German Army

German Army
Deutsches Heer
Logo Heer with lettering.svg
Logo of the German Army
Active 1955–present
Country Federal Republic of Germany
Role Land force
Size 91,752 [1]
Motto To protect, help, moderate, and fight
Schützen, helfen, vermitteln, kämpfen
Colors Blue, Grey and White
Anniversaries November 12, 1955
Engagements United Nations Operations in Somalia

Aftermath of the Balkan Wars 1995-1999
Kosovo War
War in Afghanistan

Decorations Badge of Honour of the Bundeswehr
Military Proficiency Badge
Badge of Marksmanship
Service Medal
Flood Service Medal
Commanders
Current
commander
Lieutenant General Werner Freers
Notable
commanders
General Ulrich de Maizière
General Ernst Ferber, COMAFCENT 1973–1975

Lieutenant General Jörg Schönbohm, later Undersecretary of Defense

The German Army (German: Deutsches Heer, Heer pronounced [ˈheːɐ̯]  ( listen)) is the land component of the armed forces of the Germany. Traditionally the German military forces have been composed of the Army, the Navy and the Air Force after World War I. It was reinstalled in 1955 as the West German Army and as a part of the newly formed Bundeswehr. In the aftermath of the German reunification of 1990, the National People's Army of the former German Democratic Republic was integrated into the West German Army.

Contents

History

Overview

A German infantryman stands at the ready covering his comrade with the Bundeswehr's standard G36 assault rifle during a practice exercise in 2004 while being observed by American soldiers.

Since Germany first became a modern unified state in 1871, previous names of German unified ground forces have included:

Pre-1914

After the reform movement of the Prussian Army following a series of disastrous defeats at the hands of her enemies in the 18th century, internal analysis of the lessons learned had informed Prussian civilian and military leadership that, while individual soldiers were first rate, command structures, staff organisation and generalship was a hit-and-miss affair, more dependent on the martial skills of the King and the individual members of the German nobility who dominated the military profession. Too often, military talent was brought together only after the Nation faced a crisis. There was little effective organizational work in between wars. The rise of the German General Staff, an institution that sought to institutionalize military excellence, brought the German Army back from years of atrophy and the humiliation of Napoleon's capture of Berlin. With a membership in the officer corps extended to all qualified German speaking men via national examinations, the improved education of the military schools, the intensive selection process of the top 1% graduated from the Kriegsacademie, with its new rising class of top notch and world class leaders, the German Army was set on a course of eventual near total dominance in Europe.

Following the defeat of Napoleon at the Battle of Waterloo the Prussian Kingdom had years of military successes in the 19th and 20th centuries. Every able bodied man between the ages of 17 and 45 was liable for military service. There were 4 classes of service - Active (Aktiv), Reserve, Landwehr and Landsturm. The Landwehr and Landsturm were only called up at times of war. The basic unit of the army at this time was the Regiment. Regiments were typically raised and supported by a specific city or region. Each regiment was then stationed near its home city. The Reserve regiment was often made up of past members of the local regiment. The Landwehr and Landsturm units were also organized the same way. An individual could spend all 22 years of military service surrounded by their friends and family. While this system created close ties within regiments, it also meant that the entire population of young men from a city or region could be wiped out in one battle.

World War I 1914–1918

German infantry (wearing characteristic, early-war pickelhaube helmets with cloth covers) during the 1914 Battle of the Marne.

The German Army that fought in World War I was not in fact a single, unitary army. All the monarchies (Great Dukedom of Hesse, Great Dukedom of Baden - as example) as a part of the German Empire had its own armies. Since the unification of Germany in January 1871 most of them were under Prussian command, though each continued to wear its own style of uniforms and insignias. The four German kingdoms that existed since the Napoleonic era - Bavaria, Prussia, Saxony and Württemberg - of course had its own armies until the end of WWI. The commander in chief in peacetime of each of these armies was the King. Prussia had the largest army of the four. After the unification and the formation of the German Empire, the Prussian army became the nucleus of the Armies of the German Empire (Deutsches Reichsheer). After the declaration of war, the emperor became the commander-in-chief of all the armed forces. By 1914 the German army fielded 50 active divisions and 48 Reserve-Divisions - by 1918 251 divisions had been created.

Reichswehr 1918–1935

Following the end of World War I and the collapse of the German Empire, most of the German Army (Heer) was demobilized or simply dissolved. Many former soldiers drifted into small paramilitary groups known as Free Corps (Freikorps). The Free Corps were generally groups of 100 men or fewer that protected a neighbourhood or town.

On 6 March 1919 an army known as the Provisional German Defence Force (Vorläufige Reichswehr) was formed with about 400,000 men, many drawn from the Free Corps. Then, on 30 September 1919 the Transitional Army (Übergangsheer) was created from the Defence Force and the Free Corps.

Finally, on 1 January 1921 the 100,000 man Army of the Weimar Republic (Reichswehr) was formed with seven Infantry Divisions and three Cavalry Divisions. In November 1923, it was troops from the Army of the Weimar Republic who crushed Adolf Hitler's Beer Hall Putsch in Munich.

Heer 1935–1945

Under the Treaty of Versailles, the Reichswehr was only allowed 100,000 men split between the Army and the Navy. Following the 1932 German elections the Nazi Party came to power and began to abrogate the treaty. The Army was made part of the Wehrmacht in May 1935 with the passing of the "Law for the Reconstruction of the National Defence Forces". The Wehrmacht included not just the Army and Navy but also a third branch known as the Luftwaffe. Initially, the Army was expanded to 21 divisional-sized units and smaller formations. Between 1935 and 1945 this force grew to consist of hundreds of divisions and thousands of smaller supporting units. Between 1939 and 1945 close to 16 million served in the Army. Over 3 million were killed and over 4.1 million were wounded. Of the 7,361 men awarded the initial grade of the highest German combat honor of World War II, the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross, 4,777 were from the Army, making up 65% of the total awarded. The Allies dissolved the German Army on 20 August 1946.

Cold War and the 1990s

Corps sectors of military responsability in NATO's central region in the '80.

The Heer was founded in 1955 as the army of West Germany. After 1990, it absorbed the army of socialist East Germany, a part of the Nationale Volksarmee. The former East German forces were initially commanded by the Bunderwehr Command East under command of Lieutenant General Jörg Schönbohm, which was disbanded on 30 June 1991.[3] In the aftermath of the merge, the German Army consisted of four Corps with a manpower of 360,000 men. It was continuously downsized from this point. In 1996, an airborne brigade was converted into a new command leading the Army's special forces, known as the Kommando Spezialkräfte.

The 2001 onwards restructuring of the German Army saw it move to a seven division structure – 5 mechanized (each with two mechanized brigades), 1 special forces, and one airmobile.

In 2003, three Corps still existed, each including various combat formations and a maintenance brigade. I. German/Dutch Corps, a joint German-Netherlands organization, used to control in peacetime the 1st Panzer and 7th Panzer Divisions as well as Dutch formations. The 1st Panzer would have reported to the corps in wartime while the 7th would be posted to the Allied Rapid Reaction Corps. II Corps was German in peacetime but would have exchanged a division with the V U.S. Corps in time of war (the 5th Panzer). 5 Pz Division disbanded as of 30 June 2001. In peacetime it also commanded the 10th Panzer Division, which was allocated to Eurocorps and which parents the German half of the Franco-German Brigade. The 1st Mountain Division at Munich was also under this headquarters.

The IV Corps was headquartered at Potsdam in eastern Germany and controlled two Panzer-Grenadier Divisions, the 13th and 14th. The 14th Panzer-Grenadier Division also took control of units in Western Germany re-subordinated from the 6th Division when it lost its command function. It would have made up the German contribution to the Multinational Corps Northeast in time of war. IV Corps also used to have under its command the Military District Command I, the 1st Air Mechanised Brigade, and the Berlin Command ('Standortkommando').

Current army

Bundeswehr Kreuz.svg
Bundeswehr
Teilstreitkräfte or TSK
(Branches)
Bundeswehr Heer.jpg Heer
Bundeswehr Luftwaffe.jpg Luftwaffe
Bundeswehr Marine.jpg Marine
Organisationsbereiche
(Organisational areas)
Sanitätsdienst
Streitkräftebasis

All corps have now been disbanded or transferred to a multinational level such as Multinational Corps North East. IV. Corps was reorganized and became an overseas deployment command like the British Permanent Joint Headquarters.

Personnel

A total of 91,752 soldiers are currently on active service in the German Army.[4] Of these, approximately 60,000 are professional soilders and 20,000 are conscripts.

Current structure of the German Army

Structure of the German Army (click to enlarge)

The German Army is commanded by the Chief of Staff, Army (Inspekteur des Heeres) based at the Federal Ministry of Defence in Berlin and Bonn. The major commands are the German Army Office in Cologne and the German Army Forces Command in Koblenz. In 2002 a number of army units and their personnel were transferred to the newly-formed Joint Support Service (Streitkräftebasis) and Joint Medical Service branches.[5]

Chief of Staff, German Army

German Army Office

German soldiers during exercise in 1960
German dog handler quickly pulls his working dog off of a simulated criminal

The German Army Office in Cologne (Heeresamt) is the superior authority for all supporting elements of the Army, such as schools and education centres. It is commanded by a Major General, currently MajGen Joachim Clauß.

German Army Forces Command

German soldiers, having rebuilt the bridge in the town of Visoko, Bosnia, during the opening ceremony in 1996
German Army soldiers from Paratrooper Battalion 261 onboard an armoured personnel carrier in Somalia in 1993
German ISAF soldiers involved in combat in Northern Afghanistan in 2009
A German Army soldier demonstrates the equipment of the IdZ program.

The German Army Forces Command in Koblenz (Heeresführungskommando) exercises command and control over all combat units. It is commanded by a Lieutenant General. These units include two armour divisions, two mechanized infantry divisions, the Division for Specialized Operations and the Airmobile Division. Depending on their size and role, brigades can be commanded either by a Brigadier General alike or a Colonel. Unlike other European armies such of neighbouring Netherlands and France, regiments are not a common form of organization and are thus rare in the German army. Battalions are most likely directly subordinate to brigades or to divisions as divisional troops.

Truppengattungen

Helicopter of the German Army Aviation Corps in Northern Iraq in 1991

The German Army has eleven different branches of troops, designated as Truppengattungen. Each Truppengattung is responsible for training and readiness of its units and disposes of its own schools and centres of excellence for doing so. Optically this distinction can be made by the branch colour, called Waffenfarbe which is displayed by a cord attached to the rank insignia, and the colour of their beret with a specific badge attached to it.

Beret Colour (Army only)

Waffenfarbe (Army and army support branch only)

Rank structure

The rank structure of the German army is adjusted to the rank structure of the NATO. Unlike its predecessors, the modern German Army does not use the rank of Colonel General. The highest rank for an army officer is Lieutenant General, as the rank of Full General is reserved for the Armed Forces chief of staff or officers serving as NATO officers. Officer cadets do not pass through all enlisted ranks, but are directly promoted to Lieutenant after 36 months of service.
Equivalent US Army ranks are shown below according to "STANAG 2116 NSA MC LO (EDITION 6) – NATO CODES FOR GRADES OF MILITARY PERSONNEL":

Officers of the German ArmySchirmmütze heer.jpg
General
(General)
Gen
Lieutenant General (Generalleutnant)
GenLt/GL
Major General (Generalmajor)
GenMaj/GM
Brigadier General (Brigadegeneral)
BrigGen/BG
Colonel
(Oberst)
Oberst/O
Lieutenant Colonel
(Oberstleutnant)
Oberstlt/OTL
OF-9 OF-8 OF-7 OF-6 OF-5 OF-4
Bundeswehr-OF-9-Gen.png Bundeswehr-OF-8-GL.png Bundeswehr-OF-7-GM.png Bundeswehr-OF-6-BG.png Bundeswehr-OF-5-O.png Bundeswehr-OF-4-OTL.png
Officers of the German ArmySchirmmütze heer.jpg
Major
(Major)
Maj/M
Staff Captain
(Stabshauptmann)
StHptm/SH
Captain
(Hauptmann)
Hptm/H
1st Lieutenant
(Oberleutnant)
OLt /OL
2nd Lieutenant
(Leutnant)
Lt/L
OF-3 OF-2 OF-2 OF-1 OF-1
Bundeswehr-OF-3-M.png Bundeswehr-OF-2-SH.png Bundeswehr-OF-2-H.png Bundeswehr-OF-1-OL.png Bundeswehr-OF-1-L.png
Non-Commissioned Officers of the German Army Schirmmütze heer.jpg
Sergeant Major (Oberstabsfeldwebel)
OStFw/OSF
First Sergeant
(Stabsfeldwebel)
StFw/SF
Master Sergeant (officer cadet) (Oberfähnrich)
OFähnr/OFR
Master Sergeant
(Hauptfeldwebel)
HptFw/HF
Sergeant 1st Class (Oberfeldwebel)
OFw/OF
OR-9 OR-8 OR-8 OR-7 OR-6
Bundeswehr-OR-9-OSF.png Bundeswehr-OR-8-SF.png Bundeswehr-OR-7-OFR.png Bundeswehr-OR-7-HF.png Bundeswehr-OR-6-OF.png
Non-Commissioned Officers of the German Army Schirmmütze heer.jpg
Sergeant (officer cadet)
(Fähnrich)
Fähnr/FR
Sergeant
(Feldwebel)
Fw/F
Staff Corporal
(Stabsunteroffizier)
StUffz/SU
Corporal (officer cadet)
(Fahnenjunker)
Fhj/FJ
Corporal
(Unteroffizier)
Uffz/U
OR-6 OR-6 OR-5 OR-5 OR-5
Bundeswehr-OR-6-FR.png Bundeswehr-OR-6-F.png Bundeswehr-OR-5-SU.png Bundeswehr-OR-5-FJ.png Bundeswehr-OR-5-U.png
Enlisted Ranks of the German ArmySchirmmütze heer.jpg
Specialist (Oberstabsgefreiter)
OStGefr/OSG
Specialist
(Stabsgefreiter)
StGefr/SG
Lance Corporal
(Hauptgefreiter)
HptGefr/HG
Private 1st Class (NCO cadet)
(Obergefreiter UA)
OGefr/OG
Private 1st Class
(Obergefreiter)
OGefr/OG
OR-4 OR-4 OR-3 OR-3 OR-3
Bundeswehr-OR-4-OSG.png Bundeswehr-OR-4-SG.png Bundeswehr-OR-3-HG.png Bundeswehr-OR-3-OGUA.png Bundeswehr-OR-3-OG.png
Enlisted Ranks of the German ArmySchirmmütze heer.jpg
Private 1st Class (officer cadet)
(Gefreiter OA)
Gefr/G
Private 1st Class (Sergeant cadet) (Gefreiter FA)
Gefr/G
Private 1st Class (NCO cadet)
(Gefreiter UA)
Gefr/G
Private 1st Class
(Gefreiter)
Gefr/G
Private
(Soldat)
S
OR-2 OR-2 OR-2 OR-2 OR-1
Bundeswehr-OR-2-GOA.png Bundeswehr-OR-2-GFA.png Bundeswehr-OR-2-GUA.png Bundeswehr-OR-2-G.png Bundeswehr-OR-1-S.png

Weapons

Standard light weapons

Reconnaissance systems

Combat vehicles

Statistics

Puma (IFV) demonstrator for mobility-VS2 with weight simulators
GTK Boxer


Artillery

Air defence systems

A Gepard of the German Army
Wiesel 2 – in the Ozelot anti-air version of LeFlaSys
Mine layer Skorpion
Mine breaker Keiler

Engineer equipment

Aircraft inventory

Eurocopter Tiger of the German Army
Bo 105s of the German Army in a hangar
German NH90
EC 135 of the German Army
A German CH-53GS
Heavy tractor trailer Elefant whilst loading a Leopard 2A4
A MAN MULTI

The German Army operates more than 320 helicopters. Nearly all were built in Germany while nearly 40% are indigenous designs. 80 Eurocopter Tiger and 80 NH90 helicopters have been ordered.

Aircraft Origin Type Versions In service[7] Notes
Attack Helicopter
Eurocopter Tiger  European Union attack helicopter 5 80 (planned), entered service
Transport/Utility Helicopter
UH-1 Iroquois  Germany utility helicopter UH-1D 82 being withdrawn; built by Dornier
Bölkow Bo 105  Germany utility/attack helicopter 105P 104
Eurocopter EC 135  European Union utility helicopter EC135 15
NHI NH90  European Union transport helicopter NH90 TTH 3 80 (planned)
Sikorsky CH-53 Sea Stallion  Germany transport helicopter CH-53G/CH-53GS 101 110 built by VFW

Logistic equipment

Non-combat vehicles

Further reading

See also

References

  1. Official website of the German Armed Forces
  2. Reich is commonly translated as "empire," but this can be misleading; its actual connotation is closer to "realm", as in Frankreich, France, "realm of the Franks", or Österreich, Austria, "eastern realm".
  3. See Jorg Schonbohm, 'Two Armies and One Fatherland', Berghahn Books, Providence & Oxford, 1996
  4. Official website of the German Armed Forces
  5. "Die Streitkräftebasis" (pdf). http://www.streitkraeftebasis.de/portal/PA_1_0_P3/PortalFiles/02DB040000000001/W26J8MPU002INFODE/InfomappeSKB.pdf?yw_repository=youatweb/. Retrieved 2008-02-26. 
  6. http://www.marineforum.info/HEFT_5-2009/Camcopter/camcopter.html
  7. Aviation Week & Space Technology 2009, . (2009): n. pag. Web. 13 Sep 2009. <http://www.aviationweek.com/aw/sourcebook/content.jsp?channelName=pro&story=xml/sourcebook_xml/2009/01/26/AW_01_26_2009_p0240-112924-59.xml&headline=World%20Military%20Aircraft%20Inventory%20-%20Germany>.

External links

Historical links