The Joint Support Service
Transcription
The Joint Support Service
German Armed Forces Staff The Joint Support Service Issue 07/07 As of: 11 July 2007 Streitkräftebasis Table of contents Message from the Vice Chief of Staff, Bundeswehr and Chief of Staff, Joint Support Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 The Joint Support Service – A Partner of the Single Services. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Joint Support Command (JSC). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Military District Commands/Land Commands (MDC/LC). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bundeswehr Explosive Ordnance Disposal Centre. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bundeswehr Logistics Centre . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bundeswehr Logistics Office. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bundeswehr Military Intelligence Centre (BMIC). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Strategic Reconnaissance Command. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bundeswehr Geoinformation Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Psychological Operations (PSYOPS) Centre . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CIMIC Centre. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . German Element, CIMIC Centre of Excellence (German Element, CCOE). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bundeswehr Military Police. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Family Support Organisation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Major Training Areas (MTAs). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 19 25 26 28 31 32 35 38 40 42 44 47 48 Bundeswehr Operations Command. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 Joint Command Special Operations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 Response Forces Operations Command. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56 Armed Forces Office. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 Bundeswehr Command and Staff College . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64 Bundeswehr Academy for Information and Communication. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66 Bundeswehr Transformation Centre. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67 Leadership Development and Civic Education Centre . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68 Bundeswehr Verification Centre. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69 Bundeswehr Institute of Social Sciences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70 Military History Research Institute. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71 Bundeswehr Command Support School . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72 Bundeswehr Logistics School. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74 Bundeswehr Military Police and Headquarters Service School . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76 Bundeswehr Sports School . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78 Bundeswehr School of Dog Handling. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79 Bundeswehr Infrastructure Staffs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80 German National Military Representative to SHAPE (NMR[GE]SHAPE) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81 NATO School Oberammergau. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82 Senior National Representative / German Element, Allied Land Component Command, Headquarters Heidelberg (SNR/GE CC-Land HQ Heidelberg). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83 German Armed Forces Command, United States and Canada (GEFORCOM US/CA). . . . . . . . . 84 Streitkräftebasis Table of contents German Headquarters Section, France . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Military Attaché Offices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bundeswehr Sports Promotion Groups. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Military Music in the Joint Support Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Military Motor Vehicle Affairs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Voluntary Reservist Work Independent of Assignments. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86 87 88 90 91 94 G erman Military Representative to the NATO Military Committee, European Union and Western European Union (GEMILREP MC/NATO, EU and WEU). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95 Federal College for Security Studies. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97 Military Counterintelligence Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98 B undeswehr Personnel Office and its Recruiting Centres. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100 Bundeswehr Enlisted Personnel Office . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102 B undeswehr University, Munich and Helmut Schmidt University/Bundeswehr University . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104 Commissioner for the Buildup of the Joint Support Service. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107 N otes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108 Editorial Details. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120 Streitkräftebasis M essage from the Vice Chief of Staff, Bundeswehr and Chief of Staff, Joint Support Service The Joint Support Service (JSS) provides support to the single services - Army, Air Force and Navy - as well as to the Bundeswehr Joint Medical Service by performing tasks that can be carried out more effectively and efficiently on a joint basis. Since being established, the JSS has demonstrated its effectiveness in an impressive manner. It has been possible to reduce duplication and exploit synergies. The central support approach has proven successful and capable of meeting future challenges. As part of the process of transformation, we are optimising the Joint Support Service as a strong partner of the Army, Air Force, Navy and the Joint Medical Service across the entire operational spectrum of modern, future-oriented and task-tailored German armed forces. The purpose of this folder is to provide you with information on the Joint Support Service and its manifold tasks and diverse agencies. Inside the folder, you will find information on our modules and productive areas covering the broad spectrum of training and education all the way to the command and control and support of operations presented in just a few pages. I invite you to learn more about the Joint Support Service and to stay in touch with us. You Wolfram Kühn Vice admiral Further information not included in this information folder can be found on the Internet under http://www.Streitkraeftebasis.de and on the Bundeswehr’s Intranet pages. Streitkräftebasis The Joint Support Service – A Partner of the Single Services Streitkräftebasis The decision in the year 2000 to consolidate The tasks of the Joint Support Service include: common tasks in the Joint Support Service pro-. provision of the command and control organivided a major impetus to the Bundeswehr’s orientation on operations abroad. Capability gaps sation for operations abroad and for Bundeswehr assistance operations in support of civil-. had to be closed and operational forces significantly increased. ian disaster relief in Germany command and control support in Germany, in Today, the Joint Support Service is the central mil-. the deployment areas and from Germany to itary organisational area for the provision of sup- the deployment areas port to the Bundeswehr on operations and dur-. logistic support NBC defence and protection tasks including ing routine duty. It performs common and joint explosive ordnance disposal support tasks for the entire Bundeswehr. As a re military intelligence including strategic reconsult of this concentration of tasks, the burden on naissance and Bundeswehr Geoinformation the single services is reduced, synergy effects are Affairs exploited and the overall effectiveness of the. psychological operations armed forces will be enhanced. Bundeswehr Military Police civil-military cooperation at home and abroad joint training as well as academic research and studies. Command and control Military Intelligence and Bundeswehr Geoinformation Affairs Bundeswehr Military Police Training / education / science / research Command and control support Bundeswehr civil-military cooperation (at home and abroad) Mission spectrum Binational / multinational cooperation Bundeswehr Military Music Psychological operations Personnel support Other support Streitkräftebasis Bundeswehr NBC defence and protective tasks Logistics The Joint Support Service – A Partner of the Single Services Streitkräftebasis Tasks concerning the areas of personnel management, military music as well as binational and multinational cooperation are equally part of the Joint Support Service‘s area of responsibility, as are family support, voluntary reservist work and the promotion of top-level sport. This multifaceted task spectrum determines the organisation and structure of the Joint Support Service. command and control support forces as well as CIMIC personnel provide support with their specialist capabilities. own contingents with an operational mission in the deployment areas or for direct support in operations Organisational Development With an initial strength of 7,000 military and ci-. vilian personnel from the former central military agencies, the organisational establishment of the Joint Support Service, which today numbers 55,000 military and 22,000 civilian personnel, is largely complete. The Joint Support Service is functioning well; without it, worldwide Bundeswehr operations would not longer be feasible today. support of operational forces from the home base A key element of this is the command and con-. trol of all operations abroad from Germany through the Bundeswehr Operations Command The Joint Support Service has grown into an effi- or the Joint Command Special Operations. Morecient command and control organisation due to over, for instance, follow-on supplies, the central the incorporation of the Bundeswehr Operations provision of logistic services or planning of de-. Command, the Response Forces Operations ployments and transport as well as the linking up Command, the Joint Support Command, a Joint of agencies and forces abroad with command Command Special Operations as well as the. and control support assets are important support Armed Forces Office, the Personnel Office and tasks, as are the Geoinformation service and the the Bundeswehr Enlisted Personnel Office. These integrated intelligence, surveillance and reconcommands and agencies are complemented by naissance (ISR) system. central facilities such as the Bundeswehr univer performance of routine tasks at home sities, the Federal College for Security Studies and the Bundeswehr Counterintelligence Office. The main activities are here the concentration of forces and assets in the core areas of logistics, Operations – The Determining Factor Over the past few years, the Bundeswehr has command and control support, military intelliparticipated in a steadily increasing number of gence, Bundeswehr Geoinformation Affairs, terworldwide operations. The spectrum of opera- ritorial military police tasks, training and educations for which the armed forces must be pre- tion as well as civil-military cooperation in the pared ranges from humanitarian assistance op-. form of support to civil authorities in Germany. erations to crisis management operations and stabilisation operations all the way to high-. In addition to ongoing operations there are. intensity combat operations, including the fight quasi-operational commitments which require against international terrorism. that forces are prepared and kept available for the following areas: rescue and evacuation op-. The changed operational spectrum is also the de- erations for national security provisions, NATO termining factor for the Joint Support Service. Response Force (NRF), EU Battle Groups (EUBG) The Joint Support Service fulfils its mission and the United Nations Standby Arrangements through: System (UNSAS). With its multifaceted forces and capabilities, the Joint Support Service, as an integral component, provides approx. 20 to 30 percent of the forces for all operations abroad. The Bundeswehr Military Police, electronic warfare elements, psychological operations personnel, logistic forces and Streitkräftebasis Streitkräftebasis The Joint Support Service – A Partner of the Single Services Every Joint Support Service agency has military personnel from the Army, Air Force and the Navy assigned to it. The target structure, in accordance with the 2010 Personnel Structure Model, provides for 56,300 posts in the Joint Support Serv-. ice, of which 71% are to be manned by Army, 22% by Air Force and 7% by Navy personnel. Of the 56,300 posts, 28,100 are planned as posts for stationary support forces for routine tasks at home and 28,200 for operational forces. Of. these, 3,500 posts will be assigned to the response forces, 13,000 to the stabilisation forces and 11,700 will also be available as mobile support forces for operations within and outside Germany. changed operational scenarios, technological challenges and operational requirements by centralising joint tasks. The command and control support assets operate an information and communications system in Germany around the. clock, every day of the year. In parallel, the Joint Support Service links all deployed contingents with Germany. For command and control support activities, which the Joint Support Service has conducted since October 2001, the Joint Support Service is to gain a new partner in the form of the IT company. As regards command and control support, the Joint Support Service also takes account of the The entire expertise in the field of geoinforma-. tion required by the Bundeswehr has been con- In the area of intelligence collection and reconnaissance, the Bundeswehr Military Intelligence Centre is currently the central agency of the BunDevelopments in the Task Areas deswehr Military Intelligence Organisation for The Bundeswehr Operations Command in Pots- analysing the “military situation”. The Bundesdam, which has also been designated as an EU wehr Military Intelligence Centre makes a deciOperation Headquarters for European-led opera- sive contribution to the early recognition of crises, tions, has established itself as an effective instru- crisis management as well as to the provision of ment for the command and control of Bundes- information on a continuous basis to the FMOD wehr operations abroad. executive group and the highest commanders of the Bundeswehr. Lessons learned from operaAll German armed forces on operations abroad tions demonstrate that situation appraisal on an are nationally always under the command of the interministerial basis is constantly increasing in Commander, Bundeswehr Operations Command importance. Thus, there are plans to intensify coor, in the case of special forces operations, that operation in this area. For this purpose, the tasks of the Commander, Joint Command Special Op-. and personnel of the Bundeswehr Military Intellierations. With the combination of these com- gence Centre will be integrated into the Federal mands, the Joint Support Service therefore pro- Intelligence Service or the Strategic Reconnaisvides a tight command and control organisation sance Command, with the subsequent disbandoriented towards operations across the entire ment of the Bundeswehr Military Intelligence spectrum. In addition, responsibility for the Re- Centre. The Strategic Reconnaissance Command sponse Forces Operations Command was trans- combines the stationary and mobile signal intelliferred to the Joint Support Service on 1 July 2006. gence and electronic warfare elements, and, as Its headquarters is deployable and thus especially another main area, satellite reconnaissance (including the Strategic Reconnaissance School), suited as a command post in theatre. under one roof. In this way, it is possible to cover As a result of all Joint Support Service forces of the whole spectrum of signal intelligence on a direct operational relevance being placed under joint basis with fewer personnel in the deploythe command and control of the Joint Support ment areas and thus significantly improve situa-. Command, the “single command” principle has tional awareness, despite less personnel effort. In also been ensured within the Joint Support Serv-. the future, the Strategic Reconnaissance Comice – for instance in the case of major incidents mand will be the central agency of the Bundeswehr Military Intelligence Organisation. and natural disasters in Germany. 10 Streitkräftebasis The Joint Support Service – A Partner of the Single Services solidated under the umbrella of the newly established Bundeswehr Geoinformation Service. The Bundeswehr Geoinformation Office provides all requesting agencies with mission-tailored and user-friendly geoinformation products and services. Thanks to the interdisciplinary approach and the increasing provision of online services, this specialist service’s efficiency in providing both direct and also indirect geoscience support for operations and routine duty has increased considerably. The logistic support of the Armed Forces is provided in a Bundeswehr-unified system comprising Joint Support Service basic logistics single service operational logistics the Territorial Defence Administration the Armaments Organisation and by using services provided by trade and industry as well as national and multinational agencies. As a result of this radically new concept and the centralisation of common logistic tasks in the armed forces, rationalisation effects have been achieved throughout the armed forces. The Bundeswehr Logistics Centre in Wilhelmshaven is the core of this system. Together with the logistic control centres in Germany, it forms a nationwide network. It thus ensures the central provision of the entire logistic requirements across the boundaries of the services and organisational areas. The central inventory management of the fixed logistic facilities provides stringent, optimised measures for the reduction of the total stockpile, the optimisation of storage space and the reduction of personnel strengths while improving the overall flows of materiel. The mobile logistic units of the Joint Support Service are oriented on the support of Bundeswehr operations abroad and are largely relieved of routine duty tasks. This is a logical step towards operations-oriented and joint logistics. Streitkräftebasis The task area of the Bundeswehr‘s Military Police has undergone fundamental changes. Today, military police assets with their special capabilities are a key component of any operation. Due to the close cooperation between national and multinational civilian and military police forces, the Bundeswehr Military Police also makes a significant contribution to the overall mission accomplishment of the armed forces at civil-military “interfaces”. At the same time, the Bundeswehr Military Police continues to carry out its tasks in Germany in the same way as before. All assets for operations, training, scientific support and the further development of psychological operations are consolidated in the Psychological Operations Centre. This way of concentrating competence and responsibilities sets a trend. Because of the cooperation between mobile operational forces and stationary support from the home base (reach back), it has been possible to greatly increase sustainability. Civil-military cooperation at home (support of civil authorities) and abroad (CIMIC) has become considerably more important. The Joint Support Service has taken account of this fact in the planning of its structures. Both areas were reorganised and massively strengthened. The Bundeswehr will continue to rely on qualified, capable and, above all, available reservists in the future. On the basis of their voluntary commitment, they will strengthen the units’ sustainability by performing special functions or serving in the active forces. In this way, reservists, appointed as Bundeswehr representatives for civil-military cooperation, or working as part of government regional and district liaison groups, will make an important contribution to the provision of advice at local level to civil disaster control authorities. Joint schools, universities, academies and offices are assigned to the Joint Support Service. The armed forces require a comprehensive and Streitkräftebasis 11 The Joint Support Service – A Partner of the Single Services Streitkräftebasis Structure of the Joint Support Service in 2010 FMOD Vice Chief of Staff, Bundeswehr and Chief of Staff, Joint Support Service Bundeswehr Operations Command Schwielowsee Joint Support Command Response Forces Operations Command Joint Command Special Operations Schwielowsee Cologne HQ and signal battalion Bundeswehr universities1 Hamburg/München Bundeswehr Personnel Office Ulm Cologne Military District Command I Land Command Schleswig-Holstein Military District Command II Land Command Rhineland-Palatinate Military District Command III Land Command Thuringia Military District Command IV Land Command Bavaria Land Command Hamburg Land Command Saarland Land Command Saxony Land Command Baden-Württemberg Bremen Hesse Saxony-Anhalt Lower Saxony North Rhine-Westphalia Brandenburg Garrison Command Berlin Bundeswehr Academy for Information and Communication Strausberg Bundeswehr Institute of Social Sciences Bundeswehr Enlisted Personnel Office Strausberg Cologne Bundeswehr Command and Staff College Leadership Development and Civic Education Centre German National Military Representative to MC/NATO/ EU/WEU Hamburg Command support troops Command support troops Logistics troops Major training areas Major training areas Major training areas Major training areas Military History Research Institute Bundeswehr Sports School Central Office for Military Motor Vehicle Affairs Warendorf Bundeswehr School of Dog Handling Ulmen Bundeswehr Military Police Military band Bundeswehr Military Police Bundeswehr Military Police Military band CIMIC Centre Koblenz Bundeswehr Military Police and Headquarters Service School Hannover Logistics troops Bundeswehr Military Police Bonn Signal battalion2 Schwielowsee MecklenburgWestern Pomerania Armed Forces Office Ulm Potsdam Mönchengladbach Bundeswehr Transformation Centre Strausberg Military band Bundeswehr Command Support School Bundeswehr Verification Centre Explosive Ordnance Disposal Centre Bundeswehr Logistics School German missions / NATO elements Pöcking OsterholzScharmbeck Strategic Reconnaissance Command Bundeswehr School of Military Music Rheinbach Hilden Federal College for Security Studies Berlin Bundeswehr Counterintelligence Office Cologne Office for Military Studies Geilenkirchen Big Band of the Bundeswehr Euskirchen Signal Sectors Psychological Operations Centre Mayen Psychological Operations Battalion 950 Koblenz 12 Streitkräftebasis Strategic Reconnaissance School Bundeswehr SIGINT Technical Analysis Centre Flensburg Military attaché offices Hof German element within the CIMIC Centre of Excellence Weert/NL Euskirchen Siegburg German Armed Forces Command, US / CA Bundeswehr Logistics Office St. Augustin Bundeswehr Geoinformation Office Joint Band of the Bundeswehr Bundeswehr Logistics Centre Reston/US Military elements in civil agencies of the Bundeswehr Wilhelmshaven Bundeswehr Military Intelligence Centre3 Grafschaft Infrastructure staffs In organisational terms, the Bundeswehr universities are part of the military organisational area Joint Support Service; their Presidents coming under the general administrative authority of the Federal Minister of Defence. 2 New designation still to be determined. 3 No longer part of the target structure. 1 The Joint Support Service – A Partner of the Single Services well-balanced training system that caters for young superiors all the way to General/Admiral Staff Officers to produce the leaders of the Bundeswehr of tomorrow. Streitkräftebasis Force and Navy to concentrate on their core capabilities. The Principles of the Joint Support. Service, that is to say a joint approach In the central areas of responsibility of the Joint focus on operations abroad Support Service, joint schools are being estab-. the performance of command and control ac- lished. As a result of this joint approach, military tivities and specialist tasks from a single personnel can be employed in all the areas of ac- source tivity of their specialty. A prerequisite for the success of the joint approach is the consistency of have proven successful. The Joint Support Service personnel management terms, occupational pro- is already today a reliable and indispensable partfiles and processes. ner of the single services and the Bundeswehr Joint Medical Service on operations abroad and Modern training that is transferable to civilian during routine duty. occupations also contributes to the attractiveness of the military profession. In the framework of Structure 2010, the Joint Support Service will see a further increase in The Joint Support Service provides professional tasks, particularly in the areas of logistics, comand nationwide family support for the depend-. mand and control support and explosive ordents of all deployed military personnel. The fami- nance disposal. Specifically, the implementation ly support centres / points are within easy reach of a number of structural changes is also on the of the dependents’ respective places of residence. agenda, ranging from the establishment / extenAll 31 centres have been up and running since sion of joint schools all the way to the optimisa-. tion of the territorial commands for the perforthe beginning of 2006. mance of civil-military cooperation tasks and the With the Bundeswehr Transformation Centre, command and control of relief operations at the Joint Support Service supports the transfor- home. mation process and further development of the single services in the context of the Bundeswehr’s capabilities as a whole. Conclusion and Outlook The overriding objective of the Joint Support. Service is to improve the operational capability of the armed forces at home and abroad. For this purpose, important prerequisites have been, and are being, established to allow the Army, Air Streitkräftebasis 13 Streitkräftebasis The Joint Support Service – A Partner of the Single Services Milestones on the Road to Structure 2010: establishment of the full operational readiness of the Joint Command Special Operations and the Response Forces Operations Command. reorganisation of the Military District Commands into Military District Commands /Land Commands and the establishment of Land Commands establishment of non-active regional and district liaison groups headed by the Bundeswehr Representatives for Civil-Military Cooperation. establishment / expansion and consolidation of the Bundeswehr Logistics School and the Bundeswehr Command Support School in the Joint Support Service. start of harmonised and centralised headquarters service training at the Bundeswehr Mili-. tary Police and Headquarters Service School from the beginning of 2007 and relocation of the school to Hanover. establishment / extension and consolidation of the Bundeswehr Enlisted Personnel Office. completion of the establishment of the Bundeswehr Explosive Ordnance Disposal Centre. 14 Streitkräftebasis disbandment of the Bundeswehr Military Intelligence Centre, transfer of the sub-tasks to the Strategic Reconnaissance Command as the central agency of the Bundeswehr Military Intelligence Organisation, intensification of the cooperation with the Federal Intelligence. Service. detailed information on all commands, offices, agencies and further task areas of the Joint Support Service can be found in the following chapters. Joint Support Command (JSC) The mission and operational spectrum of the Bundeswehr have fundamentally changed since the 1990s. The focus has changed from na-. tional defence on German territory, with Army, Air Force and Navy being largely self-sufficient, to joint missions abroad. For that purpose, contingents consisting of forces from the Bundeswehr military organisational areas, i.e. Army, Air Force, Navy, Joint Support Service and Central Medical Service, are tailored to the given opera-. tional needs. Operations conducted by one single service alone are an exception; they are mainly centred around the establishment and maintenance of personnel and materiel readiness. The challenges of the future can only be met by a holistic approach consistently oriented to the mission. There is a need for creative solutions that meet operational requirements and at the same time provide for the best possible use of limited resources. Experience has shown that we can accomplish our missions more effectively if general support tasks are centralised and performed by uniform, multiservice procedures. This enables us to pool resources and utilise synergies. Joint tasks include, for example, civil-military cooperation, logistics, command and control support, military police, design safety of ammunition, occupational safety and health services and/or handling hazardous cargo as well as countering NBC threats. barracks in Köln-Wahn, in the immediate vicinity of Cologne/Bonn airport. Within the next few years, the staff currently based at seven different locations across Germany will be concentrated at Cologne. Beyond the fields of activity mentioned above, additional tasks such as “Intelligence Collection and Reconnaissance” performed by subordinate agencies of the Joint Support Command have, for the first time in the history of the Bundeswehr, been defined and integrated under one roof. Strong leadership and services in all situations In the “new” Bundeswehr structure, the Joint Support Command has three core functions: Command Headquarters of the Joint Support Service Its forces are major contributors to intervention and stabilisation operations of the Bundeswehr, acting both in theatre and from Germany. Personnel of the Joint Support Command are significantly involved in all Bundeswehr operations abroad. The command exercises command and control over Joint Support Service forces during daily service routine. Supreme National Territorial Command Cooperation with trade and industry is another The Joint Support Command coordinates military expedient approach to improve the forces’ mate- manpower and exercises command and control riel situation: Tasks delegated to civilian partners of operations in the context of the Bundeswehr’s in, say, a cooperative approach, will make addi-. territorial tasks. These may include flood control tional military personnel available for operational operations, disaster relief in case of major accidents in Germany, or support provided as admin-. contingents. istrative assistance as during the World Youth This is the very “business concept” that led Day in 2005 or the 2006 Football World Cup. to the establishment of the Joint Support Command as the central command head Functional Command for armed forcesquarters of the Joint Support Service. wide / Bundeswehr-wide specialist tasks The command’s functional competence provides Activated on 10 April 2001, the Joint Support the driving force for the further development of Command has its main base at the Air Force the Bundeswehr in key capability areas. These in- Streitkräftebasis 15 Joint Support Command (JSC) clude logistics, command support, NBC defence and protection, Bundeswehr military police support and civil-military cooperation. The demands and diversity of this task spectrum are outstanding. and during routine duties. Open dialogue with all users is the essential basis of success – primarily in order to continuously balance and harmonise aims and services. Broad spectrum of tasks performed in the Command‘s area of responsibility Optimised structures and a new way of thinking Geoinformation Service Command and Control Support PSYOPS Command Headquarters of the Joint Support Service Military Intelligence Logistics Bundeswehr Military Police NBC Defence and Protection Tasks Strategic Reconnaissance Central service provider performing all common logistic tasks in Germany and in the area of operations (Basic Logistic Organisation) Functional command for armed forces-wide / Bundeswehr-wide specialist tasks Supreme National Territorial Command Support of Bundeswehr operations abroad Ensuring the strategic mobility of the armed forces NBC Defence and Protection Tasks Civil-Military Cooperation Territorial Tasks The headquarters of the Joint Support Command comprises approximately 1,100 military and civil-. ian personnel. National Territorial Tasks Global Reconnaissance CivilMilitary Cooperation Although it has been organised in a classical hierarchical structure, its workflows are functional and process-oriented. Besides the preparation of deployments abroad (25–30% of a contingent consist of Joint Support Command units) and the conduct of operations in Germany, the mission of the Command extends to exercising its authority to issue guidelines in the functional areas mentioned above: The overall responsibility for the support of the armed forces clearly rests with the Joint Support Command. Jointness in thinking and acting is the No. 1 priority! The needs of the “customers” must be known and appreciated; therefore military personnel from the Army (70%), Air Force (22%) and Navy (8%) are assigned to the headquarters and command area. Advanced business administration procedures, cooperation with trade and industry, controlling as well as cost and performance accounting enhance efficiency and thus extend the scope of action for all. As a central service provider, the Joint Support Command is fully geared to the forces’ overall requirements, both on operations 16 Streitkräftebasis Common command and control support in Germany and in theatre PSYOPS Military Police Tasks GeoInformation Affairs Support of the armed forces and the defence administration by rendering services and performing coordination tasks Military Intelligence Basic driver training in the context of joint armed forces training Ensuring national C2 capability The four military district commands as the divi-. sion level of the Joint Support Service are the backbone of the command organisation. Joint Support Command (JSC) Besides those, the Joint Support Command’s area of responsibility encompasses further agencies directly subordinate to the Deputy Commander of the Joint Support Command, and which each have defined functional areas allocated. These are: the Bundeswehr Logistics Centre the Bundeswehr Logistics Office the Bundeswehr Intelligence Centre the Strategic Reconnaissance Command the Bundeswehr Geoinformation Office the Psychological Operations Centre and the German Element – CIMIC Group North These agencies will be explained in more detail later on. Mission Statement and Identification The mission statement of the Joint Support Command is an instrument of identification with the command and its tasks and underlines the ambition to achieve the defined objectives. We are: • The Joint Support Service’s command headquarters • The supreme national territorial command • A command with specialist tasks Our main tasks: • Our forces substantially contribute to intervention and stabilisation operations – both in theatre and from Germany. • We exercise command and control of operations in the context of the Bundeswehr’s territorial tasks. • Our functional competence provides the driving force for the further development of the Bundeswehr in key capability areas. Our ambition: • Our command is characterised by jointness and diversity. We think and act with joint responsibility and extend the scopes for action for all involved by applying advanced business administration procedures. • As a central service provider, we are fully geared to the forces’ overall requirements, both on operations and during routine duties. To support them is our first and foremost objective. • We rely on internal and external dialogue to balance and harmonise our aims and services. – Joint Support Command – Strong leadership and top service in all situations Streitkräftebasis 17 Joint Support Command (JSC) Organisational structure of the Joint Support Command LEGAD Controlling Commander Military District Commands I-IV Deputy Commander Strategic Reconnaissance Command Psychological Operations Centre Chief of Staff G1 / G2 / G3 Surgeon General of the Joint Support Service / Command Surgeon, Joint Support Command Military Police Affairs in the Bundeswehr Logistics Division / G4 Bundeswehr Geoinformation Office Administrative Division Civil-Military Cooperation, Division / G5 Bundeswehr Military Intelligence Centre Headquarters Section Command and Control Support Division G6 Bundeswehr Logistics Office Press and Information Centre of the Joint Support Service NBC Defence and Protection Tasks Division Bundeswehr Logistics Centre German Element, CIMIC Group North Integrated Intelligence Collection and Reconnaissance System 18 Streitkräftebasis Specialist tasks of the Joint Support Command National territorial tasks Military District Commands/ Land Commands (MDC/LC) The Military District Commands/ Land Commands act as the Joint Support Service‘s ´division headquarters‘, exercising command and con-. trol over the subordinate units and agencies; conduct Bundeswehr operations at home in interaction with the Joint Support Command; perform territorial tasks in their military district, each of which comprises several Länder; or fed-. eral states, render extensive support to operations abroad and routine duty at home, particularly in terms of logistics and command and control support; provide capabilities, ready units and individual personnel for Bundeswehr operations abroad. Subordinate to the MDC/LC there are, among others, military police battalions, Land Commands, major training area headquarters and military bands. Two MDC/LC specialise in logistics while the other two MDC/LC focus on command and control support tasks: MDC I/Land Command Schleswig-Holstein. (LC SH) and MDC IV/Land Command Bavaria (LC BY) command the logistic forces; M DC II/Land Command Rhineland-. Palatinate (LC RP) and MDC III/Land Command Thuringia (LC TH) control the command and control support forces. For territorial operations in an MDC/LC‘s area of responsibility, additional Army, Air Force, Navy and Bundeswehr Central Medical Service battal-. ion- and company-size units may be subordi-. nated to the MDC/LC. They will provide assistance, for instance in case of natural disasters, and sometimes also for or in cooperation with allied nations. In each German Land, the Land Commands act as liaison elements between the Bundeswehr and the Land governments. In those four Länder where there are MDC/LCs, the MDC will also fulfil the tasks of a Land Command. In addition to the four combined MDCs/ LCs and the Berlin Garrison Command there are another eleven Land Commands. The LCs have their own independent command-. ers. Their staffs are specifically task-tailored for civil-military cooperation on Länder level. Regionally, the following elements are, among others, assigned to the Land Commands: the motor vehicle training centres, the family support centres and the sports promotion sections. Reservists, who are organised in non-active gov-. ernment region and government district liaison groups and who are preferably local residents, will maintain liaison with the approximately 470 government regions, government districts and urban districts. Active agencies, reservists and the respective civil-. ian authorities form a dense network reflecting all levels of civil-military cooperation. This new territorial command structure optimises civil-military cooperation and enhances the Bundeswehr‘s command and control capability with regard to supporting operations at home. Streitkräftebasis 19 Military District Commands/ Land Commands (MDC/LC) Territorial Organisation (Structure 2010) • Joint Support Command (JSC) Kiel JSC • 4 Military District Commands / Land Commands SchleswigHolstein (Joint Support Command) Cologne Mecklenburg- Hamburg Western Pomerania Schwerin Bremen Lower Saxony MDC I/LC SH Potsdam Kiel Hanover Düsseldorf Mainz MDC III/LC TH Erfurt RhinelandPalatinate Hesse Munich 20 Streitkräftebasis Saxony Thuringia Wiesbaden Mainz Saarland Saarlouis MDC IV/LC BY Brandenburg Dresden Erfurt Cologne Berlin SaxonyAnhalt North RhineWestphalia MDC II/LC RP Magdeburg Bavaria Stuttgart BadenWürttemberg Munich MDC I and LC Schleswig-Holstein MDC II and LC Rhineland-Palatinate MDC III and LC Thuringia MDC IV and LC Bavaria • 11 Land Commands LC Baden-Württemberg LC Brandenburg LC Bremen LC Hamburg LC Hesse LC Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania LC Lower Saxony LC North Rhine-Westphalia LC Saarland LC Saxony LC Saxony-Anhalt • Berlin Garrison Command • 29 non-active government region liaison groups • 439 non-active government district liaison groups Military District Command I/ Land Command Schleswig-Holstein (MDC I/LC SH) Military District Command I/ Land Command Schleswig-Holstein is headquartered in Kiel. Upon integration of the Land Command the official des-. ignation will be: MDC I / LC Schleswig-Holstein. The headquarters will exercise command and control over units and agencies in the five north-. ern Federal States of Germany, i.e. Schleswig-Holstein, Hamburg, Lower Saxony, Bremen und Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania It will also be responsible for the Land Commands in the respective Länder capitals. Approx. half of the Bundeswehr‘s fixed logistic installations to include materiel, ammunition and fuel depots as well as maintenance and repair centres are subordinate to MDC I/LC SH. Besides, MDC I/LC SH exercises command and control over the Bundeswehr‘s only logistic brigade that is part of the response forces and, to mention another peculiarity, over one logistic regiment which is stationed in Brandenburg, i.e. outside Military District I. The agency‘s area of responsibility also includes two military police battalions and seven major training areas, among them Bergen and Munster, two important training areas in Lower Saxony. An important task is to perform a bridging function for linking up with the neighbouring NATO With its CIMIC Centre in Nienburg (Lower Saxoand EU members Poland, Denmark and the Neth-. ny) Military District I provides one of the key op-. erlands as well as with all other Baltic states. erational capabilities. Military District Command I/ Land Command Schleswig-Holstein (Structure 2010) XX Military District Command I LC Schleswig Holstein Kiel X LC Hamburg Hamburg X LC Bremen Bremen X LC Lower Saxony Hanover X LC MecklenburgWestern Pomerania Schwerin X II Log Bde 1 Delmenhorst CIMIC Centre Nienburg II MP Bn 152 Hannover III II MP Bn 151 Neubrandenburg MTA HQ Bergen MTA Münster Log Regt 17 Burg I MD Band I Neubrandenburg MTA Lübtheen MTA Ehra-Lessin MTA HQ Jägerbrück MTA HQ Putlos MTA Todendorf Air Weapons Range Comd Nordhorn Streitkräftebasis 21 Military District Command II/ Land Command Rhineland-Palatinate (MDC II/LC RP) Military District Command II/ Land Command Rhineland-Palatinate is headquartered in Mainz and exercises command and control over subordinate units and agencies to accomplish territorial tasks in Hesse, North Rhine-Westphalia, Rhineland-Palatinate and Saarland. Upon integration of a Land Command the official designation will be: MDC II / LC RhinelandPalatinate. Land Commands will also be activated in Wiesbaden, Düsseldorf and Saarlouis and placed under command and control of MDC II. The coordination of official support and assistance services for the American, British and French units in the military district‘s area of responsibility rendered within the scope of Host Nation Support (HNS) is a special responsibility of MDC II/LC RP. There will be cross-border cooperation with the neighbouring countries France, Belgium and Luxembourg, for instance in the case of disaster relief operations. A core task is to operate the Bundeswehr information and communication system to en-. sure telephone, fax and data transmission and to provide Internet access in the West and South of Germany. The stationary command and control support personnel required for this task will in future be assigned to the IT Company. Military District Command II/ Land Command Rhineland-Palatinate (Structure 2010) XX Military District Command II LC Rhineland-Palatinate Mainz X LC North RhineWestphalia Düsseldorf X X LC Hesse Wiesbaden Lc Saarland Saarlouis III III II II Comd Spt Regt 28 Mechernich Comd Spt Regt 29 Dillingen MP Bn 251 Mainz MP Bn 252 Hilden MTA HQ Baumholder MTA Daaden GMR MTA HQ Senne 22 Streitkräftebasis Military District Command III/ Land Command Thuringia (MDC III/LC TH) MDC III/ Land Command Thuringia was activated in Erfurt in 2001 and will exercise command and control over the Land Commands of Thuringia, Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt, Brandenburg and Berlin all of them located in the respective Land capitals. Like MDC II/LC RP, MDC III specialises in command and control support. Its stationary personnel operate a state-of-the-art digital information and communication system to include all Bundeswehr facilities in northern and eastern Germany, as does its counterpart MDC II/ LC RP. The stationary command and control support assets required for this task will in future be assigned to the IT Company. The Berlin Garrison Command is a peculiarity in this military district. As a territorial command authority - similar to the future Land Commands - it is already acting as liaison element between the Bundeswehr and the Berlin Senate. In addition, it provides protocol, administrative and general support to the Federal President, the Federal Government and the Federal Ministry of Defence in Berlin. Subordinate units such as the FMOD‘s Guard Battalion, the Joint Band of the Bundeswehr and a military police battalion ensure the organisation and conduct of and provide security for representative events taking place in Julius Leber Barracks, the second official seat of the Minister of Defence, or at other Berlin venues. The agency called Berlin Garrison Headquarters/ Military Region Command 100 was activated on 3 October 1990; in 1997 the name was changed into Berlin Garrison Command. It is responsible for approx. 50 units and agencies, one local training area and the Bundeswehr‘s only indoor firing range. The Commander, Berlin Garrison Command also acts as Garrison Senior Officer of the German. capital. Military District Command III/ Land Command Thuringia (Structure 2010) XX Military District Command III LC Thuringia Erfurt X X X X Garrison Comd Berlin LC Saxony Dresden LC SaxonyAnhalt Magdeburg LC Brandenburg Potsdam II III MP Bn 350 Berlin Comd Spt Regt 38 Strokow II FMOD Guard Bn Berlin I Joint Bw Band Berlin II I MP Bn 351 Leipzig MD III Band Erfurt MTA HQ Wittstock MTA HQ Oberlausitz MTA HQ Klietz MTA Altengrabow MTA Lehnin Streitkräftebasis 23 Military District Command IV/ Land Command Bavaria (MDC IV/LC BY) Military District Command IV/ Land Command Bavaria is headquartered in Munich. This command‘s area of responsibility comprises the two large Länder in the South of Germany, i.e., Baden-Württemberg and Bavaria. A second Land Command will be established in Stuttgart to ensure liaison with the government of Baden-Württemberg. a wide range of service and logistics tasks. Most of these arise from support rendered to operations abroad, and from quasi-operational commitments such as the NATO Response Force. The Explosive Ordnance Disposal Centre of the Bundeswehr is subordinate to MDC IV/LC BY and will in future pool all expertise in this crucial area, which is literally important for survival, particularly in extended task spectrum operations. Like MDC I/LC SH, MDC IV/LC BY has mainly logistics assets (two regiments). In addition to the territorial tasks that need to be taken care of in the two Länder, MDC IV/LC BY has to accomplish Military District Command IV/ Land Command Bavaria (Structure 2010) XX Military District Command IV LC Bavaria Munich X LC BadenWürttemberg Stuttgart III III Log Regt 46 Diez Log Regt 47 Dornstadt MTA HQ Wildflecken II II MP Bn 451 Munich MP Bn 452 Stetten a.k.M. MTA Hammelburg MTA Schwarzenborn I II Bw EOD Centre Stetten a.k.M. Mtn Div Band Garmisch-P.. MTA Ordruf MTA HQ Heuberg GMR MTA HQ Grafenwöhr / Hohenfels 24 Streitkräftebasis Bundeswehr Explosive Ordnance Disposal Centre With the Bundeswehr’s transformation towards an army on operations, the requirements to be met by the EOD force have substantially in-. creased. In the countries of deployment the. threats from unexploded ordnance (UXO) and improvised explosive devices (IED) used by terrorists call for EOD capabilities to be concentrated and optimised. These new requirements are met by the establishment of the Explosive Ordnance Disposal Centre of the Bundeswehr at Stetten am kalten Markt, and by a change in the organisation focusing on consolidation and close interlocking of command and control, standard and proficiency training, operations and further development. The joint EOD capabilities are combined at the Explosive Ordnance Disposal Centre of the Bundeswehr. For this purpose, EOD companies of the Joint Support Service and the Army have been or will be disbanded, with their assets becoming integral parts of the new structure. The Explosive Ordnance Disposal Centre of the Bundeswehr allows highly efficient utilisation of personnel and material resources and, by using local training facilities and installations, intensive preparation of the forces for operations directly geared to the requirements of the mission. The garrison at Stetten a.k.M. with Alb Barracks, the depot and Heuberg military training area with several demolition areas for practising EOD technologies provides an ideal environment for op-. erating the Explosive Ordnance Disposal Centre. A large former ammunition storage site and the former target factory offer ideal conditions for exercises in realistic operational scenarios. Among others, new major elements include continuous psychological support for EOD operators and their families, concurrent language training in technical English, and permanent training in the documentation of tactical data during EOD operations. In addition to that, initial steps have been taken to establish a network for training, exercises and operations of the forces involved in an EOD operation. The availability of military police, fire brigade and medical personnel based at the garrison make for the best possible working conditions. The EOD personnel are also joined by NBC defence specialists based at Bruchsal. Streitkräftebasis 25 Bundeswehr Logistics Centre As the central provider of logistic services for the armed forces, Bundeswehr Logistics Centre is responsible for the central disposition of all lo-. gistic supplies and services in the armed forces. This applies to both missions and routine duty; irrespective of the service provider - no matter whether it is a military or a commercial provider or a host nation. The Centre manages the stocks of all military organisational areas. They control the maintenance capacities of the Joint Support Service and the Army and process and control all requirements. within the scope of movement and transport man-. agement in Germany and abroad. In order to optimise the use of resources, military and civilian commercial service providers coop-. erate at Bundeswehr Logistics Centre under military con-. trol. The Logistics Centre thus is the military institution that is responsible for models of. civil-military cooperation in the area of the Joint Support Service. It is the central point of contact for all users regarding the performance of logistic tasks. The Logistics Centre has modern means, procedures and methods at its disposal – especially when the new SASPF information technology and the pertinent communication network will have been introduced. This will finally combine the variety of logistic procedures that have been used so far. Consequences: Orientation towards the operational mission, quality control, cost transparency and cost effectiveness of the. services will be provided or improved, respectively. The entrepreneurial element is a distinguishing feature of Bundeswehr Logistics Centre. Since January 2006, Bundeswehr Logistics Cen-. tre has adopted an interim structure. Command element, staff element, and the divisions responsible for ”Supply Chain Management (SCM)“, ”Maintenance and Production“, ”Navy Disposi-. 26 Streitkräftebasis tion“ as well as ”Movement and Transport“ have already been stationed at Wilhelmshaven. The ”Army Disposition“ and ”Air Force Disposition“ divisions are still located at Bad Neuenahr and Cologne. In the years to come, both divisions will comp-. letely move to Wilhelmshaven where they will be united in a division called ”Bundeswehr Disposition“. The Logistics Centre is to assume its target structure at Wilhelmshaven with the area-wide introduction of SASPF and the general replacement of legacy procedures at the latest. Eight logistic control points shall ensure widespread representation. Increasingly, Bundeswehr Logistics Centre has become an efficient control platform for the logistic processes of the Bundeswehr. The commercial services are closely integrated in this. The Supply Chain Management (SCM) task can only be implemented gradually following the introduction of SASPF and other technological developments. The reason why SCM is particularly important is that it features a holistic approach to the chain of logistic processes with all its flows of materiel, services and information. Bundeswehr Logistics Centre Commander Controlling Deputy Commander, Chief of Staff and Chief, Logistics Staff Element Disposition Department, Single Manager Responsibility, COS Army/JSS Disposition Department, Single Manager Responsibility, COS Air Force Supply Chain Management Division Management Branch, Products, Single Manager Responsibility, COS Navy Bundeswehr Disposition Division Management Branch, Products, Single Manager Responsibility, Surgeon General, Bundeswehr Products, Single Manager Responsibility, IT Director Maintenance and Production Division Movement and Transport Division Central Control of Maintenance and Production Branch 1 Movement/ Transport Management Logistic Control Points Branch 2 Transport Disposition Streitkräftebasis 27 Bundeswehr Logistics Office Until October 1997, Bundeswehr Logistics Office had been the Bundeswehr Materiel Office. Dur-. ing that time, the Office was mainly occupied with the production and publication of materiel data and the control of uniform logistic Bundeswehr data processing procedures. Since Summer 2002, in the course of the reformation process, Bundeswehr Logistics Office has taken on the task of supporting the Chief of Staff, Joint Support Service, in exercising his single manager responsibility. • Armaments = Establishment of Initial Operational Capability = Herstellen der Einsatzreife Service Use = Maintenance of ••Rüstung Operational Capability Nutzung = Erhalten der Einsatzreife Single Manager Responsibility • Materialverantwortung • Entwurf desofPlanungsvorschlages Preparation JSS Planning Proposal SKB for Bundeswehr Plan zum Bundeswehrplan Responsibility • Planning Planungsverantwortung • Radfahrzeuge, Quartiermeistermaterial, Wheeled Vehicles, Quartermaster Materiel, Ammunition, Ordnance Materiel, POL Munition, Feldzeugmaterial, Betriebsstoff Kunden inOrganisational allen Organisationsbereichen der Streitkräfte FürAll alle Organisationsbereiche derArmed Streitkräfte For Areas of the Forces Joint Support Service Streitkräftebasis Army Heer Heer During the planning and introduction phase of new materiel, the ”Armaments“ Branch represents the users‘ – e.g. the field units‘ – interests. Meanwhile, this branch has been acting as the custodian activity on the side of the user for almost half of the new initiatives and current armaments projects of the Bundeswehr. • CPM Management • Funds Titelbetreuung Use Division also acts as the Joint Support Service Commissioner for Armaments. He ensures initial operational capability of the materiel designated for field use. Air Force Luftwaffe Lw Navy Marine Marine Zentraler Sanitätsdienst Bundeswehr derMedical Bundeswehr Joint Service ZSan The ”in-service support managers“ are responsible for maintaining the operational capability of the materiel within the scope of their responsibil-. ity, which makes a good third of all Bundeswehr materiel. The ”Depot Maintenance Planning“ Section establishes logistic requirements plans. The ”Bundeswehr Planning“ Section takes the lead in contributing to the Joint Support Service‘s planning proposal for the Bundeswehr Plan. The ”Budget Item Management“ Section supports the division‘s armaments and service use tasks by participating in drawing up and execut-. ing the project-related budget. In addition, the procurement of quartermaster and ordnance materiel, wheeled vehicles, ammunition, and POL is accomplished as an interservice function on behalf of the entire Bundeswehr. Today, Bundeswehr Logistics Office acts as the armaments/service use office of the Joint Support Service, the IT support facility of Bundeswehr logistics and the Federal codification bureau. Being a competent service provider, it is firmly estab-. Division II – Codification lished in the logistic system of the Bundeswehr. Division II ”Codification“ adds materiel data to At its three locations at Sankt Augustin, Siegburg databases. Codification contributes to mini-. and Wilhelmshaven, military and civilian person- mising the number of different items of supply on nel work as competent service providers for the the national and international level. It simplifies Bundeswehr – but also as partners for trade and data maintenance in materiel management and industry. enables adequate procurement. In addition, the affiliation of an item of supply to a system component, device, component group or set is recorDivision I – Armaments/ Service Use ded. This work contributes to simplifying logistic Division I ”Armaments/Service Use“ performs support within the Bundeswehr and interop-. the single manager tasks for the Vice Chief of erability among NATO forces. Staff, Bundeswehr and Chief of Staff, Joint Support Service. This responsibility comprises both commonly used items of the armed forces and those products exclusively used by the Joint Support Service. The Chief of the Armaments/Service 28 Streitkräftebasis Bundeswehr Logistics Office Branch V – ”Special Materiel Data“ In addition to the codification of special materiel, the primary tasks of the ”Special Materiel Data“ Branch encompass the preparation of more indepth information in the fields of ”ammuni-. tion management“ and ”handling of hazardous substances“. This information is, inter alia, published in item of supply catalogs on ”chemicals“, ”pharmaceutical products“, ”ammunition“, in the hazardous goods database, in the ammunition instructions for all organisational areas as well as in the ammunition data sheets. Division III – DP Support Fundamentals and Division IV – Logistics DP Support Divisions III and IV are responsible for DP support in the field of logistic processes. This concerns the fields of fundamentals, technical logistics management, logistics management, movement and transport, materiel management, operations management and maintenance/production. A central service centre has been established for user support. With the pooling of logistic DP support we intend to achieve synergetic effects and provide effective support to SASPF introduction. The SASPF Program Organisation Branch Rather than an isolated software project, the introduction of SASPF in the Bundeswehr means the implementation of an entire organisation philosophy. This branch of Bundeswehr Logistics Office provides support to the areas of logistics, armaments, infrastructure and environmental protection as well as to some elements of the central area. Director JSS Commissioner for Armaments Controlling Deputy Director and Chief of Staff Division I Armaments/ Service Use Division II Codification Division III DP Support Fundamentals Division IV Logistics DP Support Staff Element Branch V Special Materiel Data Headquarters SASPF Program Organisation Branch Streitkräftebasis 29 Bundeswehr Military Intelligence Centre (BMIC) The Bundeswehr Military Intelligence Centre is the Bundeswehr‘s central agency for assessing, analysing and estimating the situation in other countries throughout the world. The BMIC is also responsible for assessing the military security situation of the Bundeswehr forces at home and abroad. It is therefore the key instrument of the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces when it comes to the production of intelligence information for the Bundeswehr. The Centre thus plays the most important part in the information management of the Bundeswehr‘s Military Intelligence Organisation. and constantly providing intelligence updates on the current situation in these areas. For exercises and operations, the BMIC also detaches mili-. tary intelligence support elements to the national force contingents. The BMIC provides input for national interministerial crisis management and international early crisis detection. It supports the Federal Ministry of Defence in dealing with policy matters, the concept and the further development of the. military intelligence organisation as well as with issues of arms control. It also operates the. JASMIN data processing system and centrally conducts the course-based training for military intelligence personnel. The Bundeswehr Military Intelligence Centre is administratively subordinate to the Joint Support Command and, as regards joint tasks, is under the The Bundeswehr Military Intelligence Centre technical control of the Federal directs the intelligence collection and recon- Ministry of Defence. As a renaissance assets of the armed forces - especial- sult of intensified cooperation with the Federal ly those of the Strategic Reconnaissance Com- Intelligence Service the tasks of the BMIC will be mand - by establishing intelligence requirements. divided up. The Strategic Reconnaissance ComIt renders substantial support for the planning, mand will take over a great share of the Centre‘s preparation and execution of Bundeswehr oper-. current task areas. ations abroad by producing appropriate basic information materials on the deployment areas Controlling Director Headquarters Deputy Director & Chief of Staff Coordination Section Coordination Section Intelligence Production Division Operations Support Division ADP Support Centre Military Intelligence School Plans, Policy, Doctrine & Concept Branch Ground Forces Intelligence Group Situation Centre System Management Branch Training Section Information Management Branch Air Forces Intelligence Group Security Analysis Branch Maritime Forces Intelligence Group German (National) Intelligence Database Regional Analysis Group Special Operations Branch Imagery Intelligence Branch Liaison Offices German Element, JAC System Organisation Branch 1st Training Wing 2nd Training Wing Data Management Branch ADP Support Centre Operations Branch Streitkräftebasis 31 Strategic Reconnaissance Command The Strategic Reconnaissance Command is an integral part of the Bundeswehr‘s Military Intelligence Organisation. It has comprehensive reconnaissance capabilities at its disposal, which can be employed globally, at long range and directly in a given deployment area. space-based imaging reconnaissance component for worldwide reconnaissance at its disposal. The system is to reach its initial operational capability in late 2007. To accomplish its tasks, the Strategic Reconnaissance Command controls three subordinate Thereby, the Strategic Reconnaissance Command SIGINT commands, each of which has one stacontributes significantly to the assessment of the tionary COMINT battalion and one mobile EW situation and to the planning, preparation and battalion under its command. SIGINT Command conduct of operations by German armed forces. 92, which is currently stationed in Trier, will be It thus supports the capacity of the national po- headquartered in Daun in the 2010 structure. litical leaders to make judgments and decisions Furthermore, the Bundeswehr SIGINT Technical and to take action. Administrative control of the Analysis Centre, providing technical and scientific Strategic Reconnaissance Command lies with the support, and the Bundeswehr Strategic ReconJoint Support Command whereas technical con- naissance School, where training is conducted trol is exercised by the Federal Ministry of De- for military and civilian staff from the command‘s fence. area of responsibility, are subordinate to the Strategic Reconnaissance Command. With this conBundeswehr Strategic Reconnaissance School Flensburg centration of forces and means, the requirement SIGINT command 91 for information as up-to-date, consolidated and Bramstedtlund COMINT battalion 911 detailed as possible to prepare political and military decisions – especially regarding armed forces COMINT battalion 921 operations – was met. At the same time, missionEW battalion 912 essential close interlocking of all satellite-based Berlin Nienburg reconnaissance components as well as of sta-. EW battalion 932 tionary and mobile signal intelligence forces and Strategic Frankenberg assets was ensured. Command and control of all Rheinbach Reconnaissance Command Gelsdorf forces and assets is exercised by one command in Space-Based Daun a uniform and process-oriented manner. Hof Reconnaissance Bundeswehr SIGINT Division Trier Technical Analysis Centre As of 2007, the Strategic Reconnaissance ComSIGINT command 93 mand will also perform the task of ”Coordi-. COMINT battalion 931 Donauwörth nating measures being effective in the informa-. SIGINT command 92 tion space (Info Ops)“ and will have the capabiliEW battalion 922 ty of ”Computer Network Operations“ (CNO). In addition to the classical command and con-. trol tasks, the headquarters of the Strategic Reconnaissance Command also performs specialist tasks that are organisationally reflected in the four specialist divisions ”Ops/G3 Division“, ”Concepts and Development Division“, ”Analysis and Ops Support Division“ and ”Space-based Reconnaissance Division“ as well as in the ”Cryptanalysis“ and ”Systems Control“ elements With the high-resolution radar satellite programme SAR Lupe (Synthetic Aperture Radar) the Bundeswehr will for the very first time have a 32 Streitkräftebasis Strategic Reconnaissance Command In its current structure, the area of responsibility (AOR) of the Strategic Reconnaissance Command comprises a total of about 6300 military and 700 civilian posts. All agencies are staffed with personnel from all three single services. In the future, the Strategic Reconnaissance Command will take over extensive tasks of the Bundeswehr Intelligence Centre and will serve as the central agency of the Bundeswehr‘s Military Intelligence Organisation. Commander Controlling Deputy Commander and Chief of Staff S1 S2 Analysis and Ops Support Ops / G3 Concepts and Development Space-Based Reconnaissance Cryptanalysis Systems Control S4 S6 Pay and Accounting Section Streitkräftebasis 33 Bundeswehr Geoinformation Service Geospatial and environmental information (geo-. information) is time-dependent information on objects and facts with spatial reference. This mainly includes data and products from the following areas of earth sciences (in alphabetical order): Biology, ethnology, remote sensing, geodesy, geography, geoinformatics, geology, geophysics, geopolitics, hydro-acoustics, hydrography, hydrology, cartography, climatology, meteorology, ecology, oceanography, photogrammetry. during the planning and execution of operations. abroad. This makes the Bundeswehr Geoinformation Service, which pursues an interdisciplinary approach, a modern service provider of the armed forces. Under the slogan ”geoinformation from one source“ the Service, with earth science expertise from a total of 17 scientific disciplines, contributes to the optimisation of Bundeswehr operations within the framework of the modified task spectrum. To possess worldwide, highly accurate geo-. information constitutes an indispensable basis for important Bundeswehr capabilities such as network-enabled operations or targeting. Today, satellite and unmanned aerial reconnaissance systems, such as SAR-Lupe, are the focus of inter-. est among the more than 200 military systems to which the Bundeswehr Geoinformation Service provides technical support. In addition to the capability to create our own products, this chal-. lenge to be able to provide baseline earth science data worldwide requires broad international cooperation as well as the participation in multinational production programmes. The Bundeswehr Geoinformation Service has a workforce of well over 1,800 personnel. 800 of them are military personnel paying their service at about 80 locations in Germany and abroad. Due to the high degree of specialisation, there is a very high percentage of officers or comparable civil servants and employees. Organisation and Tasks The Bundeswehr Geoinformation Office is the heart of the Service. Its assets, including seven map depots, are stationed at 13 locations. Its main locations are Euskirchen, Traben-Trarbach and Fürstenfeldbruck. Stationing of the Bundeswehr Geoinformation Office Kiel Hamburg Neubrandenburg Bergen Hannover Geoinformation has a considerable impact on political and economic decisions. Modern data processing assists in pooling, processing and eval-. uating information derived from different areas of earth sciences on an interdisciplinary basis. In March 2003, the Bundeswehr made allowance for this situation by establishing the Bundeswehr Geoinformation Service. Since then, this necessary earth science support has been highly beneficial for the Bundeswehr, both in routine duty and, in particular, Leipzig Fritzlar Euskirchen Traben-Trarbach Erfurt Mainz Offenbach Kümmersbruck Legend Germersheim Sigmaringen München Fürstenfeldbruck Surveying/Geology Branch Offices, Map Depots Sounding Branches Bundeswehr Geoinformation Service Training and Education Centre Main Locations Liaison Element with the Federal Office of Maritime Navigation and Hydrography Organisational Element with the German Meteorological Service Streitkräftebasis 35 Bundeswehr Geoinformation Service Within the scope of indirect geoinfo support, the Office provides the central, mission-oriented capabilities to produce, update and supply all required geoinfo products to support the Bundeswehr. Key element of the support services is the consistent extension of the interdisciplinary geoinfo database. It serves as the basis for the production of all geoinfo products. Sciences. It cooperates with the German Meteorological Service to provide technical college education for the senior meteorological service and training for a career with the Federal nontechnical weather service. The Office has deployment forces to provide direct support for topographic surveys, topo-. graphic, geological, and area reconnaissance, collection of aerological data, as well as map and data support. These forces will be tailored to a given mission. Furthermore, Bundeswehr Geoinformation Serv-. ice personnel are assigned to military headquarters, units and agencies to provide geoinfo advice and collect meteorological data. With the establishment of the Bundeswehr Geoinformation Service earth science support of the forces has been strictly oriented towards the new task spectrum. The interdisciplinary approach ensures that the Service will be able to continuously offer geoinformation products and services in accordance with the requirements of the user and the mission. In order to ensure that the transfer of information is tailored to user needs, the Office is increasingly using online resources. In this way, for instance, on-scene weather forecasts are constantly supported with weather model and satellite data. With the Bundeswehr Geoinformation Service Training and Education Centre (BGISTEC) at Fürstenfeldbruck, the Office provides for training and follow-on training in the geoinfo specialties. This Centre is also used as a training facility of the Federal University of Applied Administrative 36 Streitkräftebasis Bundeswehr Geoinformation Service Bundeswehr Geoinformation Office Director, Bundeswehr Geoinformation Office (BGIO) and Director, Bundeswehr Geoinformation Service (BGIS) Controlling Deputy Director, BDIO and Deputy Director, BGIS Central Services Directorate Geoscientific Research. Application and Database Directorate GeoInfo Support Directorate BGIS Training and Education Centre BGIS External Relations Division Applied Geosciences Division Operations Division Training and Education Division GeoInfo Requirements Division Global Issues Division Operations Support Division Transformation and Development Division Regions Division GeoInfo Technology Systems Centre BGIS Meteorological Division with the German Meteorological Service Staff Element/Headquarters Streitkräftebasis 37 Psychological Operations (PSYOPS) Centre Psychological operations have gained in importance due to the deployment of German. armed forces to all parts of the world. PSYOPS is an integral part of the conduct of operations. . PSYOPS forces work with communicative methods. They use print products, loudspeakers, radio broadcasts, TV and video as well as the Internet to exert an impact on target audiences in the deployment area and influence their attitudes and behaviour. Another aim is to gain trust and support for the Bundeswehr mission and thus contribute to force protection. The PSYOPS forces boost forces‘ morale outside Germany by means of the soldiers‘ radio. Combat camera teams document Bundeswehr deployments on film and in pictures. The PSYOPS forces are jointly organised at the Psychological Operations Centre (PSYOPS Centre). Response forces, stabilisation forces and support forces as well as teaching, training and development are strictly orientated on existing operational requirements and are all in one hand at the. Centre. PSYOPS Centre assets are sta-. tioned at two locations in the Eifel area and on the. Rhine river. The General Delius Barracks in Mayen house the headquarters as well as the divisions and sections of the stationary forces, including the Teaching Division and the Development Section. The subordinate PSYOPS Battalion 950 is sta-. tioned at the Falckenstein Barracks in Koblenz. It has ten modules at its disposal providing PSYOPS capabilities in all types of media. These support stabilisation operations as well as response forces operations, including operations involving special forces. 38 Streitkräftebasis Depending on the operational requirement and impact request of the force commander and the prevailing communication situation in the target audiences, the mobile forces are task-organised as a PSYOPS Task Force for a given operation. The forces on the ground are always supported from the home base in Mayen using the reach-back concept. The reach-back concept comprises planning, academic advice, editorial work, production of technically complex PSYOPS products and repair of PSYOPS-specific technology. This may also in-. clude the New Media capability, which is employed exclusively out of the home base. Psychological Operations (PSYOPS) Centre PSYOPS measures may only exert influence on approved target audiences. Possible target audiences are armed forces and security services of adversary or foreign states, parties to a conflict, or the civilian population. On principle, public media, the own civilian population, allied nations and international organisations as well as own forces are not to be targeted by PSYOPS. activities. PSYOPS forces are the mouthpiece of the force commander. Psychological operations provide him with the possibility to directly or indirectly publicise his will or intents in an undistorted manner with means of communication under his control (radio, TV and video, print products, loudspeakers, new media). In addition to mili-. tary skills, intercultural competence, basic editorial knowledge and media technology competence are indispensable. Boosting troop morale with radio broadcasts is another supporting task of the PSYOPS Centre. Assets for this task are available in the Soldiers‘ Radio Section. ”Radio Andernach“ is the soldiers‘ radio, providing German soldiers in the deployment areas with information and entertainment. A 24-hour live programme is produced at the home base in Mayen and supplemented with contributions from the respective editorial team on the ground. It is broadcast in the deployment areas including greetings and music requests. Sound carriers are also used to provide soldiers deployed abroad with radio contributions. Combat camera teams were established at the PSYOPS Centre in 2001. Seven combat camera teams produce image-based information covering the deployment areas of the German armed forces to provide the political and military lead-. ers of the Federal Ministry of Defence and the Bundeswehr Operations Command with current, comprehensive, reliable and timely information. The teams have different levels of readiness and are capable of deploying to all parts of the world at short notice in order to transmit videos and images with their own mobile satellite stations to Germany. Commander Deputy Commander Controlling PSYOPS Bn 950 Headquarters Section Headquarters S1 Operations Division Ops/Plans Section S2 S3 Target Audience Analysis Section Development Section Combat Camera Section Soldiers' Radio Section Teaching Division Training Department 1st and 2nd Training Wings S4 S6 Pay and Accounting Section PSYOPS Studies Section Programme/ Editorial Staff Section Media Production Section Streitkräftebasis 39 CIMIC Centre Hardly any other area of the Bundeswehr has gained as rapidly in importance as civilian-. military cooperation (CIMIC) abroad. The buildup of German CIMIC forces has largely been a consequence of the lessons learned during the first Bundeswehr deployments to the Balkans, where, in addition to traditional military tasks, new im- CIMIC capabilities at its disposal. In the meantime,. CIMIC – as an integral element of every operation – has virtually reached a new dimension of importance. An operation without command and control support, without accommodation for the deployment forces and follow-on supply would be impossible. The same is true for an opera-. tion conducted without CIMIC assets. Without. CIMIC, our forces would neither be aware of the picture of the civilian situation for their planning and conduct of operations nor would they be able to liaise with the civilian actors in the. deployment area. This new importance has inevitably called for an optimisation of the available capabilities and a significantly larger number of personnel. Hence, the CIMIC task area also needed to be adapted in the course of the transformation process. The portant tasks in the CIMIC spectrum had to be core elements of the adaptation process have carried out. A badly damaged infrastructure, war been the orientation to deployment and the nec-. refugees, internally displaced persons and those essary continuous orientation to a more and returning from abroad posed numerous chal-. more rapidly changing security, social and techlenges that went way beyond the establish- nological environment. ment of a stable security situation. Against this backdrop, CIMIC Battalion 100 was built up in. Nienburg on 1 April 2003 as a central element of. CIMIC operations. With the increase in commitments of the Bundeswehr in deployments abroad, the demand for CIMIC personnel and capabilities in the deployed contingents has increased significantly as to their quantity and quality. Since CIMIC Battalion 100 had been designed as a pure force provider for initial operations, it neither had the necessary sustainability nor the entire spectrum of. This resulted in CIMIC Battalion 100 being re-. structured into the CIMIC Centre, which was inaugurated on 4 May 2006. Personnel strength was boosted from 118 to 287 posts. As a result of close interlocking of personnel assets partic-. ularly with those of the territorial commands, approx. 500 active soldiers will be available for CIMIC operations upon completion of the re-. structuring process. In addition, 650 reservists are planned to work as ”technical specialists“ at the future Land commands. This will make it possible from case to case to take advantage of qualifica- 40 Streitkräftebasis CIMIC Centre tions that are not or not sufficiently available in the Bundeswehr. The CIMIC Centre is administratively subordinate to Military District Command I and technically subordinate to the G5 of the Joint Support Command. When deployed, the CIMIC Centre‘s personnel maintain important connections to the civilian environment, coordinate activities with it, record and take into account the civilian situation, as- sist in supplying the civilian population, and thus contribute to the stability in the deployment area. Hence, CIMIC forces are directly instrumental in force protection. Within the framework of na-. tion building, their tasks also include contributions to the establishment of state structures for long-term stabilisation by means of an inter-. ministry approach. Training and instruction of personnel is another domain of the CIMIC Centre. CIMIC basic training as well as technical and function-related instruction for all CIMIC personnel are conducted centrally as part of predeployment training. The decisive advantage is that training takes place where there are people who have gained experience on operations and where lessons learned are evaluated. Upon completion of the restructuring process, the Bundeswehr will have in the CIMIC Cen-. tre a highly professional and sufficiently staffed. battalion-size unit tailored to support the response and stabilisation forces across the entire CIMIC task spectrum. CIMIC Centre Commander Controlling Support Headquarters Operations Response forces Operations Stabilisation forces 1X 5X Training/ Exercises/ Documentation Streitkräftebasis 41 German Element, CIMIC Centre of Excellence (German Element, CCOE) In 2000, the NATO Military Committee asked the member states to establish international units for Civilian-Military Cooperation (CIMIC). Against this backdrop, six nations (Germany, the Netherlands, Denmark, Poland, the Czech Republic and Norway) set up the CIMIC Group North (CGN) which was to serve NATO as operational CIMIC headquarters to exercise command and control over CIMIC Support Units assigned during de-. ployments. Based on a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), the North Atlantic Council grant-. ed the CGN the status of a NATO International Military Headquarters early in 2003. It was inaugurated in Budel, the Netherlands, in April 2003. Subsequently, the CGN supported a number of NATO exercises and NATO operations, e.g. ISAF in Afghanistan, by providing CIMIC experts. In addition to supporting the military mission, the Centre has also been used as an international CIMIC training facility. Since the CGN took up its duties, the underlying CIMIC policy has been further developed: At the NATO headquarters, organic CIMIC capacities had meanwhile been established, as a result of which the use of CGN as an independent CIMIC HQ to exercise command and control over as-. signed CIMIC Support Units has become unlikely. On the other hand it became clear that following the restructuring of the NATO command structure the new strategic NATO headquarters, Supreme 42 Streitkräftebasis Allied Command Transformation (SACT), would urgently need the support of a CIMIC Centre of Excellence (CCOE). Hence, it was decided in November 2004 to transform the CGN into a CCOE on a trial basis. After a trial phase of almost a year during which the CGN proved its basic capability as a CCOE, the six founding nations decided in agreement with SACT and SHAPE on the formal transformation of the CGN into a CCOE. The CGN is expected to be accredited as a CCOE for SACT in accordance with NATO criteria and granted the status of an International Military Organisation under the provisions of Article 14 of the Paris Protocol by the end of 2006. In the future, the CCOE‘s main tasks will be to support SACT in the development/further development of CIMIC at strategic level and to serve SACT, in addition to the NATO School in Oberammergau, as the central agency for CIMIC training. The CCOE will also continue to support SHAPE by providing CIMIC experts for missions abroad. German Element, CIMIC Centre of Excellence (German Element, CCOE) The soldiers of the German element of the CCOE are employed as branch chiefs, CIMIC experts, CIMIC instructors and support personnel of the CCOE. Administratively, they report to the Sen-. ior German Officer, who in turn is subordinate to the Deputy Commander of the Joint Support Command. Every two years, the Senior German Officer also takes turns with the representative of the Netherlands in occupying the post of commander or deputy commander of the CCOE, respectively. CIMIC Centre of Excellence Command Group Planning & Control Group Concepts, Interoperability & Capability Branch Secretariat Training & Education Branch Support Branch Streitkräftebasis 43 Bundeswehr Military Police The Bundeswehr Military Police supports the. armed forces, the Federal Defence Administra-. tion, the Bundeswehr Military Legal System as well as the Chaplain Service. Within the Bundeswehr the force is referred to as the ”Feldjäger.“ In operations abroad, the Bundeswehr Military Police mainly cooperates with national and multinational civilian and military police forces in accordance with the provisions of the respective mandate and in compliance with national legislation. Employed in all operational theatres of the Bundeswehr as well as in NRF and EUBG contingents with German involvement, Bundeswehr Military Police forces deployed abroad have a task spectrum that ranges from purely national tasks to multinational MP tasks to police support tasks if and while regular police forces are unable to perform them. As part of its national MP tasks, Bundeswehr Mil-. itary Police support the respective German contingent in various situations. Besides military traffic control, military law enforcement and general support, specific security-related tasks place high demands on the MP members’ ability to act independently, reliably and aware of prevailing risks. They are, among other things, responsible for close protection of high-risk military personnel in the operational theatres but also escort civilian and military visitors of the respective contingent. Supporting investigations as requested by disciplinary superiors, scenes of crime officers and investigators of the Bundeswehr Military Police help to solve criminal offences and violations of mil-. itary order and discipline committed by military personnel. Trained drug and explosives detection dog teams of the Bundeswehr Military Police render valuable support where special capabilities as well as security-related and military law enforcement are required. 44 Streitkräftebasis While performing their wide-ranging tasks, Bundeswehr Military Policemen and women co-. operate closely with foreign MP forces as well as national and international civilian police. With activities such as passenger and baggage screening operations, they work towards the observance of international flight safety regulations and in specific situations they help provide safety and security aboard Bundeswehr aircraft. Given the appropriate mandate, the Bundeswehr Military Police can also perform or support police tasks in operational theatres if and while regular local police are not available in sufficient numbers. These tasks include, for example, establishing and maintaining public law and order, mon-. itoring and/or enforcing curfews, conducting searches, arrests, and investigations of particular offences, supporting the investigations of international agencies such as the ICTY (International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia), preventing acts of looting or protecting particularly threatened individuals. With its particular capabilities, the Bundeswehr Military Police also has a major part in crowd and riot control tasks of the armed forces. In addition, the Bundeswehr Military Police provides training support and shares experience with local military and civilian police for the development of new structures and operational procedures. Bundeswehr Military Police Under the current Bundeswehr structure, the overall mission of the Military Police at home and abroad is performed by eight MP battalions with a total of thirty-one companies. Bundeswehr. Locations of MP stations in 2010 MP 151 5 Eckernförde 4 MP 4 MP 152 3 Bremen 2 MP 5 2 MP 252 3 MP 151 152 2 MP 152 4 5 MP 4 MP 3 MP 3 MP 351 Storkow Leipzig 351 2 MP 351 251 252 Erfurt Rotenburg a. d. Fulda 2 MP 251 5 Mainz 251 Zweibrücken MP 452 Veitshochheim 3 MP 452 4 MP 3 MP 451 Roding 4 MP 2 MP 451 Amberg Bruchsal 452 452 Ulm München Sigmaringen 2 Murnau 5 MP 451 350 350 Berlin Postdam Burg 252 MP 351 MP 251 Koblenz 5 MP MP Neubrandenburg Munster 4 MP Bonn 3 MP MP Augustdorf Hilden 2 Hagenow Hannover Münster 252 MP 151 Hamburg 5 MP Wilhelmshaven 151 3 152 MP 451 As part of their traffic control duty, the Bundeswehr Military Police is responsible for supervising and controlling military road traffic. For accident prevention, Bundeswehr Military Police personnel warn civilian motorists of military convoys or oversize loads, check Bundeswehr vehicles - especially those used for transports of hazardous goods - and attend the scene of traffic accidents involving Bundeswehr personnel or vehicles. 4 MP 350 The Bundeswehr Military Police also performs crime prevention functions for the good and ben-. efit of the Bundeswehr or allied forces. In close cooperation with military organisers and region-. ally responsible police authorities, for instance, they provide security at major events, exhibitions, displays and other public activities of the Bundeswehr. Moreover, they provide ceremonial escorts for special events and security escorts to protect transports of cash and/or ammunition. As a contribution to area and point defence, Bundeswehr Military Police personnel conduct checks in the vicinity of Bundeswehr premises and take part in the protection of installations and premises of allied armed forces. Military Police duties inside and outside Germany’s borders are discharged 24 hours a day from national or multinational MP stations specifically assigned to the respective area of operations. If required, reservists can support active Military Thanks to its manifold operational experience, Police personnel in performing their tasks. conceptual and structural adaptations as well as strict orientation of training towards operational As part of military law enforcement, Bundeswehr needs, the Bundeswehr Military Police - under Military Police forces are mainly employed as pa- the umbrella of the Joint Support Service - has trols. Outside military premises they support all developed an increasingly broad spectrum of disciplinary superiors in monitoring, maintaining military police capabilities to meet national and and restoring military discipline and order, and multinational requirements; it is well prepared to act as points of contact to soldiers and civilian cope with future tasks. agencies alike to render assistance as necessary. Their helpline for civilian authorities and soldiers is available 24h a day under 01803-90-99. Streitkräftebasis 45 Family Support Organisation To support the families and dependants of de-. ployed soldiers, the Bundeswehr has established a country-wide professional Family Support Organisation. Prior to their deployment, the soldiers indicate in writing by which Family Support Cen-. tre (FSC) they wish their dependants to be cared for. The Family Support Centre approaches the dependants even in the run up to the operation. The Family Support Organisation helps soldiers on operations to concentrate on their military tasks. They know that the problems and worries of their dependants at home are taken care of. For this purpose, the Bundeswehr entertains a Central Family Support Agency (CFSA) in Potsdam as well as thirty-one Family Support Centres FSC Kiel Neubrandenburg FSC FSC FSC Schwerin Wilhelmshaven Faßberg FSC FSC FSC Delmenhorst Rheine Postdam FSC Hannover FSC Magdeburg FSC Augustdorf Unna FSC Storkow FSC FSC Euskirchen Berlin CFSA FSC FSC The Centres serve as a 24-hour-a-day point of contact for the dependants in all social and welfare matters and establish links to other support-. ing agencies. Moreover, they organise events for the families to get to know each other and be informed on the situation in the area of operations. As part of the ”Bundeswehr Support Network“, the Family Support Organisation closely cooperates with the Bundeswehr Social Service, the Bundeswehr Chaplain Service as well as various volunteer organisations. Warnemünde FSC FSC FSC Leipzig FSC Erfurt Frankenberg/E. Frankenberg/S FSC Lahnstein Veitshöchheim FSC Wiesbaden FSC Kümmersbruck Saarlouis FSC FSC FSC Donauwörth Speyer FSC FSC Bogen Sigmaringen FSC FSC München FSC Bad Reichenhall FSC Kempten staffed with specially trained full-time personnel. These are supported by about fifty Family Support Points which are set up by the units contributing personnel for operations abroad and staffed with part-time personnel as required. Streitkräftebasis 47 Major Training Areas (MTAs) Major training areas in Germany are intended to contribute to meeting the training requirements of the German armed forces in a mission-. oriented manner. Besides the Bundeswehr, the allied armed forces stationed in Germany and other allied partners, too, are welcome to utilise the MTAs. Suitable firing and exercise facilities are provided within the framework of a network for training assets in a way that is oriented towards requirements, results, and costs. In this context, military goals, laws and regulations, proceeding in accordance with environmental requirements, and making sustainable use of available re-. sources deserve special consideration. qualified training is provided across the entire spectrum of general operational tasks, and readiness is established as a part of operational training. The Wildflecken-based joint Combat Simula-. tion Centre, the Combat Training Centre on the Altmark Training Area but also the Bundeswehr UN Training Centre in Hammelburg are the most efficient training areas because of their realistic training facilities. In the coming years, the exercise capacities are to be realigned. The utilisation of MTAs Altengrabow, Ohrdruf, Lübtheen, Schwarzenborn, EhraToday’s training parameters and increased ex-. Lessien and Daaden will be restricted, and exerercise activities call for spacious firing and exer-. cise activities on these MTAs will predominantly cise areas and state-of-the-art ranges that permit take place without live ammunition. composite land force operations to be conducted but also exercises in the extended spectrum of tasks with and without live or practice ammunition. In parallel with these changes, some MTA headquarters will be reorganised under one roof. Train-. ing area headquarters (plus the respective. branches) will be established: The MTAs differ with respect to their sizes and qualities. However, they all fulfil the training requirements of the units by ensuring that different arms can interact in exercises up to the brigade-level, units, especially of the Response and Stabilisation Forces, are prepared for their operational tasks in the extended and more likely spectrum of tasks, 48 Streitkräftebasis in Bergen for the training areas Bergen, Munster, Ehra-Lessien, and Lübtheen, in Klietz for the training areas Klietz, Alten- grabow, and Lehnin, in Wildflecken for the training areas Wild- flecken, Hammelburg, Schwarzenborn, and Ohrdruf, and in Baumholder for the training areas Baumholder and Daaden. Major Training Areas (MTAs) Major training areas in the 2010 Structure Putlos Todendorf Lübtheen Munster Bergen Ehra-Lessien Jägerbrück MD I Wittstock Klietz Lehnin Altengrabow Nordhorn Haltern (GBR) Senne (GBR) Schwarzenborn MD III MD II Daaden Heuberg Grafenwöhr (USA) CMTC Hohenfels (USA) Legend Training Area where Live Ammunition is Used Training Area where No Live Ammunition is Used Oberlausitz Ohrdruf Wildflecken Hammelburg Baumholder Air-To-Ground Firing Range Altmark Army Combat Training Centre MD IV Siegenburg (USA) Military District (MD) Streitkräftebasis 49 Bundeswehr Operations Command Since the end of 2002, the Bundeswehr Operations Command has planned and conducted all Bundeswehr operations in a joint and combined mode. When German armed forces are deployed in a multinational environment, the Bundeswehr Operations Command – from its headquarters at. Schwielowsee-Geltow near Potsdam – performs all tasks that remain a national responsibility. These typ-. ically national tasks include the deployment, supply and support of the operational contingents. Each contingent commander will receive his tactical missions from the respective multinational commander. The Bundeswehr Operations Command then has to check whether such orders to German troops are lawful and in compliance with the mandate of the German Bundestag. The Bundeswehr Operations Command is the national operational level of command, which day by day translates the guidelines of the Federal Ministry of Defence into concrete military action. It is thus the Bundeswehr authority that issues directives to the commanders of deployed contingents and ensures unity of command. The command and control of Special Forces is an exception because – at the operational level – it is the responsibility of Joint Command Special Operations. In December 2001, only a short time after it had been set up, the Bundeswehr Operations Com- Chain of Command for Operations Strategic Level Operational Level Tactical Level mand carried out national command tasks as part of “Operation Enduring Freedom” (OEF, for instance at the Horn of Africa) as well as within the framework of the “International Security Assistance Force” (ISAF) in Afghanistan. In 2002, the Bundeswehr Operations Command was entrusted with the missions in the Balkans, which had already become established by that time, and with UNOMIG, the United Nations Observer Mission in Georgia. The conceivable spectrum of missions and tasks Federal Minister of Defence State Secretary Chief of Staff, Bundeswehr National Command Authorities, Agencies and Offices Commander, Bundeswehr Operations Command Multinational Headquarters Contingents Streitkräftebasis 51 Bundeswehr Operations Command the Bundeswehr Operations Command may have to perform is richly diversified, ranging from peacemaking and peacekeeping measures to humani-. tarian assistance abroad, the most recent example of this being the assistance provided in the wake of the 2004/2005 tsunami in Southeast Asia. The current international involvement of the Bundeswehr focuses on peace stability operations in the Balkans and in Afghanistan. In addition, the Bundeswehr Operations Command commands and controls the German troops employed within the framework of UN operations. Apart from the United Nations Observer Mission in Georgia (UNOMIG) already mentioned above,. these missions include the United Nations Mission in Ethiopia and Eritrea (UNMEE), the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA), and the United Nations Mission in Sudan (UNMIS). In addition, the Bundeswehr Operations Command makes a significant contribution to the conceptual development and implementation of guidelines for Response Forces available at short notice such as the NATO Response Force (NRF) and the EU Bat-. tle Groups (EU BGs). The Bundeswehr Operations Command has at its disposal a nucleus staff for a Potsdam-based EU Operation Headquarters (OHQ), which is to command and control EU operations at the military-strategic level. In the event of an activation of the OHQ, this nucleus staff – already during the multinational build-up – will ensure a swiftly available initial planning and command capability by drawing on reinforcements from partner nations and additional German personnel. The structure of the Bundeswehr Operations Command reflects the two guiding principles of operational command and control: joint and combined. When Germany acted as lead nation for ISAF III, for example, a Potsdam-based ISAF Operations and Coordination Centre (IOCC) commanded and controlled the entire mission in a combined manner. Liaison officers from different nations are part of the Bundeswehr Operations Command. For operational purposes, the Commander, Bundeswehr Operations Command, reports to the Chief of Staff, Bundeswehr. In terms of administrative con-. trol, the Bundeswehr Operations Command, which is part of the Joint Support Service, is subordinate to the Vice Chief of Staff, Bundeswehr, and Chief of Staff, Joint Support Service. In Germany, the Bundeswehr Operations Command Commander Deputy Commander Chief of Staff J1 52 Streitkräftebasis J2 J3 J4 J5 J6 Legal Advisor (LEGAD) Public Information Office (PIO) Controlling / Cost & Performance Responsibility Senior Medical Officer Operational Management Section J7 J8 J9 J Med OHQ Nucleus Staff Bundeswehr Operations Command does not command and control any troops other than its own HQ and Signal Battalion. Therefore, with respect to the preparation and execution of missions as well as post-mission activities, it close-. ly cooperates with the command headquarters of the Joint Support Service, the Army, Air Force, Navy, and the Bundeswehr Joint Medical Service. In their capacity as force providers, these commands are responsible for the preparation, equipment and provision of qualified contingents in accordance with the guidelines of the Bundeswehr Operations Command. At a certain point in time, usually when the troops deploy to the theatre, the Commander of the Bundeswehr Operations Command will assume command authority. After the mission, this responsibility will be handed back to the force providers. It is important that the soldiers earmarked for deployment prepare conscientiously for their tasks and receive a thorough training. The Bundeswehr Operations Command contributes its lessons learn-. ed to the training. Another task of the Operations Command is to provide adequate morale, welfare and recreation (MWR) support both to the deployed troops and to their families at home. The family support function is an integral part of the activities of the Bundeswehr Operations Command because it is from here that the family support centres across Germany are provided with the most important. pieces of information. Unified command has proved to be the right approach because it is in this way that all assets are combined for success in one place, i.e. at the Bundeswehr Operations Command. The Command Meanwhile, some 700 soldiers and civil employees constantly maintains close cooperation with allies are working at Henning-von-Tresckow-Barracks and partners. Multinationality is a value in itself, near Potsdam. They come from all services and. and, on all operations, such cooperation alone alareas of the Bundeswehr because the Command ready suffices to send out signals of stability and uses a joint approach in all functional areas, thus hope. capitalising on the broad expertise of personnel from all of the armed forces. So far, more than 152.000 Bundeswehr soldiers have served on operations abroad. The formidable demands made on them in international missions and the strain of such deployments call for suitable structures to be implemented and state-of-the-art equipment to be provided. In this area, the Bundeswehr Operations Command has to assist the troops through exercises, evaluation and development activities. Streitkräftebasis 53 Joint Command Special Operations administrative control over the forces attached to it for operations. The Command, in addition, performs those operational tasks that continue to be a national responsibility even after the above troops have been placed under operational con-. trol of a multinational commander. The Command makes an important contribution (nucleus staff) in the event that Germany as a nation should assume primary responsibility for a Combined Joint Forces Special Operations Component Command Headquarters (CJFSOCC HQ). In addition, the Command plans and carries out joint exercises for the Special Operations Network and contributes to the development of the Special Forces and their operational network. On 15 April 2005, a separate operational-level command for the command and control of Special Forces operations was activated: Joint Command Special Operations. Joint Command Special Operations is headquartered in Henning-von-. Tresckow Barracks at Schwielowsee near Potsdam in the immediate vicinity of the Bundeswehr Operations Command. Worldwide, continuous and joint: These are the criteria that determine the way in which the Command will in the future command and control all operations of Bundeswehr Special Forces, using an optimised command organisation. In this command organisation, the Army‘s KSK Special Forces and Navy combat divers will interact with other forces from the so-called “Special Operations Network”. The Joint Command Special Operations per-. forms a number of tasks. It plans and conducts all operations of the Special Operations Network outside the German territory. It also exercises. 54 Streitkräftebasis In the case of our allied partners, too, an independent command organisation has often proved successful. This type of command organisation takes account of the fact that – in terms of time and space - Special Forces operations are usually conducted independently of the operations of other forces. Furthermore, the conditions under which Special Forces operate are often notice-. ably different from those of other operations. What is more, strict secrecy requirements must be met so as not to jeopardise the success of. these operations, which are sensitive and risky for the most part and whose success often depends to a high degree on the element of sur-. prise. The military has put these facts in a nutshell: “Command and control of Special Forces only by Special Forces command and control fa- Joint Command Special Operations cilities.” Already in its basic organisation, the Joint Command Special Operations has joint NATO-. standardised staff divisions at its disposal. The HQ of the Command, for example, is structured in a way that is compatible with the structure of similar national command headquarters as well as multinational NATO and EU headquarters. achieving its transformation goals. The new organisation has implemented the. forward-looking and consistently joint approach to the command and control of Special Forces operations and – for the first time – places the Bundeswehr in a position to assume the command and control of special operations using multinational command structures. The adoption of this new structure, takes the Bundeswehr another significant step towards Germany has notified NATO and the EU that it is prepared to shoulder the main responsibility for Commander Chief of Staff J1 J2 J3 J4 J5 J6 J7 JMed Streitkräftebasis 55 Response Forces Operations Command On 7 October 2005, the Ulm-based Response Forces Operations Command emerged from HQ II (GE/US) Korps. prevention and crisis management operations across the entire spectrum of Petersberg tasks. Among other things, the Response Forces Op-. erations Command is expected to deploy to the theatre at short notice and perform command tasks there as Force Headquarters (FHQ) of the European Union (EU), even with little prepara-. tion. If the Council of the European Union adopts a resolution, the FHQ must then be able to as-. sume command and control of an EU Battlegroup (EUBG) in theatre within 10 days. It is true that the demand for readiness is less Since 1 July 2006, the Response Forces Opera- stringent in the case of larger-scale EU-led op-. tions Command has been part of the Joint Sup- erations conducted in accordance with the Euro-. port Service. In terms of administrative control, pean Headline Goal 2010 and involving formathe Response Forces Operations Command is tions up to division or even corps size. However, subordinate to the Vice Chief of Staff, Bundes- as a result of having to command and control dif-. wehr, and Chief of Staff, Joint Support Service. ferent component commands at the tactical. During operations, the deployable HQs set up by level, the complexity of requirements to be met the Response Forces Operations Command re- at the operational level increases. port to the Bundeswehr Operations Command. If instructed correspondingly, the Responses Regarding the special tasks of concepts and de- Forces Operations Command will also carry out velopment and the responsibility for joint exercises, the Response Forces Operations Command is directly attached to the Chief of Staff, Bundeswehr. The core capability of the Response Forces Op-. erations Command is the operational command and control of joint combined operations using the capability to conduct network-enabled. tasks of the Headquarters of the German Contingent Commander in Theatre. Furthermore, it will provide individual augmentees to the Bundeswehr Operations Command, if necessary. operations. In its capacity as an operational-level headquarters, the Response Forces Operations Command - within the framework of NATO, the EU and/or other multinational organisations and after a corresponding assignment has been effected - plans and conducts international conflict 56 Streitkräftebasis The Response Forces Operations Command coordinates the entire exercise planning of the armed forces. The planning, execution and evaluation of joint exercises take place in accordance with the guidelines laid down by the Armed Forces Staff and in coordination with the command headquarters of the services. In cooperation with the Bundeswehr Operations Command, the Response Forces Operations Command provides national elements for joint targeting of NATO and the EU. Response Forces Operations Command The Response Forces Operations Command con- Operations Command is particularly suited to tributes to the further development of Response shaping transformation in a tangible manner. Force capabilities and initially also to stabilising joint network-enabled operations. In pursu-. ance of this task, it coordinates its activities with the Bundeswehr Operations Command and the competent offices/ command headquarters of the services/military organisational areas. In addition, as part of its functions, the Response Forces Operations Command is to contribute to Concept Development and Experimentation (CD&E). Because of its direct involvement in exercises and operations, the Response Forces. Deputy Commander Commander Political Adviser (POLAD) Controlling Deputy Commander and Chief of Staff Senior Medical Officer Press and Information Centre (PIC) Legal Adviser (LEGAD) Coordination Deputy Chief of Staff - Operations Military Intelligence/ Geoinformation Affairs J3 Operations J5 Operational Planning J7 Training/ Exercises Deputy Chief of Staff - Support J9 CIMIC J ENG Engineers J1 Personnel J4 Logistics J6 Command Support J8 Administration J Med Streitkräftebasis 57 Armed Forces Office The Armed Forces Office is a major command au-. thority and as such is part of the command organisation of the Joint Support Service (JSS). In 1959, the Armed Forces Office was set up as Bundeswehr Office (Bundeswehramt) from different military agencies of the Bundeswehr and elements of the Ministry of Defence. In the years from 1975 to 1979, the Armed Forces Office acquired the status of a major command in what was then called the Central Military Agencies of the Bundeswehr. In 2001, a turning point occurred as a result of reor-. ganisation measures in the context of the further development of the armed forces. Since then, the Armed Forces Office has been a mainstay of the Joint Support Service, where – as a central installation − it is in charge of joint training in the Joint Support Service and the further development of the JSS. With the 2001 restructuring, additional offices, schools, and academies were attached to the. Armed Forces Office. JSS (Joint Support Service) Bundeswehr Operations Command - Planning and Conduct of Operations (Abroad) Armed Forces Office - Command and control of Offices, Centres, Schools, NATO Agencies, Military Attaché Offices - JSS Development - Organisation of the JSS - Joint Training in the JSS Joint Support Command - Command and control of Troops in the Task Areas - Planning and Conduct of Operations (at Home) - Specialist Tasks + Logistics + Command and Control Support + Bundeswehr Military Police Affairs + NBC Defence/ Protection Tasks + Civil-Military Cooperation of the Bundeswehr In terms of administrative control, the Armed Forces Office is in charge of numerous subordinate agencies and performs official tasks for the Joint Support Service as well as specialist tasks for the entire Bundeswehr. Besides the classically structured HQ, which is responsible for general matters pertaining to administrative control, the specialist divisions and independent sections of the Armed Forces Office that perform specific functions are of particular im- portance. Furthermore, the Armed Forces Office includes some elements set up temporarily to fulfil special and mostly comprehensive individual tasks. The Armed Forces Office, which is directly subordinate to the Vice Chief of Staff, Bundeswehr, and Chief of Staff, Joint Support Service, carries out the key tasks listed below: personnel, leadership development and civic education (Innere Führung), and public relations, security, organisation, training, crisis response and preparedness planning, controlling to include cost/performance responsibility, and planning and introduction of user-oriented stand-. ard software for the entire Joint Support Service (standard application software product families – SASPF). The Armed Forces Office‘s area of responsibility includes about 160 agencies and similar organisa-. tional elements worldwide that carry out their own tasks in the areas of personnel, training, science, research, military representation abroad, and joint specialist tasks. In terms of administrative control, the agencies subordinate to the Armed Forces Office include: the Bundeswehr Command and Staff College, the Student Affairs Sections at Bundeswehr Universities, the Leadership Development and Civic Education Centre, the Bundeswehr Transformation Centre, the Bundeswehr Academy for Information and Communication, the Bundeswehr Sports School, the Bundeswehr Military Police and Headquarters Service School, the Bundeswehr Command Support School, the Bundeswehr Logistics School, the Bundeswehr Central Office for Military Motor Vehicle Affairs, the Joint Band of the Bundeswehr, the Bundeswehr School of Military Music, and the Bundeswehr Big Band. Northern, Southern, Eastern and Western. Infrastructure Staffs (the latter to be set up as of 1 April 2007), Streitkräftebasis 59 Armed Forces Office Commander, Armed Forces Office Military History Research Institute Directors of Military Affairs at the Bundeswehr Universities Bundeswehr Command and Staff College Central Office for Military Motor Vehicle Affairs Commissioner for Special Bundeswehr Tasks in the New Länder Joint Band of the Bundeswehr Big Band of the Bundeswehr German Armed Forces Command United States / Canada Southern Infrastructure Staff Eastern Infrastructure Staff Western Infrastructure Staff1 German National Military Representative to SHAPE Senior Officer / Military Element, Bundeswehr IT Office 17 Senior German Officers/ German Elements 61 Military Attaché Offices/ 2 Military Attaché Offices Reinforcements Small Agencies Delegations and Elements of the Federal Ministry of Defence the Bundeswehr School of Dog Handling, and other minor agencies. Besides, there is the administrative control of Agencies of the Armed Forces Office, Europe Senior German Officer / German Element JFC HQ Brunssum, NLD Senior German Officer / German Element JWC, Stavanger, NOR Senior Officer with the Permanent Mission of the Federal Republic of Germany to the European Union Brussels, BEL FMOD Element with the Permanent Mission of the Federal Republic of Germany to the Secretariat of the Franco-German Defence and Security Council Paris, FRA Senior German Officer / German Element CC-Land HQ Heidelberg, DEU NMR (GE) SHAPE Mons, BEL Senior German Officer / German Element JFTC Bydgoszcz, POL Senior German Officer / German Element CC-Mar, HQ Northwood, GBR Senior German Officer / German Element NS SHAPE Oberammergau, DEU FMOD Element with the Permanent Mission of the Federal Republic of Germany to the OECD Wien, AUT German HQ Section, France Paris, FRA German Military Element, Geneva Centre for Security Policy (GCSP) Geneva, CHE Senior German Officer / German Element JALLC Lisbon, POR Senior German Officer / German Element JHQ Lisbon, Oeiras, POR Senior German Officer / German Element CC-Air HQ IZMIR Izmir, TUR Senior German Officer / German Element CC-Land HQ Madrid, ESP Senior German Officer / German Element NADEFCOL, Rome, ITA Senior German Officer/German Element CC-Mar Naples, ITA Senior German Officer/German Element JFC Naples, ITA Senior German Officer / German NCISS, Latina, ITA USA and Military Attaché Offices Senior Officer with the Permanent Mission of the Federal Republic of Germany to the United Nations New York, USA German Armed Forces Command US / CA Reston, USA Senior German Officer HQ SACT and USJFCOM Norfolk, USA Accreditation (in Progress) Secondary Accreditation (in Progress) Military Attaché Offices, Currently Vacant No Accreditation 60 Streitkräftebasis 61 Military Attaché Office 2 Military Attaché Office Reinforcement 180 Military personnel in the Military Attaché Service under administrative control of the Armed Forces Office Bundeswehr Institute of Social Sciences Bundeswehr Transformation Centre Bundeswehr Verification Centre Northern Infrastructure Staff 1 from 1 April 2007 approximately 60 military attaché offices worldwide, German elements of multinational headquarters, and the German Armed Forces Command, USA and Canada (GEFORCOM US/CA). The Armed Forces Office is responsible for the further development of the Joint Support Service in the context of the Bundeswehr‘s transformation process. This responsibility comprises the development of conceptual foundations for joint tasks including joint training. The Headquarters The functions of the HQ arise from the many different agencies and organisational elements mentioned above that are subordinate to the Armed Forces Office in terms of administrative control. The special challenges of administrative control ensue from the pronounced heterogeneity of the agencies subordinate to the Office. These agen-. cies range from prominent training installations such as the Bundeswehr Command and Staff College and the Leadership Development and Civic Education Centre to minor agencies with just a few. employees. However, technical control and administrative con-. trol are often performed by different agencies. Armed Forces Office So, for instance, the military attaché offices are subordinate to the Ministry of Defence in terms of technical control, while the Armed Forces Offices exercises administrative control. Furthermore, in the principal staff functional areas Logistics and Command and Control Support but also in the Administrative Division, some responsibilities are fulfilled in a way that encompasses the entire Joint Support Service. This fact applies to IT security throughout the Joint Support Service, for instance. In addition, the Armed Forces Office renders support services to agencies directly subordinate to the Vice Chief of Staff, Bundeswehr, and Chief of Staff, Joint Support Service. These agencies include the Bundeswehr Universities, the Bundeswehr Personnel Office, and the Bundeswehr Enlisted Personnel Office. Another special feature of the HQ worth pointing out is the fact that the Senior Medical Officer provides medical care for all German troops of the Armed Forces Office‘s area of responsibility serving abroad anywhere in the world and also assists them in settling the costs of medical treatment received outside Bundeswehr facilities. The Specialist Divisions The specialist divisions of the Armed Forces Office, which are to be regarded as the “functional nucleus of the Armed Forces Office”, have the specialist orientation called for by their task area. In order to satisfy the need of the public for information, the “dissemination of information” is of central importance. In pursuance of this task, all technical devices available today are being used. In accordance with a functional directive issued by the Press and Information Office, Division I of the Armed Forces Office, the Bundeswehr Information and Media Centre, performs central technical coordination, control and implementation functions in the fields of PR, media, and central troop information and assists with information activities aimed at meeting personnel requirements. From a multitude of different flows of information, modern armed forces must be able to sift out and process - in a way that is both timely and in accordance with the requirements of the situation - pieces of information that are relevant to the decision maker in terms of command and control. The aspect of economic efficiency of thoughts and actions is of critical importance in this context. Division II, Controlling/Central Cost Accounting, among other things performs the basic work for the Executive Group Controlling Staff and assists the organisational area of the Joint Support Service with the introduction and application of Controlling by laying the groundwork and rendering other kinds of support. By availing itself of standard cost accounting, profitability calculations and off-budget activities, Division II works out responses to a great variety of business management issues for the entire Bundeswehr and/or creates important data bases with the aid of the cost guideline, which is continuously updated. Next to media in a general sense, Division III - in its capacity as the Bundeswehr Scientific and Technical Information Centre - serves as the Bundeswehr point of contact for extensive technical information and the provision of technical literature, studies and current service regulations as well as regulation-type pamphlets on the Bundeswehr Intranet. Furthermore, this Division assists the Ministry of Defence with the further development of Bundeswehr service regulations and performs archiving tasks. Concomitant with the changes in the Bundeswehr, Division IV has gained special importance. It is responsible for policy matters pertaining to the training in the Joint Support Service and the other services as far as the armed forces are concerned (e.g. training courses, force commanders, distance learning, computer-aided training (CAT), training of military driving instructors). In addition, this Division is in charge of sports in the Bundeswehr and the promotion of top-level sports by the Bundeswehr. Division V serves as the point of contact for all matters of military infrastructure in the Bundeswehr below MoD level and exercises the technical con- Streitkräftebasis 61 Armed Forces Office trol of Infrastructure Staffs North, East and South. The branch focuses on the timely and requirementoriented provision of buildings, installations and facilities for the armed forces at home and abroad and on devising fundamental principles of infrastructure in all organisational areas. When the Bundeswehr conducts operations abroad, Division V coordinates the deployment of specialist personnel and advises on the development of a deployment infrastructure. Division VI is the highest non-ministerial authority for the Further Development of the Joint Support Service (WE SKB). To the extent required, this Branch – as a central element – controls and coordinates the Further Development of the Joint Support Service in all task areas and capability categories by laying down guidelines for Levels 2 and 3 of WE SKB. These levels are established at the subordinate commands/centres and some schools of the Joint Support Service with a mission orientation and a training orientation, respectively. The Division is in charge of devising the joint conceptual foundations for the organisational area of the Joint Support Service and, in pursuance of this task, sets targets for the capabilities to be attained by the Joint Support Service, analyses current military capabilities and, by identifying capability gaps, makes a major contribution to an optimised ascertainment of requirements. Another key task of the Branch – albeit a temporary one – concerns the task of “effectively operating in the information space” (information operations) in the Bundeswehr. Division VII, Organisation of the Joint Support Service, and responsible for all organisational matters of the Joint Support Service, represents another central support element of the Armed Forces Staff. The principal tasks of the branch include planning detailed structures for units and agencies of the Joint Support Service, devising and/or dealing with realisation plans and organisational foundations for the adoption of new structures, participating in stationing analyses, and managing the introduction of SASPF (standard application software product families) in the Joint Support Service. In addition, the Branch is tasked with developing and/or dealing with personnel structures in the fields of Military Police, signal intelligence (SIGINT), psychological operations, Bun- 62 Streitkräftebasis deswehr Geoinformation Affairs, and the coordination of personnel requirements with other requesting authorities of the Joint Support Service. The independent Military Psychology Group is in charge of providing technical quality assurance in the Bundeswehr Psychological Service, laying the groundwork with respect to personnel psychology, advising organisations from the point of view of military psychology, and performing applied military psychology. The term mentioned last specifically comprises the control of technical preparations for deployment as well as psychological support of and post-deployment activities for German force contingents abroad. Organisational psychology provides military leaders with contributions towards an analysis of the “internal situation” of the armed forces. The independent Reservist Work section, develops guidelines as regards contents and organisation for voluntary reservist work that is independent of assignment and controls the implementation of this work. The Inspector General of AssignmentIndependent Voluntary Reservist Work in the Bundeswehr supervises these activities on behalf of the Vice Chief of Staff, Bundeswehr, and Commissioner for Reservist Matters. The Security Officer at the Armed Forces Office identifies risks in connection with the personnel security investigations for military personnel, reservists and applicants for military careers with regard to sensitive duties. It is up to him to take decisions on suggestions put forward by the Military Counterintelligence Service that involve a rejection of candidates for sensitive jobs in the armed forces. The Director of the Military Music Service performs technical control of his area, advises the Ministry of Defence on military music matters, and deals with policy issues of the Military Music Service. Furthermore, he is in charge of planning the training in his field and managing major military music events. Altogether, the HQ and specialist divisions of the Armed Forces Office represent a highly diverse organism that carries out many different tasks and responsibilities. Therefore, if this complex organism is to function smoothly, coordinated teamwork and Armed Forces Office groundwork performed by technically qualified staff are imperative. Armed Forces Office – Central Responsibilities Within the Joint Support Service, the Armed Forces Office is responsible for decisively controlling training processes as the agency in charge of the joint further development, organisation and training of the Joint Support Service. In its capacity as a mainstay of the Joint Support Service, the Armed Forces Office – as the technically responsible lead agency − performs the tasks listed below: Laying down the outline directives for a standardised deployment-oriented training in the different services/military organisational areas in coordination with the Bundeswehr Operations Command and the Joint Support Command in line with the Bundeswehr Concept, monitoring pre-deployment training plus any follow-up that may be required, supporting post-deployment activities, and developing operational concepts in the Joint Support Service in such a way as to integrate lessons learned on deployment. Controlling Legal Adviser (LEGAD) Bundeswehr Logistics School Bundeswehr Command Support School Bundeswehr Military Police and Headquarters Service School Bundeswehr School of Dog Handling Bundeswehr Sports School Leadership Development and Civic Education Centre Bundeswehr Academy for Information and Communication Senior Officer / Military Element of the Federal Office of Languages German Element, George C. Marshall Center German Element, NATO School The Way Ahead In future, the Armed Forces Office will increasingly have an important say in the shaping of the “New Bundeswehr” and, in particular, bring its influence to bear on the further development of the Joint Support Service. To enable the Armed Forces Office to take up the challenges that can already be anticipated and to successfully deal with them as a “service provider” in the Bundeswehr, the new organisation of the Armed Forces Office and its area of responsibility outlined below will have to be fleshed out. Commander, Armed Forces Office Deputy Commander, Commander Bundeswehr Schools & Director of Joint Training Division IV, Training In keeping with the requirement that the armed forces should be capable of network-enabled operations, the sub-concept “Bundeswehr Information Operations (InfoOpBw)” assumes particular significance because information operations are part of every military operation and therefore play an important part in the entire mission spectrum. Information operations contribute to achieving information superiority as a prerequisite for command and control superiority. Chief of Staff Public Information Officer Director of Joint Support Service Development and Chief of Specialist Divisions G1 G2/G3 Division I, Bundeswehr Information and Media Centre Division II, Controlling / Central Cost Accounting Division III, Bundeswehr Scientific and Technical Information Centre Senior Officer / Military Element of the Federal Academy of Defence Administration and Technology G4 G6 Division V, Infrastructure Division VI, Joint Support Service Development Division VII, Joint Support Service Organisation Bundeswehr School of Military Music Administrative Division Pay and Accounting Section Military Psychology Branch Inspector General of Voluntary Reservist Work in the Bundeswehr Director of the Military Music Service Senior Medical Officer, Armed Forces Office Headquarters Armed Forces Office Security Officer Cooperation with the East/ International Cooperation Section Central Affairs Section Streitkräftebasis 63 NS M E AT IT AG M LE MO Bundeswehr Command and Staff College grammes, and the provision of academic training support. More than 600 participants attend the Hamburg-Blankenese-based institution day by day, and over 2,000 officers a year take part in more than 60 different courses and seminars. Approximately 100 of these officers are foreigners from 50 nations who are actively involved in life at the College. So far, more than 2,000 foreign officers from over 105 nations have attended courses at the Command and Staff College. The Hamburg institute offers a wide range of training programmes. The field-grade officer qualification course is earmarked for all regular field-grade and medical officers of the Bundeswehr. Promotion to fieldgrade officer is contingent on passing this course. The two-year national general staff/admiral staff course with officers from NATO member states and selected EU countries and the ten-month international general staff/admiral staff course take place at the College, too. The Bundeswehr Command and Staff College is the highest-level military training facility of the Bundeswehr. In terms of administrative control, the College is subordinate to the Armed Forces Office. The Vice Chief of Staff, Bundeswehr, and Chief of Staff, Joint Support Service, is responsible for education and teaching contents. The mission of the Command and Staff College focuses on the following: Training and advanced training of professionally experienced officers to prepare them for assignments as field-grade officers. The guiding principle is to train modern field-grade officers who – on the basis of a sound knowledge of their subject and a value-oriented attitude – perform their jobs efficiently while, at the same time, self-confidently representing the Bundeswehr in society. For the most part, officers from all services/organisational areas receive joint instruction. The Command and Staff College maintains close links to comparable armed forces schools all over the world through mutual visits, exchange pro- 64 Streitkräftebasis Furthermore, in keeping with the concept of “lifelong learning”, a number of three-day to three-week courses and seminars are provided in a modular system. Instruction is intended for participants from Captain/Navy Lieutenant up to and including General/Admiral and − in order to realise an interdepartmental and interdisciplinary approach – for Bundeswehr Command and Staff College civil participants in some parts. The Command and Staff College has organised its teaching contents in five subject areas: States, Societies, Military Affairs Capabilities and Structures of Armed Forces Bundeswehr Routine Duty Command and Operations of Armed Forces Individual Leadership Competence. Eight departments are responsible for teaching at the Command and Staff College. The Army, Air Force and Navy teach the leadership theory of their respective Service. The Medical and Health Service Department provides instruction in the doctrine of the Medical Corps and in aspects of preventative health care with reference to the deployment of armed forces. The department Command and Operations of Armed Forces teaches joint and combined operations and, on behalf of the Ministry of Defence, devises foundations for Bundeswehr operational planning and operations in the entire spectrum of tasks. The Security Policy and Strategy Department deals with principles and topical considerations on security policy and military strategy. The department Command and Management provides instruction in general leadership theory in order to improve the social and methodical competence of the students. NS M E AT IT AG M LE MO The Social Sciences Department focuses on the way the officer sees himself within the network of relations and activities that exists among the armed forces, the state, and society. In addition, the departments plan and conduct further education seminars in their principal fields. In addition, since March 2000, the Exercise and Training Centre has permitted computerassisted exercises to be carried out on some 200 interconnected computers available for this purpose. The Command and Staff College has a faculty of more than 110 military and 15 civil lecturers. Some 350 visiting lecturers each year complement the curriculum. With its 230 military and civilian personnel, the College HQ ensures the smooth operation of the Command and Staff College in terms of organisation and administration. Commandant Course Division Faculty Division HQ Staff Streitkräftebasis 65 Bundeswehr Academy for Information and Communication The Academy is the central installation of the Bundeswehr for the training and advanced training of command and specialist staff in the fields of press/PR and recruitment. In 1994, the Academy, which initially had been set up in Waldbröl in 1990, moved to Strausberg in the Land of Brandenburg just outside the German capital. Besides conducting training and advanced training, the Academy develops scientific foundations for information activities while, at the same time, serving as a forum of dialogue on issues of security policy and the Bundeswehr with the national and international public. In pursuance of these tasks, the Academy also makes a contribution to military cooperation with Alliance partners and partner states. The close proximity to the world of politics and the media in Berlin gives an important impetus to science and teaching at the Academy and to its dialogue with people from all walks of life. The advanced training department of the Academy is subject to the technical supervision of the Press and Information Office of the Ministry of Defence. Recruitment is conducted under the specific technical responsibility of the Personnel, Social Services and Central Affairs Directorate of the Ministry of Defence. In terms of administrative control, the Academy is subordinate to the Armed Forces Office. In terms of function, it is divided into the two key areas Teaching/Training and Research/Development. In addition, there is the service sector with the library, pay and accounting section, and the HQ. The qualification and training programme provided in the field of Teaching/Training is tailored to the requirements of command personnel, fulltime and part-time PR officers, youth officers and youth NCOs, officers and senior NCOs advising on military service, and media-engineering staff. The press specialists covering Bundeswehr mis- 66 Streitkräftebasis sions abroad are also trained here. Top executives from the higher commands, authorities, administrative agencies and ministries attend three-day media and communication training programmes at the Academy to obtain an individual competence profiling. Participants in the General Staff and Admiral Staff officer courses at the Bundeswehr Command and Staff College, too, regularly avail themselves of the Academy’s programmes. The Research/Development section lays the academic groundwork for the information activities of the Bundeswehr, assisting with contributions to all fields of information work, in particular with reference to communication in security and defence policy. Another task area of this section is the intense promotion of the exchange of views with multipliers in society. In several forums of dialogue, up to 2,000 participants attend seminars, conferences and symposiums each year. The soldiers and civilian staff of the Strausberg HQ /support section perform the tasks of personnel management, security, organisation, logistics, and signal communications/IT support for the Academy and to some extent for all agencies of the Strausberg Campus. In addition, they assist with the running of courses, seminars and conferences by providing accommodation, lecture rooms, conference rooms, and study aids or by rendering logistics, audio-visual or IT support Director Headquarters Support Section Deputy Director and Chief of Staff Teaching / Training Research / Development Technical Information Centre (Library) Pay and Accounting Section The Technical Information Centre (library) is the largest military-scientific library of the German armed forces. Its stock comprises approximately one million books and documents by now, some of which date back to the sixteenth century. Bundeswehr Transformation Centre As part of his responsibility for the development and realisation of the overall concept of military defence, the Chief of Staff, Bundeswehr, controls the transformation of the Bundeswehr. This continuous forward-looking process of adapting to the changing framework conditions aims to enhance the operational readiness of the Bundeswehr. It is in particular this task area that determines the mission of the Bundeswehr Transformation Centre, which is headquartered in Strausberg. The Centre does the groundwork for the Ministry of Defence and – across the boundaries of organisational areas – coordinates the activities of all authorities and commands in a complementary approach in order to combine central and decentralised contributions to the transformation process. The mission of the Centre essentially comprises three interrelated components: Assisting with the transformation process and the Bundeswehr planning and, in addition, evaluating the lessons learned from operations and exercises. In addition, the Centre performs tasks in the area of managing studies that are not subject-restricted. The Bundeswehr Transformation Centre analyses and assesses changes within and outside the Bundeswehr and gives impetus to its transformation. The Centre lays the scientific groundwork by devising interministerial strategic future development analyses in order to develop conceptual guidelines and objectives. Its tasks also include continuously analysing the security environment and developing prognoses. In this context, Concept Development and Experimentation (CD & E) is an important iterative method of supporting transformation, which is directed at obtaining innovative solutions and reviewing and implementing them in a joint manner. In this field, the Bundeswehr closely cooperates with other nations and NATO. In addition, “Operations Research” and “Modelling and Simulation” are being used as additional analyticscientific aids for further developing the required knowledge of methodology. The Bundeswehr Transformation Centre also relies on services and institutes of study made available by the aca- demic sector and trade and industry. In order to assist with the Bundeswehr planning and capability analysis, the Bundeswehr Transformation Centre advises the Ministry of Defence on drawing up and further developing conceptual foundations and assumes responsibility for the set-up and updating of the IT-based capability posture of the Bundeswehr. It assists with the analysis of armed forces resources and cooperates on the development of the Bundeswehr plan by primarily applying the methods of Operations Research and Modelling & Simulation. The Centre contributes to the analysis of experiences in the field of jointness the Bundeswehr and international allies and partners have gained from operations and exercises. It suggests options for action that are to be fed into the transformation process of the Bundeswehr and contributes to proposals for the improvement of joint foundations of operations. In terms of technical control, the Centre is subordinate to the Ministry of Defence, while the Armed Forces Office exercises administrative control. Director Deputy Commander / Chief of Staff Division I Transformation of the Bundeswehr Division II Concept Development and Experimentation Division III Operations Research & Modelling and Simulation Headquarters Streitkräftebasis 67 Leadership Development and Civic Education Centre Since 1956, the Leadership Development and Civic Education Centre in Koblenz has developed into an important establishment of central professional development for Bundeswehr executive personnel of different levels of command. It does important groundwork while, at the same time, serving as a didactic institute and a venue of military, social, economic and political meetings, communication and conferences. This is where battalion and company commanders, first sergeants and public figures take an open-minded look at the Bundeswehr leadership philosophy and exchange their experience during training courses and seminars. Commissioned and non-commissioned officers of allied armed forces, but also members of armies from all over the world receive information on the practical application of Innere Führung, i.e. on leadership, civic education and the integration of the Bundeswehr into the concept of justice maintains good relations with academies and schools of other government organisations at home and abroad. The mission of the armed forces – contributing to international conflict prevention and crisis management within the framework of operations abroad and peace missions – makes new demands on leadership development and civic education. The leadership training provided at the Centre, which teaches military superiors to meet the special requirements of a given deployment area, is extremely important. By conducting more than 350 different continuation training programmes in Koblenz, at the Strausberg branch and in the units, the Leadership Development and Civic Education Centre imparts expertise to more than 14,000 Bundeswehr members as well as to many other groups in society. Director Controlling Deputy Director and Chief of Staff Pay and Accounting Section Chief, Headquarters Section and law. Multipliers of various important social groups such as theologians, educationalists, employers and members of trade unions receive basic information on security and defence policy as well as insights into the fields of application of Innere Führung. All this contributes to immediately understanding and analysing current developments in society and within the Bundeswehr and to implementing the knowledge gained for the internal organisation, leadership, education and training within the armed forces. The Leadership Development and Civic Education Centre continues to play the leading role in a network for research and tasks concerning all issues of Innere Führung. Moreover, the Centre 68 Streitkräftebasis Division 1 Concepts, Basic Research Leadership Development and Civic Education Network Project Coordination S1 S4 Technical InformationCentre Mail Room and Military Manuals Centre S3/ S2 Situation Centre and Conference Support Desk DP / Classroom Monitoring System Graphics and Reproduction Centre Advanced Training Technology / CAT Division 2 Leadership Morale, Welfare and Recreation (MWR) Division 3 Civic Education Division 4 Constitutional, Military and International Law Military Discipline Division 5 (Strausberg) Bundeswehr Verification Centre In April 1991, the Bundeswehr Verification Centre entered into service at the Geilenkirchenbased Selfkant Barracks north of Aachen. In terms of administrative control, the Verification Centre is subordinate to the Armed Forces Office, while the Ministry of Defence exercises technical control. Verification is the control of armed forces, arms and military activities as agreed among states by carrying out random on-site inspections or using other means of surveillance. Owing to such active inspection activities, members of the Bundeswehr Verification Centre travel as far as Central Asia and Vladivostok by land and air, respectively. Also, the Centre accompanies all foreign inspections in Germany within the framework of passive implementation. Generally, the Centre ensures that the rights and duties arising for the Federal Republic of Germany from international agreements on arms con- trol, security and confidence building, disarmament, and non-proliferation are exercised and/or fulfilled. About two thirds of the missions the Bundeswehr Verification Centre has conducted so far were carried out abroad. Such missions call for a high level of expertise, strength of character, and diplomatic skills on the part of the Centre‘s staff. By evaluating its verification missions, the Centre regularly contributes to the Federal government‘s picture of the security situation. In addition, the Centre does the conceptual groundwork regarding the further development of arms control measures and assesses changes suggested by other states. Further tasks of the Verification Centre include the central documentation of arms control aspects within the Federal Ministry of Defence area of responsibility and the provision of expert advice on all implementation matters. Cooperating with verification organisations of other states and providing training and follow-on training for arms control personnel constitute important activities of the Centre, too. The Centre‘s spectrum of tasks also includes media operations, information activities, PR, the preparation and conduct of national and international exercises, and practical training projects. Director Controlling Deputy Director Chief of Staff S1 S 3/2 S4 S6 Pay and Accounting Section Division 1 Central Arms Control Tasks Division 2 Regional Conventional Arms Control Division 3 Confidence-Building Division 4 Cooperative Aerial Observation Division 5 Global Arms and Proliferation Control Section 1 Central Policy Planning Section 1 Evaluation Planning Section1 Evaluation Planning Section 1 Evaluation Planning Section 1 Arms Transfers Ammunition Section 2 Country Assessment International Cooperation Section 2 Mission Conduct Section 2 Mission Conduct Section 2 Mission Conduct Section 2 Nuclear Arms Control Delivery Means Section 3 Sensor Operation Section 3 Biological / Chemical Weapons Section 3 Information Management Documentation Streitkräftebasis 69 SO WI Bundeswehr Institute of Social Sciences In 1974, the Bundeswehr Institute of Social Sciences emerged from the Academy for Education in the Armed Forces (Wissenschaftliches Institut für Erziehung und Bildung in den Streitkräften). In 1995, the Institute, which had initially been stationed in Munich, moved to Strausberg in the Land of Brandenburg where it makes up the Strausberg Campus with other agencies from the Leadership Development and Civic Education Network. The Institute of Social Sciences is a ministerial research institution of the Federal government, which pursues social science research for the Bundeswehr on behalf of the Federal Ministry of Defence. It is the central facility for social science research with reference to the military. The Institute is responsible for military-related empirical research, for developing pertinent fundamentals and decision-making tools, and for making them available for the fulfilment of ministerial tasks. The work done by the Institute is geared towards the knowledge and support requirements of the Federal Ministry of Defence and the armed forces and is integrated into national and international science structures and networks. The principal tasks of the Institute include applied military-related social science research and the required basic research in military sociology. The internal organisation of the armed forces and macro-sociological questions pertaining to “The Bundeswehr and Society” and “The Purpose and Function of Armed Forces” are the fields of research the Institute is involved in. The Institute’s research activities include the following levels of analysis: “International System”, “National System and Society”, “Military Organisation”, and “The Soldier as an Individual”. The subject areas, which are significant now and will continue to be significant in future, centre in particular upon the foreign missions of the Bundeswehr, the introduction of control tools of business management into the Bundeswehr, the prevailing conditions of multinational force struc- 70 Streitkräftebasis tures and military integration, and “Women in the Armed Forces”. For this reason, various shorterterm projects are correspondingly grouped to meet current knowledge requirements. The research results are usually published in different leaflets and books of the Institute. These results do not merely fulfil the function of the Institute as an advisor to the political and military leadership but also contribute to scientific discussion in the scientific community and the development of the social sciences and arts. In terms of administrative control, the Institute is subordinate to the Armed Forces Office, while the Federal Ministry of Defence exercises technical control. A director and professor are at the helm of the Institute. Two project directors assist the director of the Institute with all policy matters and the performance of research activities. The nucleus staff of the Institute is made up of fifteen scientists from different fields of social science. For research projects, project groups are set up according to the task force principle and temporarily assigned to the two Project Areas. In terms of project-specific and general activities, these research groups are assisted by elements of the Project Areas and Planning & Organisation, respectively. Director Controlling Planning and Organisation Project Area I Project Area II Plans Officer (field-grade) Project Director Project Director Organisation Officer (field-grade) S3 Sergeant / Org Sergeant / DP Org Sergeant Editor Translator Clerk Project Support Project Support Research Assistants for Project Directors I and II 7 Scientists (Civil Servants) 8 Scientists (Civilian Employees) Military History Research Institute The Potsdam-based Military History Research Institute is a competent point of contact for all questions pertaining to military history. As a central agency of the Bundeswehr, it does research into German military history as an integral part of general history. In pursuance of this task, the Institute takes into account the interrelation among the military, the state, politics, society, law, culture, the economy, science and technology in an international context. Promoting the teaching of history in the armed forces constitutes the second important mission of the Military History Research Institute. Basic research on military history, which currently focuses on German military history of the twentieth century, is among the central tasks of the Institute. The history of the two world wars, the Bundeswehr as part of NATO, and the East German National People’s Army as part of the Warsaw Pact are the principal subjects of this research. The Institute promotes the teaching of history in the armed forces by providing state-of-the-art teaching media and touring exhibitions. In this way, the Military History Research Institute makes a contribution to the way the Bundeswehr sees itself and is instrumental in shaping the awareness of history in the armed forces. Within the framework of operational support, the Institute provides historical orientation on theatres abroad. Furthermore, it exercises technical control of the museums of military history in Dresden and Berlin-Gatow. The Dresden-based Museum of Military History of the Bundeswehr presents German military history in an overall context of history from the beginnings to the present time. Appropriate mention is made of the foreign armed forces on German ground after 1945 and the military history of the former East German states, in particular Saxony, which are now part of Germany. The Air Force Museum of the Bundeswehr in BerlinGatow presents the history of military aviation and air warfare in Germany from its beginnings to the present time and integrates it into an overall context of history. This includes the presentation of air campaigns against Germany conducted by opposing armed forces in the World Wars and the presence of foreign armed forces on German ground after 1945. Both museums are receptive to future military and political developments. The Military History Research Institute provides expert opinions and reports on military history for the armed forces and civil authorities, assists and advises lecturers and instructors on military history at the Bundeswehr officer schools and academies and, in addition, closely cooperates with the Potsdam-based Chair of Military History, the only one of its kind in Germany. In terms of administrative control, the Military History Research Institute is subordinate to the Armed Forces Office, while it reports to the Federal Ministry of Defence with respect to joint specialist tasks. The Military History Research Institute is made up of two academic divisions. A total of about 35 historians work at the Research Division and the Training, Information, Specialised Studies Division, which are headed by a civilian scientist and a military officer, respectively. With its editorial department, the Institute has its own publishing house, and its inventory of about 240,000 books makes it the largest library that specialises in military history in the German-speaking countries. Streitkräftebasis 71 Bundeswehr Command Support School port personnel. Furthermore, in addition to instructing members of the C3I services (Principal Staff Functional Area 6) in their functions, the School trains all users of commonly introduced technical C2 means. In the training of the latter, special emphasis is also being placed on operations-oriented additional training. The Bundeswehr Command Support School was set up on 1 October 2006. It emerged from the Signals College and Army Specialist School for Electronics Technology . The Command Support School is not just an organisational amalgamation of training capacities that were already available in the services but as a harmonised new cross-service approach. This approach, which takes account of the new prevailing conditions (e.g. the Ordinance of the Federal Government on Further Vocational Training in the Field of Information and Telecommunication Technology (Verordnung über die berufliche Fortbildung im Bereich der Informationsund Telekommunikationstechnik)), involves a fundamental modernisation of training courses and contents. The idea behind all this is to put the communications and electronics services staff of the armed forces in a position to cope with the challenges of the Information Age, in particular on operations and under the conditions of networkenabled operations. The Bundeswehr Command Support School fulfils common and cross-service training functions in the entire field of command support. The School essentially performs the three tasks listed below: It is the central training installation for the joint training of the Bundeswehr’s command sup- 72 Streitkräftebasis In the Bundeswehr Technical School for IT, Officer Candidates of the Officer Specialist Service of the Army, the Joint Support Service, and the Air Force as well as in some establishments of the Navy and the Bundeswehr Joint Medical Service, the Command Support School trains military personnel for professions in the fields of electrical engineering and computer science that are recognised in civilian life. T hrough its Development Division, the School is responsible for development in the fields of command support and all-arms signal communications. With respect to the further development of the C3I services, the School provides input to the single service offices. Bundeswehr Command Support School The Bundeswehr Command Support School is one of the forward-looking joint projects carried out as part of the transformation of the Bundes- wehr. In future (i.e. in the target structure), the School will be garrisoned at the Pöcking-based General Fellgiebel Barracks on Lake Starnberg. Commandant Staff Council Controlling Chief of Staff School Headquarters Section S1 Technology / Protection Section S2 Teaching / Training Division Support Division Training Department A Training Department B Training Department C Pay and Accounting Section 1 Training Wing IT Officer Bundeswehr / C3I Services / S6 4 Training Wing 7 Training Wing Section S3 Cash Office Section S4 Accountant 2nd Training Wing IT Officer JSS / Comms Officer Section S6 th st 3rd Training Wing C3I Services / IT Security / Crypto Special Branch Instructor Group Central Training Affairs / Course Planning / Control Training Objectives Development and Evaluation th Technical Media Centre Command, Control and Information Systems (C2IS) 5th Training Wing SATCOM 8th Training Wing Command and Control Means Maintenance Log Control Section 6th Training Wing 9th Training Wing Motor Pool Management Information Processing/Programming 11th Training Wing 10 Training Wing Information Transmission 11 Training Wing is slated for disbandment as of 30 September 2009. Headquarters Section Stock Control Network Administrator, Radio WAN Senior NCO Training Course/ Specialist Training / Radio Development Division Section 1 Section 2 Section 3 th Information Processing/VAN Section 4 th Bundeswehr IT School [Until 1 October 2006 called Signals College and Army Specialist School for Electronics Technology] Section 5 Computer-Assisted Training (CAT) ITU [International Telecommunication Union] Provision of Training Equipment Streitkräftebasis 73 Bundeswehr Logistics School The Garlstedt-based School, which is subordinate to the Armed Forces Office, has been part of the Joint Support Service since July 2005. On 1 October 2006, it was reorganised to become the Bundeswehr Logistics School. It is the central joint logistics school of the Bundeswehr and a multinational single point of contact for the development of logistics doctrine. The Bundeswehr Logistics School provides teaching on logistic procedures and skills in the form of courses that were harmonised among the Army, Air Force and Navy. This means that the effectiveness and efficiency of logistics performance are noticeably enhanced through the application of the same logistic terms, contents and proce- dures. In this way, then, the Bundeswehr Logistics School – in a forward-looking way – does special justice to the new joint and combined profile of logistics, both in routine duty and on operations. The branch-specific training contents and procedures of operational logistics remain under the responsibility of the Army, Air Force and Navy. The Logistics School of the Bundeswehr is a central training installation for logistics command and administrative personnel as well as the central training installation of the Bundeswehr for instruction in logistic support for operations abroad. The same applies to the nation-wide training of Hazardous Goods Officers and the training and advanced training of the entire command and 74 Streitkräftebasis administrative staff in the field of military motor vehicle affairs. The School is essentially made up of the Development Division, the Teaching/Training Division, and the Support Division. The Development Division: analyses the current challenges in the task area of logistics, d evises branch and task-specific training directives, also for unit-level training, in close coordination with the agencies of the services, is involved in the service-specific development and implementation of joint procedures, d evelops service regulations and conducts field trials, lays the groundwork for the further develop- ment of doctrine and the foundations of organisation, and c ontributes to the development and design of SASPF (Standard Application Software Product Families) and its introduction in the Bundeswehr. In the instruction groups, the officers, reserve officers, officer candidates, and NCO/senior NCO candidates pass through different assignment qualification and follow-on training courses. It is here that the soldiers of the Army, Air Force and Navy jointly receive their logistics training and formation. The support section ensures that the cycle of operations at the School runs smoothly and assists with Teaching & Training, including the administrative control of the soldiers. Bundeswehr Logistics School Commandant Staff Council Controlling Teaching / Training Support Special Branch Instructor Group Training Department A Training Objectives Development and Evaluation Leadership Training in Logistics Training of Officers / NCOs Supply / Transportation Joint Log Unit Stock Control / Maintenance 2nd Training Wing 6th Training Wing 10th Training Wing Computer-Assisted Training (CAT) Logistics Data Processing (DP) Operation Support 1st Training Wing Training of Command / Specialist Personnel Hazardous Goods/ Bulk Supplies 3 Training Wing rd Training Department B 5th Training Wing Training Department C 9th Training Wing Operational Training / Flight Operations Stock Control I Army / JSS / Navy / Med Service 7th Training Wing 11th Training Wing Flight Operations Military Driving Instructors Officer Training in Logistics Food Supply Training Course(s) for Senior NCO/NCO Candidates at the Competent Agency Log Units Chief of Staff School Headquarters Section S1 Technology / Protection Section S2 Pay and Accounting Section Section S3 Cash Office Section S4 Accountant Stock Control 13th Training Wing Movement / Transportation / Officially Recognised Automotive Safety Experts/Examiners Provision of Materiel 14th Training Wing Military Driving Instructors Maintenance Log Control Section 15th Training Wing Military Driving Instructors 8 Training Wing th 4th Training Wing Training Department D 16 Training Wing Headquarters Section th Military Driving Instructors 16th Training Wing Military Driving Instructors Technical Media Centre Logistic Exercise Centre Development Section 1 Section 2 Section 3 Section 6 Section 4 Section 5 Section 7 Section S6 Streitkräftebasis 75 LE SU Bundeswehr Military Police and Headquarters Service School CU A M This training installation, which has been the Bundeswehr Military Police and Headquarters Service School since 1 October 2003, was set up as early as in June 1956 at the Sonthofen-based officers, officer candidates, NCOs, and students from many different civil authorities and organisations. The length of courses varies between a week and a year. The school complements its central mission of providing “Course-Based Career and AssignmentRelated Training” in the fields mentioned above by fulfilling the additional functions listed below: Generaloberst-Beck-Barracks. Today, the School is the central establishment for the coursebased military police training and the headquarters service training of the Bundeswehr. The harmonised, centralised and joint staff duty training of the Bundeswehr started here as of 1 January 2007. In the future, the School, which has been subordinate to the Armed Forces Office in terms of administrative control since October 2002, will perform its training mission in Hannover. Special training programmes: Training of the Bundeswehr‘s representatives for civil-military cooperation. Training of the Bundeswehr‘s tele-tutors. Conduct of leadership training for Crowd and Riot Control (CRC) and the training of CRC support platoons as a pilot function for all military services . Career training of top athletes of the Bundeswehr. Cooperation in the development of modern training technologies including the development of CAT tutorial programmes. The School has more than 1,300 places on its courses. With its more than 70 different types of courses, the School provides a richly diversified training programme for field-grade officers, Following its reorganisation and transfer to Hannover, the Bundeswehr Military Police and Headquarters Service School will be excellently placed for optimising the training offered in terms of consistent deployment orientation and joint alignment, also with reference to future challenges. 76 Streitkräftebasis CU LE SU M A Bundeswehr Military Police and Headquarters Service School Commandant Staff Council Chief of Staff School Headquarters Controlling Support Division Teaching / Training Division Section S1 Technology / Protection Special Branch Instructor Group Training Department A Training Department B Section S2 Pay and Accounting Section Computer-Assisted Training (CAT) 1st Training Wing 7th Training Wing Provision of Materiel Section S3 Cash Office Training Objectives Development and Preparation 8th Training Wing Maintenance Log Control Section Section S4 Accountant 9th Training Wing Stock Control 10th Training Wing Motor Pool Management Officer Training 2nd Training Wing Special Training for Officers / Senior NCOs partly conducted at STETTEN a. k. M. training facilities 3rd Training Wing Senior NCO Training Section S6 4th Training Wing Senior NCO Training 5th Training Wing Complementary Training / CRC Officer Training / Personnel Affairs First Sergeant / Senior Personnel NCO Training Personnel Affairs CIMIC / Headquarters Service / S3 Sergeant/Manuals/Classified/ Accountant/ Personnel NCO Navy Officer / NCO / Accountant / Pers NCO Training Technical Media Centre Headquarters Section 6th Training Wing Advanced Individual Training (AIT) Streitkräftebasis 77 Bundeswehr Sports School The Warendorf-based Bundeswehr Sports School is the centre of competence for sports and the central sports training installation of the Bundeswehr. The School primarily trains soldiers to become sports coaches and aims to enhance the capability, resilience, and health of Bundeswehr personnel. Officers and NCOs are trained comprehensively in accordance with the latest research in sports education. On the basis of findings from the science of sports and exercise, they are trained as sports instructors or special field instructors in individual and team sports. The training provided takes account of comprehensive scientific findings from the fields of education, psychology, sociology, and medicine. All this supports the conduct of technically sound sports training in the units. Thus, the course has been set towards enhancing physical capability and advancing the soldiers’ operational readiness. The German Sports Federation (DSB) recognises these courses. In addition, in close cooperation with the Bundeswehr Institute of Sports Medicine, the Sports School offers preventative, regenerative and reCommandant Controlling Headquarters Section Bundeswehr Sports Promotion Section SONTHOFEN / WARENDORF Teaching / Training Division Teaching / 1st Training Wing Training Group 3 Classes 2 classes, Sonthofen branch Bundeswehr GruppeSports Promotion Section Weiterentwicklung SONTHOFEN / WARENDORF 78 Streitkräftebasis 2nd Training Wing 4 Classes habilitative programmes and measures for specific groups of persons, top athletes, and special forces. As a result, the most up-to-date findings from sports medicine are being integrated into the School’s training in a goal-directed manner. On account of the ideal infrastructure conditions available at the School, the most up-to-date scientific findings, and the expertise of both the military and civilian training staff, the School is in a position to offer 26 types of courses and implement them on site. The Sonthofen branch provides ideal conditions for special fields instructor courses in the winter sports of Alpine Skiing, Nordic Skiing, and Ski Touring. Furthermore, national and international training programmes and competitions as well as sports events within and outside the Bundeswehr are conducted at home and abroad. The School also cooperates with civilian sports institutions. A number of military sports competitions take place in Warendorf each year as a result of the Bundeswehr’s membership in CISM (Conseil International du Sport Militaire). The Sports School itself organises one CISM world championship each year. Moreover, the School accommodates and looks after more than 4,000 athletes each year who take part in selection courses and training camps or preparatory courses for national and international championships. Local sports clubs and schools are permitted to use the first-class infrastructure of the Bundeswehr as far as free capacities are available. Bundeswehr School of Dog Handling The Bundeswehr School of Dog Handling emerged from the service dog team, which has been stationed in Koblenz since 1958. The School itself has been garrisoned in Ulmen (Eifel) since its relocation in July 2005. The School of Dog Handling is the central military training installation for Bundeswehr members handling service dogs. The School provides courses for this group of personnel and, by conducting an integrated training of service dog handlers and service dogs, meets the demand of the individual services and/or the organisational areas for suitably qualified service dog teams. In particular, the School trains sniffer and tracker dog teams that search for and locate explosives, illegal drugs, ordnance, people and mines as well as patrol dogs for Germany and foreign countries. The Bundeswehr School of Dog Handling conducts quality assurance measures at all levels of service dog training and use. It determines the performance level of all service dog teams of the Bundeswehr and the commercial security services under contract. Also, the School is the central supply and procurement agency for dogs, dog equipment, training devices, and medical supplies for service dogs. It is in charge of both outpatient and in-patient veterinary treatment of Bundeswehr service dogs, especially surgical and dental measures, internist checkups and treatments including laboratory and imaging diagnostics. Since 2002, the Bundeswehr School of Dog Handling has been successfully involved in service dog breeding. Controlling Headquarters Section Teaching / Training Division The Bundeswehr School of Dog Handling develops policies for the training and tactical employment of service dog teams with special consideration being paid to operational requirements at home and abroad. Furthermore, the School does some important groundwork in connection with the development of instructions, regulations and decrees of the Federal Ministry of Defence, taking special account of scientific findings. As part of its mission, the School cooperates with dog handling agencies of foreign armed forces, civil authorities, national and international aid organisations, and working dog associations. In terms of administrative control, the School is subordinate to the Armed Forces Office, while the Bundeswehr Medical Office exercises technical control. The Bundeswehr School of Dog Handling is made up of the HQ Section, the Teaching/Training Division, the Service Dog Hospital, and the Development Division. Commandant Service Dog Hospital Development Division Teaching / Experiment Section Streitkräftebasis 79 Bundeswehr Infrastructure Staffs The Northern, Eastern and Southern Infrastructure Staffs are responsible for processing and controlling all infrastructure matters of the Bundeswehr‘s armed forces. Thus, they are responsible for all construction projects in/at barracks, airfields, air defence facilities, training areas, firing ranges, depots and port facilities in their respective areas of responsibility. The staffs closely cooperate with the users and the respective Military District Administrative Offices to achieve an effective realisation of those projects. The Infrastructure Staffs prepare military infrastructure requirements for construction measures of the armed forces and accompany those measures with military and engineering expertise during the planning and realisation phases. Furthermore, they represent military infrastructure interests visà-vis national and foreign building authorities, the Defence Administration, NATO agencies and the public sector. In January 1994, the Northern Infrastructure Staff was inaugurated at the Garrison of Münster/ Westphalia. It is responsible for the national and NATO infrastructure of the armed forces in North Rhine-Westphalia, Lower Saxony and Bremen as well as for the infrastructure projects of all services in the United States, Canada, Italy, Greece, France, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Poland. Since spring 1996, the Eastern Infrastructure Staff has been based at Julius Leber Barracks in Berlin. It looks after the infrastructure interests of the armed forces of the Länder in Military District North (Hamburg, Schleswig-Holstein and Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania) and in Military District East (Berlin, Brandenburg, Thuringia, Saxony and Saxony-Anhalt). Since the third quarter of 1994, the Southern Infrastructure Staff has been based at Wilhelmsburg Barracks in Ulm. It processes the infrastructure requirements of the armed forces in Military District South (Bavaria and Baden-Württemberg) and in the three southern Länder of Military District West (Rhineland-Palatinate, Hesse and Saarland). The Staffs cooperate with the building authorities during the preparation and review of concepts for the use and the expansion of military facilities, during dispensability checks, during regional planning procedures, and in the scope of civil-military cooperation. In addition, they advise the commanders and heads of agencies in infrastructure matters. In addition, the Northern, Eastern and Southern Infrastructure Staffs assign qualified specialists to all Bundeswehr operations abroad to provide accommodation and morale and welfare infrastructure for German contingents in the deployment facilities as well as the deployment-relevant special infrastructure and engineer support for the reconnaissance of new deployment sites. They are subordinate to the Armed Forces Office. 80 Streitkräftebasis The infrastructure organisation will be reorganised in the scope of adopting Structure 2010. The Staffs will deploy as follows: Northern Infrastructure Staff from Münster to Hannover, Eastern Infrastructure Staff from Berlin to Strausberg, and Southern Infrastructure Staff from Ulm to Munich. A new Western Infrastructure Staff will be established in Düsseldorf. German National Military Representative to SHAPE (NMR[GE]SHAPE) The German National Military Representative to NATO’s Allied Command Operations in Mons/ Belgium has represented the German position at the military strategic command level since 1956. He is the central liaison element between the German Federal Ministry of Defence and the Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe (SHAPE). The essential task of the German National Military Representative to SHAPE is, on the one hand, expressing national interests of the Ministry of Commander, Armed Forces Office, while the Federal Ministry of Defence exercises technical control. After the United States, Germany provides the largest number of soldiers to the Garrison of Mons – comparable to the similarly high personnel strength of Great Britain. Apart from the German elements in the headquarters, in which the vast majority of German soldiers are employed, and the Staff of the German Representative, the following German agencies are also located in Mons: the German Headquarters and Service Company, SHAPE, the Federal Republic of Germany Of- fice of Defence Administration, Belgium, the German Element of the International SHAPE School, and the Protestant and Catholic Chaplaincy. Defence to the Supreme Allied Commander Europe (SACEUR). On the other hand, he informs the Ministry of Defence about all important facts resulting from the planning, execution and followup activities of NATO-led operations, and about all other matters of national interest. The German National Military Representative to SHAPE is under the administrative control of the A Bundeswehr military intelligence liaison and support element, which performs its tasks for the most part independently, and the medical detachment with a unit surgeon and a unit dental officer are likewise located at Mons. As an increasing number of soldiers from NATO headquarters are deployed on the various NATO operations, family support forms a new and challenging element in the task spectrum of the German National Military Representative. Streitkräftebasis 81 NATO School Oberammergau A wide range of subjects is taught at NATO School Oberammergau: from Joint Operations to Weapons of Mass Destruction to Operations & Plans. Apart from many other topics, these major subjects are treated in courses, seminars and conferences lasting one to three weeks. Students come not only from NATO nations. Especially nations participating in the “Partnership for Peace” (PfP) cooperation programme, nations participating in “NATO’s Mediterranean Dialogue” and countries such as Argentina, Australia, South Africa and South Korea like to send their officers to Oberammergau. training facility. The Bundeswehr uses approximately 700 of these course spaces a year, which are centrally managed by the Armed Forces Office. The NATO School is jointly managed by Germans and Americans. The staff consists of 180 soldiers and civilians from 22 nations. The school emerged from the U.S. Army Special Weapons School founded in 1953. In 1975, it received its charter and its name. Currently, even officers from Austria, Switzerland, the Czech Republic, Lithuania and Romania are employed in a new PfP staff element at the NATO school. The German element – currently the largest with regard to personnel strength – consists of 35 soldiers. This element of the school is under the administrative control of the Armed Forces Office, while the Federal Ministry of Defence exercises technical control. High-ranking military and civilian guest speakers from East and West play an important role in daily teaching. They have years of experience and thus contribute to the intellectual highlights of the school’s academic work. Every year, approximately 8,000 students from 60 nations attend this NATO Legal Commandant Sergeant Major Deputy Commandant Exec Protocol Public Affairs Dean of Academics Director International Affairs Deputy Chief of Staff Support Academic Chair(s) Deputy Director International Affairs Deputy DeputyDean Deanofof Academics Academics STDS, EVAL, TNG Deputy Director International Affairs Pers/ Admin J1 ED Tech Linguistic Services Research & Publications Current Ops J3 Joint Operations WMD Non-Resident Instruction Conferences/ Seminars Operations & Plans Comm/ Info Systems Plans and Policy J6 Engineering and Housing PfP Staff Element J7 82 Streitkräftebasis Logistics J4 J5 Policy Security J2 Budget and Finance J8 Senior National Representative / German Element, Allied Land Component Command, Headquarters Heidelberg (SNR/GE CC-Land HQ Heidelberg) When the Central Army Group (CENTAG) was established there, NATO forces were for the first time stationed in Heidelberg in 1952. In 1993, the forces were restructured and the headquarters renamed Allied Land Forces Central Europe (LANDCENT). In the year 2000, LANDCENT was restructured again: The Joint Headquarters (JHQ) Centre was established. In January 2004, its reorganisation into an Allied Land Component Command Headquarters (CC-Land HQ) began. The Senior National Representative/German Element (SNR/GE) at CC-LAND HQ is under the administrative control of the Armed Forces Office. The soldiers of the German element in the NATO command support the commander in performing his tasks. At present, approximately 200 German soldiers are attached to the Senior National Representative. Altogether, approximately 500 soldiers from all NATO member states are serving with the Land Component Command HQ Heidelberg. The Senior National Representative represents German interests as directed by the Federal Minister of Defence, assesses important events within NATO and/or the Land Component Command and informs the Federal Ministry of Defence about matters of interest to the ministry. This applies to all German soldiers serving in Heidelberg. The German Support Element also acts as administrative unit for several minor agencies at the Heidelberg location. A CIS (Communication and Information Systems) Sector is installed in Heidelberg as well. It operates NATO communication and information systems and ensures safe operations at the NATO agency. The medical support of German soldiers is provided by the Heidelberg physician team from the Bruchsal Medical Centre. In August 2003, NATO assumed command and control over the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan. The then Joint Headquarters Centre was in command of this mission until February 2004. Lessons learned from this deployment are today reflected in the training and predeployment preparations of all soldiers at the Heidelberg Headquarters. The German Support Element to NATO in Heidelberg supports the Senior National Representative in performing all national administrative tasks. Senior German Officer DEU Spt Elm CC-Land HQ Heidelberg Headquarters Section S1 DEU Elms, CC-Land HQ Heidelberg DEU Elm, CIS Sector Heidelberg Admin Section S2/S3 S4 S6 Streitkräftebasis 83 German Armed Forces Command, United States and Canada (GEFORCOM US/CA) The German Armed Forces Command, United States and Canada (GEFORCOM US/CA) is based in Reston, a Washington, D.C. suburb. The Commander, COMGEFORCOM, exercises administrative control over all German soldiers serving in the United States and Canada. Apart from being in command of the forces deployed in the United States and Canada, the Command is also in charge of supporting exercises in these two countries. In its capacity as the responsible importer and exporter of all Bundeswehr materiel, this division runs a point of transshipment at Washington‘s Dulles International Airport. In addition, the division services all Bundeswehr aircraft at the airport in Washington. The German Air Force Command, United States and Canada (GAFCOM US/CA), concentrates on training aircrews and surface-to-air missile (SAM) personnel. The 3rd German Air Force Training Squadron USA conducts the primary flying training for Air Force and Naval student pilots. The 2nd German Air Force Training Squadron USA conducts training for Air Force weapon system officers, Navy helicopter pilots and operations officers. Within the scope of ”Euro NATO Joint Jet Pilot Training“ (ENJJPT), future combat aircraft pilots Core elements of its mission are: go through a multinational training programme. Administrative control of all soldiers deployed At the German Air Force Flying Training Cenin the United States and Canada (with the tre, primary and advanced flying training for exception of military attaché offices) Air Force aircrews is carried out on the Tornado S upport of training and exercise projects weapon system. Logistic support Liaison with US agencies The German Air Force Air Defence Centre USA is O peration of communications centre as in charge of course-based special military trainan interface between Germany and North ing for the PATRIOT weapon system, to include America. the information and coordination central (ICC). It conducts the Surface-to-Air Missile Operations The Command is subordinate to the Armed Forces Office. Units assigned to the German Armed Forces Command, United States and Canada, are under the technical control of the Service Staffs and/or their subordinate agencies. The Command‘s area of responsibility includes approximately 1,700 soldiers, who are stationed in nearly all states of the US and some Canadian provinces. Centre (SAMOC) training and is in charge of exA special task of the Movement and Transport tension and continuation training courses in the Division in the Federal Armed Forces Command field of extended air defence. In addition, it is consists in planning and controlling all forms responsible for the further development of the of logistic transports for Bundeswehr units and surface-to-air missile branch”. formations permanently stationed in the United States and Canada, as well as for units and for- The German Liaison Officer to the Supreme mations temporarily conducting exercises there. Allied Commander Transformation (SACT) and 84 Streitkräftebasis German Armed Forces Command, United States and Canada (GEFORCOM US/CA) to the United States Joint Forces Command (USJFCOM) looks after national German interests in his capacity as a link between the Supreme Allied Commander Transformation and the German Federal Ministry of Defence. He conducts liaison at all levels: at the NATO Headquarters of SACT, at the U.S. Joint Forces Command, at the German Federal Ministry of Defence and all other national German agencies. Topics are related to security, politico-military, operational-level and tactical matters. The German Liaison Team to the United States Army Signal Center in Fort Gordon looks after the interests of the Joint Support Service in the field of command and control support, while the German Liaison Team to the United States Army Intelligence Center in Fort Huachuca covers the fields of signal intelligence and electronic warfare. The German Army Liaison Organisation in the United States establishes liaison between the German Army and selected agencies and facilities of the United States Army and the United States Marine Corps. The spectrum of tasks comprises the fields of conceptual planning, organisation, doctrine, training, equipment (armaments and defence technology) and logistics. Within the scope of their mission, liaison staffs also participate in training projects and field trials. They prepare individual reports and respond to requests for information. In addition, the German liaison staffs inform U.S. agencies about German Army plans and developments. The German Liaison Officer to the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) serves as a liaison element between the Bundeswehr Military Intelligence Organisation and the United States Military Intelligence Community. Staff GEFORCOM US/CA, Reston, VA GAFCOM US/CA, El Paso, TX German Army Main LN Staff USA, Ft. Monroe, VA GLO SACT & USJFCOM, Norfolk, VA German LN Detachment HQ US CENTCOM, Tampa, FL GLO DIA, Reston, VA Instructors Training course attendees LNOs Exchange Offs / NCOs Streitkräftebasis 85 German Headquarters Section, France Since 1957, the Bundeswehr has been present in France with an agency in Fontainebleau near Paris. First, this agency (German Logistic Representative at AFCENT) represented German interests vis-à-vis NATO. Later on, after France had withdrawn from NATO’s military structures, it represented German interests towards the host nation in its capacity as the German Logistic Representative in France. Following the end of the East-West conflict, mission, scope and structures were repeatedly adjusted to the new requirements. In 2003, the agency was renamed German Headquarters Section, France. The German Headquarters Section, France performs administrative, logistical and medical tasks as well as movement control and liaison tasks in France for the German Ministry of Defence and by direction of the Armed Forces Office. The agency is under the administrative control of the German Defence and Army Attaché in Paris. Treaties and agreements concluded with France form the basis for the accomplishment of its mission. As a rule, all exchange officers / non-commissioned officers and liaison officers employed in France as well as Bundeswehr soldiers on temporary duty in France are under the administra- tive control of the German Headquarters Section, France, unless they are controlled directly by the Military Attaché Office in Paris. In addition, the German Headquarters Section, France takes care of soldiers serving in supranational organisations in France. Thus, it is responsible for approximately 80 soldiers. It supports national, binational and multinational training and exercise programmes in France and provides logistic and IT support as well as medical support. Head Staff Section Missile Depot, Brest DEU Elm, NMPA Atlantic Training course attendees 86 Streitkräftebasis Exchange officers Exchange officers at the French Ministry of Defence Liaison officers Exchange NCOs Military Attaché Offices In the scope of the foreign service at German embassies, German military attachés represent the politico-military, military, technical and defence industry interests of the Federal Republic of Germany. To this end, German military attachés advise the heads of missions abroad and represent the Federal Ministry of Defence vis-à-vis the government and the armed forces of the receiving state. German Military Attaché Offices are an organisational and integral part of the missions abroad and thus of the Federal Foreign Office. In order to have early indicators of emerging crises, the Federal Government needs comprehensive intelligence and reconnaissance capabilities. The German Military Attaché Service provides an important contribution to this in the scope of foreign service. armed forces of their respective receiving states. By means of their reports, they contribute to the overall reporting of the embassy, thus supporting to a considerable extent the assessment and estimate of the situation as a basis for security and politico-military decisions. This applies especially in the context of the early detection of crises. Since July 2001, the Armed Forces Office has been responsible for processing the personnel matters of soldiers serving in the German Military Attaché Service and for furnishing military equipment to the missions abroad. The German defence attachés are under the administrative control of the Commander, Armed Forces Office. The technical responsibility for the German Military Attaché Service remains with the Federal Ministry of Defence. To this end, military attachés analyse and evaluate the military policy, the strategic objectives, the military potential and the status of the Accreditation (in progress) Secondary accreditation (in progress) Military Attaché Office, currently vacant No accreditation Streitkräftebasis 87 R PP TF Bundeswehr Sports Promotion Groups U SPO E BUNDESWEHR ÖRDERGR In 1968, the German Bundestag requested in a resolution to the Federal Government “to promote top Bundeswehr athletes by establishing promotion groups, which were to follow the example of training centres of sports federations as closely as possible.” As a result of this, the Bundeswehr sports promotion groups came into being. this area. For example, it is planned to reduce the number of sports promotion groups from 25 to 15 in three stages by 2010. The pending reduction of spaces for top athletes by 2010 will not have a major impact on Thus, the Bundeswehr supports efforts of the Federal Government to promote high performance sports in Germany, which aim at ensuring that Germany is represented in international competitions such as European Championships, World Championships and Olympic Games. Besides, German athletes are thus to be granted the same chances as the athletes from other nations. In this respect, top priority is given to the Olympic sports or disciplines. A close cooperation exists with the German Sports Federation. The top athletes of the Bundeswehr are members of 25 sports promotion groups at present. Three groups are reserved for military sports only. As a rule, the groups are located in the catchment area of Olympic training centres and training centres of the leading organisations of the German Sports Federation. In the course of restructuring the Bundeswehr, all sports promotion groups will be integrated into the Joint Support Service. At present, 23 groups form part of the Joint Support Service, while two groups – the ones in Rostock and Eckernförde – belong to the Navy. The sports promotion groups are under the technical control of the Armed Forces Office Sports Section. In terms of administrative control, those sports promotion groups assigned to the Joint Support Service are subordinate to the Military Region Commands (with few exceptions). In the course of the Bundeswehr‘s transformation process, various areas in the promotion of top-level sports are subject to an unbiased review with the objective of further optimising this promotion in the Bundeswehr. These reviews form part of a concept oriented to future challenges in 88 Streitkräftebasis the training possibilities. The promotion spaces will continue to be assigned in a manner tailored to the needs and regionally in accordance with technical criteria and in close cooperation with the German Olympic Sports Federation and the leading organisations. The two naval groups in Rostock and Eckernförde will be collocated in Eckernförde. In the end, further groups (those in Potsdam and Stuttgart) are to be disbanded. Thus, 15 sports promotion groups will be left: Eckernförde, Appen, Warendorf, Köln-Longerich, Mainz, Berlin, Frankfurt/O., Oberhof, Frankenberg, Bruchsal, Todtnau, Neubiberg, Altenstadt, Sonthofen, Bischofswiesen. The training will continue to take place in training centres in accordance with the guidelines of the leading organisations. R Envisaged Bases of Sports Promotion Groups in the Joint Support Service as of 2010 It is planned that the groups will be under the administrative control of the Land Commands in the future. This does not apply to the sports promotion groups in Warendorf and Sonthofen, attached to the Bundeswehr Sports School, and to the group in Cologne, attached to the Bundeswehr Enlisted Personnel Office. Eckernförde PP TF U SPO Bundeswehr Sports Promotion Groups E BUNDESWEHR ÖRDERGR The Bundeswehr promotion of top-level sports assures athletes the best possible conditions for their competitive sports and professional careers. In the future, it will continue to be an important guarantor for the Federal Republic of Germany keeping its leading position in international sports. Correspondingly, it was declared to be indispensable, for instance in the “National TopLevel Sports Concept” of the German Sports Federation. Rostock Appen Frankfurt/Oder Berlin Potsdam Hannover Warendorf Köln Halle Holzwickede Oberhof Wahn Frankenberg Bundeswehr Sports Promotion Group Mainz to be disbanded Bruchsal Tauberbischofsheim Stuttgart Todtnau Neubiberg Altenstadt Bischofswiesen Sonthofen Mittenwald Streitkräftebasis 89 Military Music in the Joint Support Service film music and current hits in the big orchestra sound. Playing in minor ensembles in the fields of both chamber music and modern pop music are additional tasks performed by members of the Military Music Service. Military music in the Joint Support Service represents the Bundeswehr internally and externally, just like the military bands of Army, Air Force and Navy do. As a “sounding expression of the way our armed forces see themselves”, it is an important integration factor among military personnel, between military personnel and the civilian population, and at the international level. In the changed social and security environment, especially with regard to the progress made in the transformation process of the Bundeswehr, the following three tasks are becoming more and more important: P romotion of the team spirit among military personnel Strengthening of relations between the Bun- deswehr and the civilian population B oosting of the Bundeswehr image both at home and abroad. The tasks to be performed by the musical bands of the Bundeswehr - with the Big Brass Band in their centre are characterised by an exceptional versatility. Aside from performing within the scope of ceremonial duties for the Federal President, the Federal Government and the Federal Ministry of Defence as well as during traditional military ceremonies, the musical bands accompany Bundeswehr events with great public appeal, give concerts which result in enthusiastic reactions from the local population, and demonstrate their great skills during national and international music festivals. Their vast musical repertoire ranges from the traditional march music via the arrangement of great pieces of classical music up to contemporary original compositions, 90 Streitkräftebasis Besides, in its capacity as a public relations instrument, the Big Band of the Bundeswehr contributes considerably to the recruitment campaign. Last but not least, the Bundeswehr musicians gain public notice by working in their spare time and with considerable personal commitment as music teachers and conductors of amateur brass bands. At present, eight (in the future seven) elements of the Military Music Service are attached to the organisational area of the Joint Support Service. These are four elements with special Bundeswehr priority tasks: T he Bundeswehr Band, which primarily performs ceremonial duties in Berlin. The Joint Band of the Bundeswehr as an orchestra which is primarily responsible for special representation of the armed forces on important concert stages at home and abroad and during protocol ceremonies in Bonn. The Big Band of the Bundeswehr as a modern musical formation that reaches a wider public. The Bundeswehr School of Military Music as a central training facility of the Bundeswehr Military Music Service as well as four (in the future three) Military District Bands which, along with the musical bands of Army, Air Force and Navy, are responsible for “striking the right notes” within and outside of the Bundeswehr. In wartime, all military musicians will be employed in the medical service. To this end, they will undergo medical training in addition to their musical training. Military Motor Vehicle Affairs The Military Motor Vehicle Affairs organisation creates the prerequisites for effective military vehicle operations in the Bundeswehr. Statutory provisions and military requirements form the basis of all regulations promulgated. The training and examination of military drivers and automotive specialists (e.g. officially recognised experts and examiners, driving instructors and company motor sergeants) are governed by regulations and training directives which ensure a high quality of training. Guidelines for the inspection and registration of official vehicles and their regular technical control take into consideration their special military utilisation and the resulting high levels of use. Regulations for the use of official vehicles serve to protect human health and life and to use the vehicles in an economical manner. The Joint Support Service performs these tasks because of their common importance across all services. of the Armed Forces Staff, serves as a recognition and supervision authority. In addition, it is the central office for automotive experts and examiners of the Bundeswehr, who are trained, examined and recognised in accordance with the law on motor vehicle experts. The Central Office of Motor Vehicle Affairs keeps the statutory registers on registered official vehicles, driving licences, Bundeswehr driving licences issued and recognitions. In addition, it registers all traffic accidents in which official vehicles of the Bundeswehr were involved and evaluates them statistically. The Director, Central Office of Military Motor Vehicle Affairs also acts as Director, Military Motor Vehicle Affairs. In this capacity, he supervises the compliance with basic traffic law provisions. The Head, Military Motor Vehicle Affairs issues “Special Directives for Military Motor Vehicle Affairs“ (Besondere Anweisungen für das Militärische Kraftfahrwesen). He decides whether exceptions from construction specifications for official vehicles are justified by their intended military use and whether the safety of other road users is duly taken into consideration. The Military Motor Vehicles Affairs sections of the Military District Commands are subordinate to him in terms of technical control. In addition, he has directive authority over all officially recognised automotive safety experts and examiners of the Bundeswehr. He is in charge of the further development of military motor vehicle affairs. The Armed Forces Staff at the Federal Ministry of Defence is in charge of ministerial tasks in the field of military motor vehicle affairs. It prepares conceptual documents and regulations and represents Bundeswehr interests in the field of motor vehicle affairs vis-à-vis other ministries. In addition, it provides the Permanent Representative to the Specialised Committees of the Federal Government and the Länder, which deal with vehicle technology and the application of the law concerning driving licences. The Central Office of Military Motor Vehicle Affairs, which is under the direct technical control Streitkräftebasis 91 Military Motor Vehicle Affairs Since 2001, the Central Office of Military Motor Vehicle Affairs has been based in Mönchengladbach-Rheindahlen. It is under the administrative control of the Armed Forces Office. over basic driver training organisations and over the training facility for driving instructors. Driver training is geared to the requirements of the Bundeswehr‘s entire spectrum of operations. It consists of the following successive phases: Seeth Eutin Oldenburg Delmenhorst Trollenhagen Lüneburg Munster Diepholz Potsdam Celle Minden Burg Rheine Augustdorf Ahlen Unna Delitzch Leipzig Erfurt Aachen Mechernich Lahnstein Basic driver training Specialised driver training Advanced driver training Operational driver training. Frankenberg Hammelburg Since 2002, the entire basic driver training has been carried out exclusively by the driving school organisation of the Joint Support Service. Following the adaptation of the driving school organisation to the decreasing training needs, 37 training facilities will still conduct basic driver training in the future. Baumholder Veitshöchheim Zweibrücken Kümmersbruck Ellwangen Dornstadt Bogen Erding Fürstenfeldbruck Kleinaitingen München Motor Vehicle Training Company, Tracked Vehicle Driving Simulator Motor Vehicle Training Centre Technical control of registered official vehicles is ensured by the Technical Inspections Organisation of the German Joint Support Command. On deployment, inspections will always be carried out by military personnel. At home, civilian inspection organisations will be contracted to perform upcoming inspections, unless own military assets carry them out for training and practice purposes. The Armed Forces Office is in charge of the specialist tasks field of “driver training, training for automotive specialists and driving schools”. It develops the driving school organisation, devises training fundamentals, performs the tasks of a licensing office, and exercises functional control 92 Streitkräftebasis 25 driver training centres will train drivers for the acquisition of the required driver licence classes. In addition, eight driver training centres will concentrate on the practical training for driving instructors. The training on wheeled vehicles concentrates on the acquisition of the truck driver licence. At the four training companies with tracked vehicle driving simulators, the drivers of tracked vehicles will be trained on driving simulators. Military Motor Vehicle Affairs The goal of specialised driver training is the proficient driver who is properly familiarised with and tested on the official vehicle assigned to him for operation during routine duty. This type of training is conducted at the agencies and parent units. Advanced driver training serves the purpose of improving driving skills and behaviour, and of acquiring specific military driving skills (crosscountry driving, tactical driving). In the scope of advanced training, the students are to update their knowledge on rules and traffic regulations. This training segment constitutes an important part of the Bundeswehr road safety programme and is conducted under the responsibility of the agencies and parent units. The goal of operational driver training consists of conveying the skills required for deployment tasks. These include, above all, driving on unfamiliar roads and driving an official vehicle under adverse conditions. This training segment will be conducted in the context of predeployment or crisis training at the parent units or at special training centres. On behalf of the Armed Forces Office, the Bundeswehr Logistics School conducts the coursebased training of automotive specialists for the entire Bundeswehr. FMOD Commander, Armed Forces Office Director, Central Office of Military Vehicle Affairs Director, Military Motor Vehicles Affairs Staff Section Section 1 Policy Controlling Section 2 Driver Licences Section 3 Vehicle Registration Streitkräftebasis 93 Voluntary Reservist Work Independent of Assignments Voluntary reservist work independent of assignments is directed at all Bundeswehr reservists willing to support the Bundeswehr in addition to existing obligations. Reservist work contributes considerably to maintaining and strengthening operational motivation. It enhances society’s awareness of security issues and ties reservists to the Bundeswehr. Due to their professional and social integration, reservists are credible mediators between the Bundeswehr and the civilian part of society. In addition, they act as advocates of the Bundeswehr in a civilian environment. They correspond to the model of the citizen in uniform. In order to gain and qualify reservists for this role, they will be trained in varied ways within the scope of reservist work. Reservist work contributes to conveying knowledge on issues related to security policy and assists reservists in preserving their military knowledge and skills even when they are not assigned to Bundeswehr units to the end of temporarily performing certain tasks in these units. Deepening mil knowledge and skills Training/leadership qualifications Military Region Commands (Land Commands as of 2007) locally responsible for reservists Bundeswehr Reserve Association Events Support by units stationed across Germany All subdivisions of the Bundeswehr Reserve Association Qualification of mediators Qualification of mediators Strengthening of motivation and awareness of security policy issues Security policy work Promotion of military capabilities Morale, welfare and recreation Security policy work Promotion of military capabilities Morale, welfare and recreation Support services performed for the Bundeswehr 94 Streitkräftebasis with their sergeants in charge of reservist affairs that are found nation-wide. Units and agencies as well as Bundeswehr and NATO schools and educational facilities support this task as far as their own tasks leave room for it. Reservist work essentially comprises the fields of “Security Policy” and “Development of Military Capabilities”. The additional task “Taking Care of Reservists” is meant to inform and motivate reservists and to appreciate their performances. The Bundeswehr Reservist Association independently complements reservist work outside the Bundeswehr and provides the Bundeswehr units with suitable reservists for certain tasks. Such activities are coordinated with Bundeswehr agencies at all levels. Qualification of mediators Bundeswehr Official events and reserve duty Reservist work in the Bundeswehr is implemented by the Joint Support Service. Competent authorities are the Armed Forces Office and the Territorial Commands, especially the Military Region Commands (the Land Commands as of 2007) German Military Representative to the NATO Military Committee, European Union and Western European Union (GEMILREP MC/NATO, EU and WEU) The German Military Representative to the NATO Military Committee, European Union and Western European Union (GEMILREP MC/NATO, EU and WEU) is based at the NATO Headquarters in Brussels. He is the permanent representative of the Chief of Staff, Bundeswehr to the NATO and EU Military Committee and at the same time functions as Germany‘s military delegate to the WEU. developments in the essential fields of activity of these three international organisations, he provides advice to the Federal Ministry of Defence. The German Military Representative is under the administrative control of the Vice Chief of Staff, Bundeswehr and Chief of Staff, Joint Support Service. Regarding his task as the permanent representative of the Chief of Staff, Bundeswehr, to the NATO Military Committee, European Union and Western European Union, he reports to the Chief of Staff, Bundeswehr, and regarding joint specialised tasks, to the Minister of Defence. The German Military Representative exercises administrative control of the following German elements: The officer in the rank of a Lieutenant General/ Admiral represents the German military interests of the Bundeswehr and brings to bear the views of the Chief of Staff, Bundeswehr, in the work of the respective bodies. In addition, he and his staff will ensure the representation of the German military interests in all bodies and working groups subordinate to the NATO Military Committee, the EU and the Permanent Council of the WEU. Based on his knowledge of current the NATO International Military Staff, the NATO C3 (Consultation, Command and Control) Agency, the NATO Air Defence Committee, the SACT (Supreme Allied Commander Transformation) Representative in Europe, the NATO BICES (Battlefield Information Collection and Exploitation System) Agency and the EU Military Staff. German Military Representative Headquarters Section Deputy German Military Representative and Chief of Staff German Elements IMS NC3A EUMS BICES NADC SACTREPEUR Section 1 NATO Section 2 NATO Section 3 NATO Section 4 NATO/EU Section 5 EU/WEU Section 6 WEU Military Policy and Strategy Operational-level Fundamentals Armaments, Logistics, PfP, NATO-RUS Communication, Information, Identification, Navigation, Systems All Pertinent Fields Support of Council Presidency (temporarily) Streitkräftebasis 95 Federal College for Security Studies In 1990, the Federal Cabinet decided on founding the Federal College for Security Studies (BAKS) as the central and top-level Federal agency for advanced training in interministerial security policy. In terms of its specialist task, the college is subordinate to a Board of Trustees to which the most important questions are submitted for consultation and decision-making. The Board of Trustees is chaired by the Federal Chancellor. The members of the Board of Trustees are the same as the members of the Federal Security Council. A scientific advisory board consisting of representatives from the academia, trade and industry, media, churches and political foundations normally gives recommendations, particularly on the contents and structuring of teaching and its further development, twice a year. The Federal College for Security Studies is an independent agency within the area of responsibility of the Federal Minister of Defence. The mission of the College is to develop and promote a comprehensive understanding of security. In doing this, all security levels are to be considered. Its course offer addresses executive personnel from Federal and Land ministries and a wide-ranging group of persons from all areas of society interested in security policy. Through its activities, the College furthers the development of a network of security policy decision-makers and interested actors. B A K S Further activities are seminars such as the ”National Security Provision“, continuing education modules within the framework of the European Security and Defence Policy lectures or the media forum for editors-in-chief. The College organises both national and international conferences, presentations and discussions on current security policy issues and background talks on subjects relating to the comprehensive security concept. The new facility located on the Schönhausen castle premises in Berlin-Pankow, which is equipped with the most modern multimedia and ADP technology, provides the historical setting for these demanding schedules of events with the possibility of accommodating up to 300 participants in the historical room of the castle. The personnel employed in the studies division is provided by the ministries of the Federal Security Council. The studies division develops the conceptual and planning aspects of the educational and seminar programmes. The College‘s focus is on the six-month course on security policy. This most advanced continuing education measure in the field of extended security policy takes place once a year, involving 25 – 30 top-level German and 6 international executive personnel from the Federal Ministries and Cabinet Offices as well as from the areas of politics, industry and trade, science and society. Federal Security Council* Federal Ministry of Defence Executive Group President/Vice President Staff * Permanent members of the Federal Security Council: · Federal Chancellor · Federal Minister for Foreign Affairs · Federal Minister of Defence · Federal Minister of the Interior · Federal Minister of Finance · Federal Minister of Justice · Federal Minister of Economics and Labour · Federal Minister for Economic Cooperation · Chief of Staff of the Federal Chancellery Studies Division Streitkräftebasis 97 Military Counterintelligence Service Besides the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution and the Federal Intelligence Service, the Military Counterintelligence Service is the third German intelligence service at Federal level. It is a defensive intelligence service within the area of responsibility of the Federal Ministry of Defence where it accomplishes tasks in the framework of the protection of the constitution. The mission of the Military Counterintelligence Service is to contribute to maintaining military security. Its tasks and powers are laid down in the Military Counterintelligence Service Act. According to this Act, the major tasks of the Military Counterintelligence Service are to collect and evaluate information on efforts directed against the free, democratic constitutional order or against the existence or the security of the Federation or a Land (counter extremism) as well as on anti-security or clandestine activities for a foreign power (counterespionage/counter sabotage). The precondition in both cases is that these efforts or activities are directed against persons, agencies or facilities within the area of responsibility of the Federal Ministry of Defence and come or are said to come from persons belonging to or working within this area of responsibility. The Military Counterintelligence Service also collects and evaluates information when members of the Federal Ministry of Defence and persons working or are said to be working in it participate in efforts directed against the idea of the understanding among nations, particularly when they are directed against the peaceful coexistence of peoples (counterterrorism). MCD 11 MCD 82 Kiel Rostock MCD 22 MCD 21 Wilhelmshaven MCD 81 MCD 32 Hannover Münster MCD 31 Bundeswehr Counterintelligence Office MCD 42 MCD 41 MCD 52 MCD 51 Potsdam Leipzig Hilden Köln Koblenz Mainz MCD 62 Amberg Karlsruhe Stuttgart München MCD = Military Counterintelligence Detachment 98 Streitkräftebasis MCD 71 MCD 61 Military Counterintelligence Service The tasks of the Military Counterintelligence Service include evaluating information from the counter extremism/terrorism and counterespionage/counter sabotage functional areas and contributing to the assessment of the security situation of Bundeswehr agencies and facilities, and under special preconditions also of agencies and facilities of the Allied forces in Germany. In addition, the Military Counterintelligence Service participates in security clearance procedures in accordance with the Security Clearance Act and technical security measures (personnel security and sabotage protection/classified material security). By order of the Federal Minister of Defence, during special foreign assignments of the Bundeswehr or humanitarian missions, the Military Counterintelligence Service collects - at home and abroad only in facilities where agencies and installations of the forces are located - information that is necessary to secure the operational readiness of the forces or protect the members of the agencies and facilities within the area of responsibility of the Federal Ministry of Defence and evaluates that information. The Military Counterintelligence Service also analyses information on persons or groups of persons not belonging to or working within the area of responsibility of the Federal Ministry of Defence if their efforts or activities are directed against the employed persons, agencies or facilities. And finally, in the facilities of the forces abroad mentioned above, the Military Counterintelligence Service also participates in security screenings of persons and in technical security measures. The Military Counterintelligence Service is under the administrative control of the Vice Chief of Staff, Bundeswehr, and Chief of Staff, Joint Support Service, and technically subordinate to the State Secretary at the Federal Ministry of Defence responsible for military security. The service consists of the Bundeswehr Counterintelligence Office in Cologne, the 14 subordinate Military Counterintelligence Detachments spread all over the Federal territory, up to five Military Counterintelligence Detachments with deployed German contingents, and the military elements at the School for the Protection of the Constitution. Director/President Legal Adviser Controlling Internal Security Revision Permanent Representative of the Director/President Division TA/V Division I Division II Division III Division IV Division V Administrative Tasks/ Administration Central Specialist Tasks Counter Extremism Counterespionage Personnel/ Classified Material Security Intelligence Technology 14 Military Counterintelligence Detachments Senior Officer/Military Element, School for the Protection of the Constitution Military Counterintelligence Detachments with deployed German contingents Streitkräftebasis 99 Bundeswehr Personnel Office and its Recruiting Centres The Bundeswehr Personnel Office, together with five subordinate Recruiting Centres, accomplishes central tasks of military personnel management. It thus makes a significant contribution to cover the personnel requirements of the Bundeswehr and to ensure the operational readiness of the forces. The Cologne-based agency is under the direct administrative control of the Vice Chief of Staff, Bundeswehr, and Chief of Staff, Joint Support Service. Technically, the Personnel, Social Services and Central Affairs Division of the Federal Ministry of Defence is responsible for all personnel management matters. A major task is the decentralised recruitment and the control of recruitment for service in the armed forces. In addition, the Bundeswehr Personnel Office determines whether applicants are qualified for commissioned service. The Office assigns qualified candidates to the career category of officers in the line, medical, military music or geoinformation service of the Bundeswehr. Candidates for the officer specialist career and reserve officers of the line service are admitted in Cologne as well. In addition, the Bundeswehr Personnel Office accomplishes the classical tasks of a central personnel management office for all officer and re- serve officer candidates, officers of all careers up to the rank of Lieutenant Colonel/Commander (pay grade A 15) and for all reserve officers up to Colonel/Captain of the Navy. The same applies to the corresponding ranks of the medical service. These tasks include particularly personnel selection, individual assignment planning and staffing of posts. The Bundeswehr Personnel Office shapes the procedures for the processing of military and civilian personnel data, provides for quality as- surance, ensures proper processing of personal data through revision and functional control and further develops the personnel management of the Bundeswehr on the basis of modern information technology and data processing (IT and ADP) in a process-oriented manner. Organisation of the Bundeswehr Personnel Office The Director, Bundeswehr Personnel Office is in charge of the Office, with the organisational elements of Legal Adviser and/or Disciplinary Attorneys for the Armed Forces, Controlling, Administrative Data Protection Commissioner and IT Security Officer directly being assigned to him. Director Legal Adviser Controlling Central Division Staff Section Centre for Testing Applicants for Commissioned Service Recruiting ADP Support 100 Streitkräftebasis Administrative Data Protection Commissioner Policy Group Deputy Director and Chief of Staff IT Security Officer Division I Army Division II Air Force Division III Navy Division IV Medical Service/ Military Music Recruiting Centre Division V Reservists Bundeswehr Personnel Office and its Recruiting Centres At the level below, there are seven divisions: the Central Division with the Staff Section, the Recruiting Section, the Centre for Testing Applicants for Commissioned Service and the ADP Support Section the Policy Division as a central subunit for joint policy and matters of personnel management the personnel management divisions for officers and officer candidates of the Army, Air Force, Navy, Medical Service and Military Music Service as well as for reserve officers and reserve officer candidates in all services. Four Recruiting Centres are headquartered in Berlin, Düsseldorf, Hannover and Munich; the fifth is located in Wilhelmshaven and works exclusively for the Navy. Approximately 320 military service counsellors belong to these centres. They are distributed all over Germany, which is an important precondition for successful recruitment work. They closely adapt themselves to the target groups in the different regions and the conditions prevailing there. Tasks of the Recruiting Centres The Recruiting Centres try to win candidates for the service in the armed forces. They inform and advise applicants about careers in the armed forces, determine the qualification of all applicants for the career of senior NCOs, NCO specialists and temporary-career enlisted personnel, and assign applicants, with the requirement of the military organisational areas being the decisive factor. Organisation of a Recruiting Centre The Centres are uniformly divided into the following six Sections: Application/Scheduling, Testing, Psychological Service, Medical Service and two Military Service Counselling Sections, except for the Centre of the Navy, which has only the Sections 1 through 4. The Bundeswehr Personnel Office and the Recruiting Centres decisively contribute to covering the personnel requirements of the armed forces. They also maintain close contacts with the personnel management offices and the service staffs in the Ministry of Defence. Not only the personal and social interests of the soldiers but also the interests of the organisational areas are taken into account adequately. Head Executive Group Section 1 Applications/ Assignments Controlling Section 2 Testing Section 3 Psychological Service Section 4 Medical Service Section 5 Military Service Counselling * Section 6 Military Service Counselling * * Except for the Recruiting Centre of the Navy Streitkräftebasis 101 Bundeswehr Enlisted Personnel Office The Bundeswehr Enlisted Personnel Office performs personnel management tasks for the soldiers – including the reservists designated for assignment – in the NCO career groups and in the enlisted personnel career group, as far as they have not been assigned to other agencies. In addition, it exercises policy-making power in matters of military personnel management of the above-mentioned groups on the basis of guidance issued. The Bundeswehr Enlisted Personnel Office established on 1 October 2006 is to adopt its target structure by 2008 to ensure the centralised personnel management of the Bundeswehr‘s enlisted personnel. The central personnel management of the NCOs and parts of the other enlisted personnel of the entire Bundeswehr is to ensure uniform personnel services through harmonised, more efficient procedures, while, of course, maintaining welltried practices, in the new, integrated personnel management system. The Bundeswehr Enlisted Personnel Office headquartered in Cologne is – just as the Bundeswehr Personnel Office – under the direct administrative control of the Vice Chief of Staff, Bundeswehr and Chief of Staff, Joint Support Service. Technically, it is subordinate in all personnel management matters to the Personnel, Social Services and Central Affairs Division of the Federal Ministry of Defence. However, the new Bundeswehr Enlisted Personnel Office is much more than a simple merger of enlisted personnel offices of the Army, Air Force and Navy. It is rather geared to the common and new framework conditions, as for example, the requirements of the new careers and the organisational changes as the Joint Support Service continues to grow; additionally, it is oriented on the model of the main process ”personnel“. This process represents the enlistment, development, and discharge of personnel. It is for the first time that the central specialty and assignment series are jointly managed in one group. These measures aim to equally ensure transparency and equality of opportunities for all services and organisational areas. The TOE of the Bundeswehr Personnel Office provides for a structure containing a headquarters and headquarters section and four divisions, i.e. Central Affairs, Enlistment, Personnel Development and Discharge. The leadership of the agency is directly supported by a legal adviser and a controlling section. The Central Affairs Division accomplishes all support and control tasks from which the personnel managers in the remaining three divisions can be relieved. Thus, among other things, basic documents, assignment, promotion and selection procedures are taken care of and managed there. This is also where support is provided by the military medical adviser, the legal section, IT/ADP management, and the administrative section. 102 Streitkräftebasis Bundeswehr Enlisted Personnel Office The procedures using the Standard Application Software Product Families (SASPF) have been consistently implemented in the personnel management divisions as well. Consequently, the candidate and course allocation as well as central scheduling of the Navy are effected in the Assignment Division, and the central personnel management of reservists and soldiers during a Vocational Advancement Service measure in the Discharge Division. Personnel development, of course, continues to be the key activity of the central personnel management of the NCOs of the armed forces. This is where career prospects and assignment opportunities are developed, identified and implemented in order to have the right man or woman available and ready at the right time for a given post. Organisation of the Bundeswehr Enlisted Personnel Office Legal Adviser Director Controlling Deputy Director and Chief of Staff Headquarters Headquarters Section Central Affairs Enlistment Policies, Procedures, Reporting, Harmonisation Personnel Management Candidates Legal Affairs Personnel Management, Enlisted Personnel Area physician Administrative Matters Central Personnel Processing Personnel Development Personnel Development, Army Personnel Management, Army Central Personnel Decisions Personnel Development, Air Force Personnel Development, Navy Personnel Development, Medical Service Personnel Management, Air Force Personnel Management, Navy Personnel Management Medical Service Discharges Personnel Development, Central Specialty and Assignment Series Personnel Management Central Specialty and Assignment Series Personnel Management, Reservists Personnel Management of Vocational Advancement Service Measures/ Discharge Training Course/ Vocational Training Spaces Personnel Planning Data Processing Streitkräftebasis 103 Bundeswehr University, Munich and Helmut Schmidt University/Bundeswehr University, Hamburg In 1971, the Bundeswehr Universities in MünchenNeubiberg and Hamburg-Wandsbek were founded in the light of the increasingly complex demands on the officer‘s profession and in order to increase the attractiveness of the career. The Bundeswehr needs academically educated officers. At the Bundeswehr University Munich, about 3,000 line officers and officer candidates of all services, including 150 women and 50 foreign officers from 20 nations, are currently receiving their academic education in ten university and technical college courses of study. At the Helmut Schmidt University/Bundeswehr University, Hamburg, line officers and officer candidates are undergoing their academic education in nine university study courses. 2,000 officers and officer candidates of all services, including 110 women and 40 foreign officers from 10 nations, are currently studying there. Due to the education sovereignty of the Länder, the Bundeswehr Universities are state-recognised institutions of the education system within the area of responsibility of the Federal Ministry of Defence according to the German university legislation and are subject to the legal supervision of their home Länder Bavaria and Hamburg. The academic degrees awarded by the Bundeswehr Universities are fully recognised in civilian life. Courses of study are divided into trimesters. The standard duration of study is ten trimesters and lasts three and a quarter years. This is approximately equivalent to ten semesters at a civilian university with a five-year duration of study. As is the case at civilian universities the officer and 104 Streitkräftebasis officer candidate students enjoy all academic freedoms, i.e. they largely organise their everyday academic life by themselves, with the shortened teaching and learning period requiring a high degree of self discipline and concentration. The great number of successful graduates – more than two thirds of the students achieve the coveted degrees – is primarily due to the excellent study conditions the Bundeswehr Universities offer to their students. This includes in particular the consistently pursued small-group principle, enabling optimal guidance of the students by their professors. The appropriate campus infrastructure with its short distances also facilitates daily academic life. Most of the students have their own apartments and rooms on the campus. The universities of the Bundeswehr in Munich and Hamburg are directly subordinate to the Federal Ministry of Defence. They are led by civilian Presidents. During their studies, the officer and officer candidate students are militarily led, trained and supervised by the military department. In both universities, the military department is under the administrative control of the Armed Forces Office. In Munich, it consists of four – in Hamburg three – military faculties to which the officer and officer candidate students are assigned for engineering, humanities, and economics studies. The military faculties in Munich consist of 19, in Hamburg of 13 military faculty groups organised according to the individual courses of study. Their heads are the direct disciplinary superiors of the officer and officer candidate students. As a general rule, they must have themselves completed the course of study whose students they are leading since the key elements of the mission of the military department – in addition to the education and moulding of the future officers – also include ensuring successful studies. Bundeswehr University, Munich and Helmut Schmidt University/Bundeswehr University, Hamburg The two Bundeswehr universities will face two significant challenges in the coming years. First, the reorganisation of Army officer training will be due that provides for the beginning of studies as early as in the 15th month of service (so far in the 39th month of service) starting 2006 and, therefore, will increase the number of officer and officer candidate students up to 4,000 in Munich and up to 2,800 in Hamburg. Example: Structure of the Military Department of the Bundeswehr University, Munich Second, the previous German Diplom degrees are to be changed to Bachelor‘s and Master‘s degrees by 2010 with the aim of better international comparability throughout Europe. This will lead to changes particularly in the academic areas. Head of Military Department Deputy Head of Military Department Staff Military Faculty A Military Faculty B Military Faculty C Military Faculty D 5 Military Faculty Groups 5 Military Faculty Groups 4 Military Faculty Groups 5 Military Faculty Groups Officer/Officer Candidate Students Officer/Officer Candidate Students Officer/Officer Candidate Students Officer/Officer Candidate Students Engineering Sciences Aeronautical and Space Engineering Engineering Sciences Electrical and Information Technology Civil and Environmental Engineering Computer Science Business Data Processing Humanities Education Sports Science Political and Social Sciences Business Administration (Technical College) Economic and Organisational Sciences Electrical and Computer Engineering (Technical College) Mechanical Engineering (Technical College) Study Courses offered by: The Bundeswehr University, Munich · Civil and Environmental Engineering · Business Administration (Technical College) · Electrical and Information Technology · Electrical and Computer Engineering (Technical College) · Computer Science · Aeronautical and Space Engineering · Mechanical Engineering (Technical College) · Education · Sports Science · Political and Social Sciences · Business Data Processing · Economic and Organisational Sciences Helmut Schmidt University/Bundeswehr University, Hamburg · Business Administration · Electrical Engineering · History · Mechanical Engineering · Education · Political Science · Computer-aided Engineering Sciences · Economics · Industrial Engineering Streitkräftebasis 105 Commissioner for the Buildup of the Joint Support Service As the Bundeswehr‘s transformation progresses, the Personnel Coordinating Organisation of the military services implements structure and stationing decisions for the personnel sector. Meeting the requirement in a professional manner is still of utmost importance to personnel control. Its task is, above all, to consider the situation of the soldiers affected by the organisational changes without delay and reassign them according to demand, if possible in their current region, but also supraregionally. The Joint Support Service‘s gradual adoption of the structure 2010 continues. Future tasks and the resulting organisational changes will, therefore, lead to far-reaching personnel changes again. Therefore, the Personnel Coordinating Organisation formed at the beginning of the establishment of the Joint Support Service with the office of the Commissioner for the Buildup of the Joint Support Service at the top, will continue to exist in the following years and contribute to the qualified manning of posts. Commissioner for the Buildup of the Joint Support Service Personnel Coordinating Element Armed Forces Office Personnel Coordinating Element Joint Support Command Personnel Coordinating Element Military District Command/ Land Command Points of Contact: Points of Contact: Personnel coordinating elements of the military organisational areas Personnel management agencies Central agencies Regional coordinators S-1 personnel, agencies, Units, personnel management agencies The Commissioner is under the administrative control of the Vice Chief of Staff, Bundeswehr, and Chief of Staff, Joint Support Service. The Personnel Coordinating Elements of the Joint Support Service functionally subordinate to him have been established for a limited period of time down to Military District Command level and accomplish their tasks on a full-time basis. At the lower levels of command, the coordinating work is done by the respective S-1 personnel in a secondary function. The Personnel Coordinating Organisation cooperates with comparable agencies down to the regional level. Head Orderly Room S1 Senior Officer Army Senior Officer, Personnel Air Force S1 Senior Officer Navy The tasks of the Personnel Coordinating Organisation are diverse. It informs the personnel concerned timely and thoroughly. Furthermore, the Personnel Coordinating Organisation records the required personnel movements. Within the area of its responsibility, it prepares proposals on the staffing of positions in cooperation and coordination with the units and agencies concerned, the personnel management offices, the personnel coordinating elements as well as the personnel POCs of the other services and commands. Senior Officer, Personnel Organisation Officer, Personnel Organisation Army Officer, Personnel Organisation Navy The Personnel Coordinating Organisation also records serious personal reasons for consideration in planned personnel changes and monitors the equality of opportunities when preparing proposal lists for the staffing of posts. It is responsible for controlling and correcting personnel measures in view of agreement with organisational changes and requirements. The personnel representatives and commissioners for gender equality are involved under their respective rights. The aim is to quickly achieve the best possible staffing of posts according to quality and quantity. Those responsible make efforts to consider the situation of the personnel affected by organisational measures for future assignments on an equal opportunity basis and also take into account, as far as possible, the personal interests of the individual in order to carry out these measures in a way that is socially benign to the greatest possible extent. Streitkräftebasis 107 Notes 108 Streitkräftebasis Notes Streitkräftebasis 109 Notes 110 Streitkräftebasis Notes Streitkräftebasis 111 Notes 112 Streitkräftebasis Notes Streitkräftebasis 113 Notes 114 Streitkräftebasis Notes Streitkräftebasis 115 Notes 116 Streitkräftebasis Notes Streitkräftebasis 117 Notes 118 Streitkräftebasis Notes Streitkräftebasis 119 Editorial Details P ublished by Führungsstab der Streitkräfte Zentralreferat Postfach 13 28 · 53003 Bonn C ontact Presse- und Informationszentrum der Streitkräftebasis Dezernat 3 – Öffentlichkeitsarbeit Pascalstrasse 10c · 53125 Bonn Telefon: +49 (0) 2 28/ 12- 17 60 · Telefax: +49 (0) 2 28/ 12 - 27 99 AllgFspWNBw: 34 00 Lotus-Notes: PIZ SKB Dez 3 OeA/SKB/BMVg/DE@BUNDESWEHR E-Mail: pizskbdez3oea@bundeswehr.org L ayout and Printing Zentrum Operative Information 120 Streitkräftebasis