The World War Two Horsey Edition.
Following
on item VI above, its also commonly believed that the retention of
horse cavalry in any army, or horses in general, during World War Two
was just romantic naivete.
Actually, it wasn't. Every
single army in World War Two had some mounted forces they used in
combat. Every single one. There are no exceptions whatsoever. The
simple reason was that there were certain roles that still could be
preformed in no other way.
One of the major combatants,
the Germans, attempted to eliminate independent cavalry formations
while retaining organic formations in infantry units and found the need
so pressing that it ended up rebuilding its independent cavalry
formations and incorporating irregular ones. The United States and the
United Kingdom both ended up creating "provisional" mounted formations
in Italy, as they couldn't fill the reconnaissance role there in any
other fashion. One army, the Red Army, had huge numbers of cavalrymen
throughout the war.
The last mounted combat by the
United States, prior to Afghanistan, actually took place in the context,
with a mounted charge of sorts being done in late 1944 or early 1945 by
a mounted unit of the 10th Mountain Division. The last German charge
was in the closing weeks of 1945, when a German cavalry unit charged
across an American armored unit, in part of their (successful) effort to
flea the advancing Red Army. When the last Soviet charge was I do not
know, but the USSR kept mounted cavalry until 1953.
In
terms of transportation, the Germans in fact were more dependent upon
transport draft horses in World War Two than in World War One, which is
also true for artillery horses. Germany, the USSR, China, Japan,
France, and Italy (at least) all still used horse drawn artillery to
varying extents during the war.
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