived experiment, however, and they were inactivated
(45th, 172d, and 181st) or returned to the United States (541st) like
other Roundout units during the last quarter of 1963. Unfortunately,
the armored cavalry regiments did not lose the evaluation mission
when they lost the MI detachments, and it was essential that they
were provided with a minimum capability for processing intelligence
information. In order to satisfy this requirement, Seventh Army provided
4-man teams from corps and division military intelligence detachment
resources, imagery interpreters from the 2d MI Battalion, and counterintelligence
support from 66th Intelligence Corps Group elements located near the
ACRs.
This whole period in the early 1960s was one of great change for the
military intelligence structure and functions in USAREUR, which was
only partly manifested bay the establishment of the JICs and the comings
and goings of the ACRs military intelligence detachments. By the summer
of 1961 it was obvious that a major reorganization of the command's
intelligence assets was needed, but the Berlin Crisis and the realignment
of intelligence functions at higher headquarters had hampered the
necessary planning. In January 1962, however, the USAREUR draft plan
for the internal realignment of intelligence missions and organizations
was completed. Originally, it was envisioned that the 66th Intelligence
Corps Group would be eliminated and that its missions, functions,
and assets would be divided between Seventh Army's 532d MI Battalion
and USAREUR's 513th Intelligence Corps Group. The two units would
be organized and operated in peacetime as they would be in wartime:
the 532d would be responsible for counterintelligence functions for
the Seventh Army area of responsibility, while the 513th would be
responsible for USAREUR's effort to collect military intelligence
in the East Bloc countries and the Soviet Union as well as for counterintelligence
activities in six Federal Republic areas, thereby centralizing the
missions of clandestine collection and offensive counterintelligence
in one headquarters. Basically, the plan would allow more MI personnel
to be placed in operational positions rather than at headquarters
and would insure greater flexibility for meeting peacetime or wartime
intelligence missions. However, Seventh Army thought its headquarters
control elements were inadequate and the plan was modified, one result
being that the 66th Intelligence Corps Group was retained and the
532d MI. Battalion inactivated in its place.
The realignments and reorganizations were provisionally implemented
on 1 April 1962, pending Department of the Army,approval. The Department
of the Army approved the reorganization on 27 April 1962 and, effective
1 June 1962, the 532d MI Battalion was inactivated, the 66th Intelligence
Corps Group was reorganized, and the lettered companies from the 532d
were redesignated as numbered companies and reorganized. The corps,
division, and ACR military intelligence detachments remained attached
to the serviced units. The 66th Intelligence Corps Group, assigned
to the Seventh Army since 1 April, now consisted of a group headquarters
and headquarters company, 5 security companies, 1 collection company
and 11 MI detachments; however, only 3 companies were of major importance
to the border mission. On the same date the following companies were
activated from 532d, assets and assigned to the 66th Intelligence
Corps Group:
- The 165th MI Company, located in the
Frankfurt area, was responsible for the supervision of overt collection
in Hesse. In addition to the US element in the Frankfurt JIC, it was
responsible for field offices at Bad Hersfeld, Eschwege, and Fulda.*
It was composed of 81 officer and enlisted personnel and an unknown
number of civilians.
- The 503d MI Company, located in Munich,
was responsible for the overt collect; on mission in southern Bavaria
and supervised the Munich JIC element as well as the Berchtesgaden
and Passau Field Offices. It had 81 officer and enlisted personnel
plus 10 Department of the Army civilians and 23 "other" civilians.
- The 511th MI Company, located in Nuernberg,
was-responsible for the overt collection mission in northern, or upper,
Bavaria and supervised the Nuernberg JIC element as well as resident
offices at Bad Neustadt, Coburg, Kronach, Hof, Marktredwitz, Altenstadt,
and Cham. The 511th had 89 officer and enlisted personnel assigned.
By the end of 1963, the 165th had picked up supervision of two other
JIC elements -- Giessen and Kassel -- and most of the field offices
in the 66th that had border responsibilities were being referred to
as Border Offices. In addition the Altenstadt Border Office had been
relocated to Weiden.
It should be noted at this point that the 66th Intelligence Corps
Group was responsible for the overall overt collection mission along
the eastern borders. Its Overt Collection Division supervised this
mission, which was accomplished by the three MI companies that interrogated
illegal border crossers, deserters, defectors, refugees, repatriates,
resettlers, travelers, and other personnel of intelligence interest
who entered the 66th Intelligence Corps Group's area of responsibility
(Land Hesse, Land Bavaria, Land Baden Wuerttemberg, and Land Rheinland
Pfalz). The Overt Collection Division had been organize during the
transition period on 1 May 1962 from personnel of the 532d MI Battalion
on the Seventh Army headquarters staff and consisted of two officers,
four enlisted personnel, and two Department of the Army civilians.
The Border Operations portion of the Overt Collection Division focused
on maintaining liaison with the German border police and customs services,
screening all border crossers, reporting any changes in the physical
features along the border, and investigating and reporting on any
incidents occurring in the border area. The overall mission remained
the detection of imminence of hostilities or, put more simply to provide
early warning of impending attack by hostile forces.28
Each MI company had an Overt Collection Division that supported those
elements of the company responsible for the overt collection mission.
The overt collection elements within the companies were supplemented
by linguist personnel of the 66th's 5th MI Company (Linguist) -- subsequently
renamed the 5th MI Company (Interrogation) in FY 1965 -- and the corps
and division MI detachments. The latter personnel were attached for
peacetime operations only, and would revert to their parent units
in wartime. This focus on the eastern borders by the 66th Intelligence
Corps Group was further refined in December 1964 when the Frankfurt
JIC was inactivated and operational control for the US elements at
the Stuttgart and Mainz JICs was transferred to the 513th Intelligence
Corps Group. This left the 66th Intelligence Corps Group with supervision
of US elements at four JICs near the eastern borders -- Munich, Nuernberg,
Kassel, and Giessen. Of note for the future, in FY 1964 almost all
of the resident offices with a border mission began to be referred
to as Border Resident Offices. |
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(Source: Email from Karl W. Scharl, 532nd MI Bn, 1958-59) |
I was a member of the 532nd during the fall of 1958 into the winter of 1959.
I arrived in Germany some time in August, I believe --- we arrived in Bremen and were taken by train to Stuttgart where after a few days were issued orders to travel to Munich. There was a 'dienstelle' at Sternwartstrasse where we did our work. It was quite a house --- we had a maid, gardener and a cook! On the first floor was the kitchen, reading room, dining room, living room and a "secure" room where we housed our documents --- the living room acted as our commander's office. On the second floor were the bedrooms shared by all of us and on the third floor were the interrogation rooms, where we "interviewed" our "clients".
We would often spend quite a few days debriefing these refugees on their knowledge of any critical areas they had encountered while either living in any iron curtain country or as they were passing through on their way to freedom. We were all in civilian clothes and drove unmarked cars with German license plates (of course everyone knew who we were, as one of our cars was a '57 Chevy!!!!!).
We got our supplies from a Kaserne a few miles away and enjoyed the freedom that was associated with our mission --- at that time there was a curfew for ALL military personnel, but we were exempt. We carried "special" identification papers, so that if we were stopped by either the German police or the M.P.'s we could verify that we were allowed to be out at all hours. You can imagine what that did to our young ego's --- in addition we carried 38 caliber handguns, concealed!!!! And at times we met airplanes from Stuttgart carrying very sensitive materials. Othertimes we also carried sensitive materials as couriers, with the satchel chained to our wrists!!! Real spy stuff.
After some months, two of us were transferred to Passau at Sechzenerstrasse where we had a house that also housed a group of CIC agents (there were three, I believe). We had a Captain, 1st Lt. and three of us (all enlisted personnel). While there we were assigned to various refugee camps, where we did the screening. Those that we felt had additional information, we forwarded their names to Munich, and in turn the group in Munich would continue interrogation, just as I had done.
In addition, we worked, not too closely, with the CIC lads from a unit housed in the same installation (the CIC unit I've also forgotten) as with selected elements of the German border police. Also did some translation work that was then submitted to Stuttgart.. We would also would "drop" code reds on forward US troops near the border --- these were intended to see the readiness of these forward troops in the event of an "invasion".
In Passau, we also had a cook and a cleaning woman that came in every so after, under the watchful eye of one of our staff.
While in Passau, I married a German national, as did one on my co-workers. Because of that I lost my top secret classification, and therefore when I was discharged could not get into the CIC, which I had hoped to do. What we do in the name of love!!!!! Since then have been divorced, but remarried.
And that's just about the story of my army days. I am still in contact with one of the fellow members of the Passau installation. Oh yes, did my basic training at Fort Dix and then on to Fort Hollabird in Dundalk, Maryland. Fort Hollabird was like a college campus, where we had free range to leave the compound and explore the surrounding areas and Baltimore. While there I had my car and would "hit" all the rowdy areas of Baltimore, and at that time there were many!!!!
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(Source: Several
emails from Bill Ward, Hq Co, 532nd MI Bn) |
In the 1961 reorganization
the 66th MI Gp was assigned to 7th Army and took over the overt collection
operations, mainly screening border crossers, of the 532d
MI Battalion which was deactivated. I was Headquarters
Company Commander of the 532d at the time of the reorganization and
had the great fortune to be given the job of organizing the CI Special
Operations Branch of G2, 7th Army.
That reorganization was a real cat fight. As I remember, the 66th
appeared to be on the chopping block after several years of in-fighting
with the 513th. When the decision was made and the 532d was to be
no more, the message back to Wallace was along the lines of "Don't
sell the punchbowl, we won". The 66th absorbed the personnel and assets
of the 532d with the exception of the HUMINT people in C Company.
They were already working in the 513th. The so-called 'Van Atta Line'
was generally seen as a joke, at least at the operating level. This
reorganization came on the heels of an major influx of personnel as
a consequence of the Berlin Wall which served to exacerbate the situation
for a while.
Bob Frazier was the Operations Officer of the 66th at the time and
is still living in England, I believe.
At the time of the reorganization the 532d, mostly A Company linguists,
co-ran , with West German counterparts, interrogation centers in Frankfurt,
Munich, Nuremberg and, I think, Stuttgart. They also had team houses
at Passau, Coberg, Berchesgarten (SP), and several other places along
the border. The CI B Company had field office at Vaihingen (7th Army
HQ), Mannheim and a couple of other locations. The Detachments were
with their assigned units, Corps and Divisions. C Company I mentioned
before. H&H Company staffed the Battalion HQ , including a large production
element, and the G2 Section at 7th Army. 66th had to absorb all of
these activities as well as a liaison office in Bonn.
LTC Fred I. Kosaka was the 532d CO at the time of reorganization.
Bob Maguire, now living in upstate New York, was the Battalion Adjutant
of the 532d and probably remembers more of the details.
Bill Ward |
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45th Military Intelligence Det |
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(Source: Email from Thomas C. (Cartter) Frierson, 45th MID, 1962-63) |
Thanks for your history of the 532nd. Those early '60's were a time of
constant change for intelligence officers. I arrived in Straubing in
August 1962 after completing the Infantry Officer Orientation Course at
Ft Benning and Intelligence School at Ft Holabird. I had been in Berlin
the previous summer when the Berlin Wall was built in August, 1961. So
it was very interesting to learn that I would spend my active duty stint
on the Iron Curtain as a combat intelligence officer, writing the weekly
intelligence summary for the 11th Cavalry Regiment. Half our unit was in
uniform and were under the operational command of the Cav. The other
half were linguists who lived in the various Border Houses your report
names. I visited some of them with the 45th unit commander, Major John
Shevis, Jr. The 11th Cav under Col. George M. Seignious (recently
deceased) was an elite force and it was very rewarding to serve with
them. Citadel has named a building after retired Brig General Seignious.
I had been commissioned into the Quartermaster Branch but assigned to
intelligence duty. I did not remember that the 45th MI Detachment had only came
into being after I reported for active duty, and I had forgotten the
history of the 532nd and the 66th. We were too busy doing live
intelligence gathering on the border to pay much attention to the high
level turf wars. Besides, we learned in 1963 that the 11th Cav was bound
for Vietnam via Ft Dix and the 45th was phasing out as our active duty
tours ran down. I was one of the last officers of the 45th MID to leave
Straubing. I see where Lt Fred G Myer signed my security debriefing
statement the week I departed Straubing for CONUS. Maurice Rawlings and
Dick Durant were two other enjoyable officers in the unit.
We had close liaison with the Passau and Nuremberg colleagues and our
nearby border houses and were in close touch with the German border
police, the Bundes Grenschutz and the Bundeswehr authorities operating
in Bavaria. There were only a handful of refugees from Czechoslovakia to
interview, but their harrowing stories were memorable. One family
escaped in a glider, flew over 100 kilometers to reach our border,
crossed uneventfully and landed safely on the Danube flood plain near
Straubing.
The 45th MID was a great bunch of guys. Unfortunately I have lost track
of them. Except for the fine web site of the 11th Cav Aviation Company
at Mansfield Kaserne in Straubing during the early '60's I have found
very little on the Internet about this exceptional front line unit and
virtually nothing else about the 45th MID. In August 1963 the 11th Cav
commander, Col Kennedy, presented the 45th MID a VII Corps Award for
superior service. Those of us in uniform proudly wore the Allons crest
of the Black Horse regiment and participated in all field training
exercises conducted by the 11th Cav. Those of us in uniform worked under
operational command of the Regimental S2, a very competent and enjoyable
Captain Crause (sp?). On his staff was Sgt Smolensky, who had been
liberated only a few clicks from the post by Patton's troops when
Germany fell. I also flew many border patrols in L-19s and a few in H34s
as an aerial observer.
I'd enjoy hearing from others who served there during those times. I
still have a copy of the unit history updated to cover 1943 - 1963
chiefly by the illustrious 1st Lt. Edward Rataj before our Roundout unit
was recalled to the United States. We forget many details in the
intervening years, but the words like "red drop" and "handicap black"
reopen a whole stream of welcome memories of a time when we were the
ones who stood in the gap in a high state of readiness and uinit
proficiency as the eyes and ears of NATO on the Iron Curtain. We will
never know to what degree our vigilance and strength kept the Cold War
from boiling over. By the grace of God it never did. I have a treasured
piece of the demolished Berlin Wall in my office. |
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Related
Links
511th Military Intelligence Company -
Gary Behymer 's
memories page for former members of the 511th MI Company (Fürth, Germany)
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