3rd Armoured Division (Syria)
3rd Armoured Division | |
---|---|
الفرقة الثالثة المدرعة | |
Active | 1971 – present |
Country | Syria |
Allegiance | Military of Syria |
Branch | Syrian Army |
Type | Armoured Division |
Role | Armoured warfare |
Size | up to 15,000 soldiers |
Garrison/HQ | Al-Qutayfah (Division HQ) Douma (65th Brigade) |
Engagements | |
Commanders | |
Current Commander | Maj. Gen. Mowaffaq Haider |
Chief of Staff | Brig. Gen. Thaer Ahmed Ajeeb |
Brigade Commanders | Brig. Gen. Jihad Mohamed Sultan (65th Brigade) |
Notable commanders | Lt. Gen. Shafiq Fayadh Gen. Ibrahim Al-Safi Brig. Gen. Akram Mualla |
The 3rd Armoured Division (Template:Lang-ar) is a formation of the Syrian Army responsible for securing the northern approach to Damascus. The division is based in a military complex near Qutayfah[3] and has traditionally been seen as one of the Syrian Armed Force's most reliable conventional divisions.[4] The 3rd Division is part of the 3rd Army Corps.[5]
Command structure
- 3rd Armoured Division (2019)[5]
- 65th and 81st Armoured Brigades[4]
- 21st Mechanized Brigade
- 155th Missile Brigade[6]
- 14th and 67th Artillery Regiments[2]
Combat history
Yom Kippur War and Lebanon
With the outbreak of the Yom Kippur War in October 1973, the division was held in reserve. The division, under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Mustafa Sharba, was an armored division consisting of T-62 tanks. On October 9, the division was put into battle and fought in the northern sector of the Golan Heights, including participating in the Battle in the Valley of Tears in an attempt to stop the Israeli attack on the Syrian Golan.
During the 1982 Lebanon War, the division's main role was to secure the anti-aircraft missile batteries in the north of the Lebanon Valley, but in the afternoon of 10 June it began In the movement south to reinforce the Syrian force in contact with the IDF, but did not enter to Lebanon before Friday morning. And an armored force of the division, which included T-72 tanks, ambushed the Israeli 409th Brigade on the morning of 11 June, and lost many tanks.
Islamic Uprising in Syria
The division, under General Shafiq Fayadh, played a key role in defeating the Muslim Brotherhood uprising in the 1980s. During the conflict the entire division was deployed to Aleppo in March 1980, and garrisoned the city for an entire year. Patrick Seale wrote on how the division had "a tank in almost every street.” Seale also wrote of an incident where General Fayadh stood on the turret of a tank and proclaimed that “he was prepared to kill a thousand men a day to rid the city of the vermin of the Muslim Brothers.”[4]
The division was also used in the Government assault on Hama, with the division's 47th Armoured and 21st Mechanized Brigades providing the backbone of the assault.[4]
Muslim Brotherhood reports following the uprising suggested that three quarters of the officers, and a third of the soldiers of these brigades were Alawites.[4]
1984 coup attempt
The division, under Fayadh, also played a key role in blocking an attempted coup in 1984 by Rifaat al-Assad. The 3rd Division, along with Ali Haydar's Special Forces and the Republican Guard, engaged with Rifaat's Defence Companies in Damascus. While the Special Forces deployed anti-Tank platoons on the streets of Damascus to confront Rifaat's armoured columns and surrounded Rifaat's bases with snipers, Fayadh's armoured forces provided the armoured back-up and firepower to completely insulate Damascus from the outside, so that Defense Company units outside of Damascus ( in Lebanon and further north) could not come inside Damascus, and the 30,000 or so of Rifaat's forces within the environs of Damascus were effectively trapped.[4]
Role in the civil war
In 2011, the division was under the command of Maj. Gen. Naim Jasem Suleiman.[7] The 65th Brigade was under the command of Brig. Gen. Jihad Mohamed Sultan.[7] Human Rights Watch accused the division of involvement in the suppression of protests at the beginning of the Syrian Civil War. Specifically, the division was alleged to have been involved in the violent suppression of protests in Douma[8] and Daraa[9] in April 2011. In Douma, the division was allegedly involved in arbitrary arrests, the looting of homes, and the shooting of unarmed protesters.[7]
The 3rd Division played a central role in creating and supporting the pro-government Qalamoun Shield Forces, consisting of loyalist and reconciled rebels in the north Qalamoun area of Damascus in 2015.[5] The division has been inactive since the mid-2018 offensives to clear the rebel pocket in East Ghouta, Damascus during the Rif Dimashq Governorate campaign and the ISIS pocket in north Suwayda.[5] Since then, the bulk of the 3rd Division’s units have returned to their respective bases on the outskirts of Damascus. In December 2018, a process of rehabilitation and reorganization with Russian help began within the 3rd Armored Division.[10]
References
- ^ Illingworth, Andrew (2018-01-08). "Syrian Army's order of battle for Harasta operation in east Damascus revealed". AMN News. Archived from the original on 1 March 2021.
- ^ a b Joseph Halliday, The Syrian Army: Doctrinal Order of Battle, Institute for the Study of War, February 2013, p.12
- ^ Joseph Halliday, The Syrian Army: Doctrinal Order of Battle, Institute for the Study of War, February 2013, p.9
- ^ a b c d e f Joseph Halliday, The Syrian Army: Doctrinal Order of Battle, Institute for the Study of War, February 2013, p.10
- ^ a b c d Gregory Waters (18 July 2019). "The Lion and The Eagle: The Syrian Arab Army's Destruction and Rebirth". Middle East Institute. Retrieved 20 September 2022.
- ^ Gregory Waters (27 July 2019). "3rd Division's artillery regiment is the 14th (the 155th is an affiliated missile brigade)". Twitter. Retrieved 12 February 2024.
- ^ a b c “By All Means Necessary” - Individual and Command Responsibility for Crimes against Humanity in Syria, Human Rights Watch, 2011, p.83
- ^ “By All Means Necessary” - Individual and Command Responsibility for Crimes against Humanity in Syria, Human Rights Watch, 2011, p.22
- ^ “By All Means Necessary” - Individual and Command Responsibility for Crimes against Humanity in Syria, Human Rights Watch, 2011, p.36
- ^ "The Syrian Phoenix is Arising". 14 September 2018.