General of the Army
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General of the Army is a military rank used in some countries of the world to denote a senior military leader, usually a General in command of a nation's Army. Less specifically, a General of the Army may also be the title given to a General who commands an Army in the field. The rank is typically considered the equivalent of Field Marshal and a Fleet Admiral.
Some non-European ranks, such as Wonsu and Mushir, are considered the equivalent to all three ranks of General of the Army, Field Marshal, and Fleet Admiral. The rank of Grand General, which may also be considered a General of the Army equivalent, has appeared often in fiction but rarely in any country's actual military.
The essentially American rank of General of the Army should not be confused with common foreign rank of Army General. An American general of the army corresponds to other countries' Marshal or Field Marshal. The rank of General of the Army theoretically corresponds to overall command of an entire national army, while the rank of Army General is a more junior rank which only corresponds to the command of an individual army in the field.
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[edit] General of the Army ranks by country
- General of the Army (United States)
- General of the Army (Liberia)
- General of the Army (Paraguay)
- General of the Army (Brazil)
- General of the Army (Russian Federation)
- General of the Army (Soviet Union)
[edit] Equivalent General of the Army ranks
- Armeegeneral (former German Democratic Republic)
- Field Marshal (United Kingdom)
- Chom Phon (Thailand)
- Comandante en Jefe (Cuba)
- Jenderal Besar (Indonesia)
- Maréchal (France)
- Pradhan Senapati (Nepal)
- Te Ji Shang Jiang (Republic of China)
- Wonsu (North and South Korea)
[edit] Similar General of the Army titles
- Reichsführer-SS (Schutzstaffel of Nazi Germany)
- Stabschef (Nazi Stormtroopers "Sturmabteilung")