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US Constabulary

United States Constabulary
USA - Constabulary patch.png
United States Constabulary patch
Active 1946–1952
Country  United States
Allegiance Regular Army
Branch  United States Army
Role Constabulary
Size Division equivalent
Nickname(s) Circle C Cowboys, Circle C Cab Company
Motto(s) Mobility, Vigilance, Justice
Disbanded 1952
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Ernest N. Harmon
Withers A. Burress
Louis Craig
Isaac D. White
Thomas L. Harrold

The United States Constabulary was a United States Army military gendarmerie force. From 1946 to 1952, in the aftermath of World War II, it acted as an occupation and security force in the U.S. Occupation Zone of West Germany and Austria.

The concept of a police-type occupation of Germany arose from the consideration of plans for the most efficient employment of the relatively small forces available.

The speed of redeployment in the fall of 1945, and the certainty that the occupational troop basis would have to be reduced speedily, dictated the utmost economy in the use of manpower. The basic principle of the police-type occupation—that the lack of strength in the forces of occupation must be made up for by careful selection, rigid training, and high mobility—cannot be attributed to any single individual, or indeed to any single agency. Before any plans were worked out for the organization of the United States Constabulary, units of the United States Army assigned to occupational duties in Germany had experimented with the organization of parts of their forces into motorized patrols for guarding the borders and maintaining order in the large areas for which they were responsible. In September 1945, the G-2 Division of European Theater Headquarters put forward a plan, which was carried into effect towards the end of the years for the organization of a special security force known as the District Constabulary. In October 1945, the War Department asked European Theater Headquarters to consider the feasibility of organizing the major portion of the occupational forces into an efficient military police force on the model of state police or constabulary in the United States.


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