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Land Command

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Military command and formation

Land Command (or 'HQ Land') was a militarycommand and formation and part of the structure of theBritish Army from 1995 to 2008. Its headquarters was atErskine Barracks, atFugglestone St Peter, some four kilometres northwest ofSalisbury inWiltshire.

It assumed control of virtually all Army combat and combat support troops on 1 April 1995. Three major exceptions wereCyprus, theFalklands Islands, andNorthern Ireland, where theGeneral Officer Commanding reported to theSecretary of State for Northern Ireland for operations in support of the civil power.

Predecessors

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Discussion was underway within the Ministry of Defence by 1967 to create a proposed Army Strategic Command.[1]

The headquarters, abbreviated as STRATCO, was established on 1 April 1968 in the wake of the government's decision, announced in January of that year, to withdraw all British troops from baseseast of Suez. In future Britain's defence efforts would be concentrated 'mainly in Europe and the North Atlantic area'.[2] Its major task was to direct the strategic reserves of the British Army; its headquarters was formed from HQSouthern Command atErskine Barracks nearFugglestone (Wilton, Wiltshire). The first Commander-in-chief of the new Command was Lieutenant General SirJohn Mogg KCB, CBE, DSO, (previously Commander-in-chief, Southern Command), who described the reasoning behind its formation as being: "to raise the standard and training of field force units to ensure any force sent abroad is correctly prepared, equipped and mounted to carry out its task speedily and successfully".[2]

STRATCO commanded most of the UK-based field forces for all matters except local administration.[3]

The command's tasks outside the British Isles were:[3]

Army Strategic Command consisted of two divisions, 3rd and5th Infantry Divisions, and command troops. 3rd Division controlled5th Infantry Brigade, 19th, 24th Infantry Brigades and16th Parachute Brigade. 3rd Division was also responsible for training of the British battalion designated for the NATOACE Mobile Force (Land). Headquarters1 Signal Group (STRATCO) was formed the same day to coordinate signals units with the same responsibilities.[4]

5th Division comprised 2nd, 8th and 39 Brigades. 2nd and 8th Brigades had skeleton headquarters which were raised at about the same time as the divisional headquarters. However, 5th Infantry Division was little more than a holding organisation for battalions resting between operational commitments abroad.[5] The division was disbanded again in 1970.[6]

From 1971–72 to the mid-1990s, land forces in the British Isles were the responsibility ofUnited Kingdom Land Forces, one of the two foremost Army commands, the other being theBritish Army of the Rhine.[7]

HQ Land Command, 1995–2008

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In 1995, HQUnited Kingdom Land Forces atWilton assumed control of troops in Germany and most other places. The remaining British Army troops in Germany (including the core ofHeadquarters Allied Command Europe Rapid Reaction Corps, HQ ARRC) were placed under its command after the disbandment of HeadquartersBritish Army of the Rhine. It becameHQ Land Command, and assumed control of almost all British Army combat and combat support units on 1 April 1995.[8] When it was formed it included 69,200 regular troops (6,400 officers and 62,800 other ranks), 59,700 reservists and 14,200 civil servants.[9]

It initially embraced all operational troops in the UK, Germany (including HQ ARRC,1st Armoured Division, andUnited Kingdom Support Command (Germany)), Nepal and Brunei, as well as theBritish Army Training Unit Suffield in Canada;British Army Training Unit Kenya; and the training team in Belize. The command represented 72% of the Army's manpower and virtually all of its fighting forces. Bringing all the army's conventional fighting forces into one command allowed the new commander-in-chief, initially General SirJohn Wilsey, to better prioritise operational commitments and to reduce the higher overhead costs previously spent in maintaining four-star operational commands both in the UK and in Germany. HQ Land Command was given control of several functions previously executed by the General Staff within theMinistry of Defence (Army). These include the Operational Tour Plot for duties in Northern Ireland, to theFalkland Islands and in support of the United Nations, and the Arms Plot, the routine rotation of armoured, artillery and infantry units between postings.[10]

Marlborough Lines, Andover

Major forces not under Land Command's aegis remainedBritish Forces Cyprus (with many units committed to the United Nations), theFalkland Islands, units underDirector Special Forces, andHeadquarters Northern Ireland. In the last of those, the General Officer commanding reported to theSecretary of State for Northern Ireland for operations in support of the civil power.[11]

Wilsey also became Joint Commander for British military operations in theFormer Republic of Yugoslavia includingOperation Grapple, UNPROFOR.[12]

On 1 April 2008, HQ Land Command amalgamated with HQAdjutant General under 'Project Hyperion' and becameHQ Land Forces.[13] It moved from Erskine Barracks to the formerRAF Andover site now known asMarlborough Lines on 23 June 2010.[14]

Components of the organisation

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Land Command was initially divided into eight formations, each one commanded by aMajor General, and several smaller units including the training units and training support units in Belize, Brunei, Canada (Suffield for armoured battlegroups andWainwright for infantry units) and Kenya.[15]

Divisions and Districts

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Land Command was later divided in 2003, under the LANDmark reorganisation, into two suborganisations, Field Army and Regional Forces, that paralleled the Cold War structure of UKLF.[16]Commander Field Army had two deployable divisions (1st Armoured Division, 3rd Mechanised Division),Theatre Troops,Joint Helicopter Command, and Training Support under him, whileCommander Regional Forces was responsible for three regenerative Divisions (2nd Division,4th Division,5th Division), London District, andUnited Kingdom Support Command (Germany). In 2007 it was announced that a new deployable divisional headquarters (HQ) would be established until at least 2011, as a means of meeting the UK's commitments to provide divisional HQs on a rotational basis toRegional Command South inAfghanistan and as the lead nation ofMulti-National Division (South-East) inIraq. This headquarters was based inYork, the re-established HQ6th Division.[17]

HQs 2, 4, and 5 Divisions (originally referred to as Regenerative Divisions) effectively used to act asmilitary districts in the UK itself. They would only have been able to generate field formations in the event of a general war. These three divisions were disbanded in Spring 2012 and the component units were transferred to Support Command.[18]

After 2012,British Forces Germany formed the district HQ for personnel based in Germany that were not attached to military formations.[19]

London District's most public concern was the administration of ceremonial units and provision of garrisons for such installations as the Tower of London. However, its primary responsibility was to maintain units directly for the defence of the capital.[20]

Brigades

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By 1999–2000, five years after the command was established, the British Army had only seven genuinely operational, deployable brigade groups – the six incorporated in 1st Armoured Division and 3rd Mechanised Division, plus16 Air Assault Brigade. 16 Air Assault Brigade was formed as part of the 1999Strategic Defence Review force reductions. On 1 September 1999, the brigade was formed by merging of24 Airmobile Brigade and elements of5th Airborne Brigade.[21]

In November 2007, the Ministry of Defence announced the temporary creation of another deployable brigade, designated as11 Light Brigade, which commanded theOperation Herrick rotation between October 2009 and April 2010.[22]

3 Commando Brigade, formed predominantly by units of theRoyal Marines but with significant army support, was under the direct command of theCommander-in-Chief Fleet (CINCFLEET).[23]

The numerous other ‘brigades’ within the new Support Command were better described as regional districts whose function is to administer allTerritorial Army units within their area, and to coordinate the provision of support to the civil authority if necessary, as well as home defence tasks. An example was the coordination of military support the regional brigades did during thefoot and mouth disease outbreak in 2001. The fourteen newCivil Contingency Response Forces (CCRFs), each parented by a TA infantry battalion, were also linked into this structure. They form force elements which may be called on, alongside regular units, by the established chain of command (Ministry of Defence, Army Headquarters, HQ Land Forces, Support Command and Regional Brigades) in the event of a request for military assistance by the civil authorities.[24]

There were a number of specialist brigades which bring together under a single administrative apparatus several units performing similar functions. There were twologistic brigades102 Logistic Brigade in Germany and101 Logistic Brigade which contained logistic units to support the two deployable divisions directly. They were formed from the original Combat Service Support Groups (Germany) (CSSG (G)) and CSSG (United Kingdom) (CSSG (UK)). Additionally104th Logistic Support Brigade operated the specialist units needed to deploy a force overseas such as pioneers, movements and port units. These brigades came under the authority of the GOC, Theatre Troops.[25]

General Officer Commanding-in-Chief, Army Strategic Command

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Holders of the post have been:[26]

Commander-in-Chief, Land Command

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Holders of the post have been:[26]

References

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  1. ^"Organisation of Forces: UK command structure; new proposals; Army Strategic Command (ASC)". National Archives. Retrieved18 June 2020.
  2. ^abKneen, J. M.; Sutton, D. J. (1996).Craftsmen of the Army: The Story of the Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers, Volume 2: 1969-1992. London: Leo Cooper. p. 253.
  3. ^ab"HQ Army Strategic Command: Reports". Ministry of Defence. Retrieved12 April 2018.
  4. ^"The Wire"(PDF). Royal Corps of Signals Association. 1969. Retrieved17 September 2019.
  5. ^Watson, Graham (2005).The British Army in Germany: An Organizational History 1947–2004. Tiger Lily Publications LLC. pp. 123–124.ISBN 978-0972029698.
  6. ^Watson, Graham (2005).The British Army in Germany: An Organizational History 1947–2004. Tiger Lily Publications LLC. p. 124.ISBN 978-0972029698.
  7. ^Rinaldi, Richard (2006)."The Original British Army of the Rhine"(PDF). Retrieved1 November 2015.
  8. ^"Land Command Shapes Up",Jane's Defence Weekly, 15 July 1995.
  9. ^"UK Defence Statistics"(PDF). Ministry of Defence. 1 April 1995. pp. 19, 21, 32. Retrieved9 December 2021.
  10. ^"Defence – Fourth Report: Land". UK Parliament. 3 March 2005. Retrieved9 December 2021.
  11. ^Charters, David A. (2017).Whose Mission, Whose Orders?: British Civil-Military Command and Control in Northern Ireland, 1968-1974. McGill-Queen's University Press. pp. 51–54.ISBN 978-0773549265.
  12. ^"Bosnia: the 'Sarajevo Formula' Extended Research Paper 94/62"(PDF). House of Commons Library. 29 April 1994. p. 18. Retrieved10 March 2023.
  13. ^HQ Land Forces on the moveArchived 7 March 2012 at theWayback Machine Drumbeat, June 2008
  14. ^Andover becomes HQ Land Forces on 23 June Andover Advertiser, 29 April 2010
  15. ^Heyman, Charles (2008).The British Army Guide. Pen and Sword.ISBN 978-1844156443.
  16. ^Lt Col Richard Quinlan, R Signals, HQ Theatre Troops, in News From Formations, The Wire, April 2003, p.127
  17. ^"Defence".Hansard. 26 July 2007. Retrieved6 February 2014.
  18. ^Defence equipment budget rises as Future Force takes shape – MOD, 18/07/11
  19. ^"British Forces Germany".
  20. ^"HQ London District".
  21. ^"4th Division".Ministry of Defence (United Kingdom). Archived fromthe original on 31 July 2010. Retrieved19 June 2010.
  22. ^"11 Brigade will provide vital support to Afghan operations". Archived fromthe original on 14 November 2007.
  23. ^"Commander UK Amphibious Force". Archived fromthe original on 16 March 2011.
  24. ^Hansard 24/02/03Archived 30 September 2007 at theWayback Machine
  25. ^"UK Armed Forces Commentary: The Royal Logistics Corps and Port logistics". 11 July 2011.
  26. ^ab"Army Commands"(PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 5 July 2015.

Further reading

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External links

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