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Royal Australian Armoured Corps

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Royal Australian Armoured Corps

Active 9 July 1941 – Present
Country Australia
Branch Army
Type Corps
Role Armour
Size 4 Regular Regiments, 5 Reserve Regiments
Engagements Battle Honours are awarded to individual RAAC Regiments
Commanders
Ceremonial chief General, HRH Prince Charles, The Prince of Wales

The Royal Australian Armoured Corps (RAAC) is a corps in the Australian Army. The corps was formed on 9 July 1941 as the Australian Armoured Corps to provide personnel to use Armoured Fighting Vehicles. It is the senior arms corps within the army and was granted the Royal prefix in 1948. Units of the RAAC include tank regiments, reconnaisance regiments and armoured personnel-carrier regiments.[1]

Contents

[edit] Current units

[edit] Equipment

The RAAC is primarily equipped with three types of vehicle:

  • M1A1 Abrams - the Abrams is Australia's main battle tank (MBT), and equips 1st Armoured Regiment.
  • ASLAV - the ASLAV is a variant of the LAV II vehicle designed specifically for the Australian Army, and is used in the armoured reconnaissance role with 2nd Cavalry Regiment and 2nd/14th Light Horse Regiment.
  • Bushmaster – the Bushmaster IMV is an Australian-built wheeled armoured vehicle that is used in the Infantry Mobility role with the 3rd/4th Cavalry Regiment as well as the Cavalry role with the 12th/16th Hunter River Lancers.
  • Landrover - Re-equipped Land Rover 6x6 LRPV used in the Light Cavalry/Reconnaissance role of the Reserve forces.

M113 - the M113 is an armoured personnel carrier that served in the light armoured and armoured reconnaissance roles primarily with Reserve forces, it is now used in support roles in some Regiments.

[edit] Deployments

Australian Army Arms and Services

Combat Arms
Royal Australian Armoured Corps
Royal Australian Artillery
Australian Army Aviation
Royal Australian Engineers
Royal Australian Infantry Corps
Combat Support Arms
Royal Australian Corps of Signals
Australian Army Intelligence Corps
Combat Services
Royal Australian Chaplains Department
Royal Australian Army Medical Corps
Royal Australian Army Dental Corps
Royal Australian Army Nursing Corps
Royal Australian Army Psychology Corps
Royal Australian Corps of Transport
Royal Australian Army Ordnance Corps
Royal Australian Electrical and Mechanical Engineers
Australian Army Legal Corps
Royal Australian Corps of Military Police
Royal Australian Army Pay Corps
Royal Australian Army Educational Corps
Australian Army Public Relations Service
Australian Army Catering Corps
Australian Army Band Corps
Training Corps
Corps of Staff Cadets

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Dennis (et al) 2008, p. 461.

[edit] References

  • Dennis (et al), Peter (2008). The Oxford Companion to Australian Military History. Second Edition. South Melbourne: Oxford University Press. 
Preceded by:
Corps of Staff Cadets
Australian Army Order of Precedence Succeeded by:
Royal Australian Artillery
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