Commander-in-Chief Fleet
Commander-in-Chief Fleet (CINCFLEET) is the admiral responsible for the operation, resourcing and training of the ships, submarines and aircraft, and personnel, of the British Royal Navy. CINC is subordinate to the First Sea Lord, the professional head of the Naval Service.
Responsibilities
Full command of the Fleet and responsibility for the Fleet element of military operational capability including the Royal Marines and the Royal Fleet Auxiliary, is delegated to Commander-in-Chief Fleet,[1] with his Command Headquarters in the Navy Command Headquarters Building at HMS Excellent in Portsmouth[1] and his Operational Headquarters at Northwood, in the London Borough of Hillingdon, co-located with the Permanent Joint Headquarters[1] and a NATO Regional Command, Allied Maritime Component Command Northwood ('AMCCN'); CINCFLEET is dual-hatted as Commander AMCCN.[2]
CINCFLEET is supported by:[1]
- Second Sea Lord, based in HMS Excellent, who is the Principal Personnel Officer for the Royal Navy
- Deputy CINCFLEET, based in HMS Excellent, who directs the work of the Fleet Headquarters
- Commander Maritime Operations, based at Northwood, who is responsible for the conduct of Fleet operations
- Commander UK Amphibious Force, who is Commandant General Royal Marines
- Commander UK Maritime Forces (previously known as Commander UK Task Group)[3], who is commander of the UK Task Group (COMUKTG)(including the newly formed UK Response Force Task Group)[4][5][6]
Collectively, COMUKMARFOR, COMUKAMPHIBFOR, Commander UK Task Group (COMUKTG) and 3 Commando Brigade, Royal Marines comprise the "Fleet Battle Staff".[7]
History of the Commanders-in-Chief
Historically, the Royal Navy was usually split into several commands, each with a Commander-in-Chief (e.g. Commander-in-Chief Plymouth, Commander-in-Chief Mediterranean Fleet, etc.). There now remain only two Commanders-in-Chief, the various fleet commands being unified under Commander-in-Chief Fleet and the various home commands being unified under Commander-in-Chief Naval Home Command ("CINCNAVHOME").
In 1971, with the withdrawal from of British forces from East of Suez, the Far East and Western fleets of the Royal Navy were unified under a single Commander-in-Chief Fleet,[8] initially based at HMS Warrior, a land base at Northwood in Middlesex and, from 2004, based at HMS Excellent at Portsmouth.[9]
NATO commitment
The post has also come with various NATO appointments since its creation, including:
- Commander in Chief Channel (CINCHAN) (until 1994)
The NATO Handbook, accessible in 1993, described the Channel Command in the following words:[10]
CINCHAN's subordinate commanders include Commander Allied Maritime Air Force, Channel; Commander Nore Sub-Area Channel; Commander Plymouth Sub-Area, Channel; and Commander Benelux Sub-Area, Channel. CINCHAN also has under his command the NATO Standing Naval Force Channel (STANAVFOR- CHAN), a permanent force mainly comprising mine countermeasure vessels.
A Channel Committee consisting of the naval Chiefs-of-Staff of Belgium, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom serves as an advisory and consultative body to the Commander-in-Chief, Channel.
- Commander in Chief East Atlantic as part of Allied Command Atlantic (until 2004)
- Commander Allied Maritime Component Command, Northwood (current)
List of Commanders-in-Chief Fleet
Commanders-in-Chief have included:[11]
- Admiral of the Fleet Sir Edward Ashmore, 1971–Dec 1973
- Admiral of the Fleet Sir Terence Lewin, Dec 1973–Oct 1975
- Admiral Sir John Treacher, Oct 1975–Mar 1977
- Admiral of the Fleet Sir Henry Leach, Mar 1977–May 1979
- Admiral Sir James Eberle, Mar 1979–Apr 1981
- Admiral of the Fleet Sir John Fieldhouse, Apr 1981–Oct 1982
- Admiral of the Fleet Sir William Staveley, Oct 1982–Jun 1985
- Admiral Sir Nicholas Hunt, Jun 1985–May 1987
- Admiral of the Fleet Sir Julian Oswald, May 1987–Apr 1989
- Admiral of the Fleet Sir Benjamin Bathurst, Apr 1989–Jan 1991
- Admiral Sir Jock Slater, Jan 1991–Dec 1992
- Admiral Sir Hugo White, Dec 1992–Jun 1995
- Admiral Sir Peter Abbott, Oct 1995–Sept 1997
- Admiral Sir Michael Boyce, Sept 1997–Sept 1998
- Admiral Sir Nigel Essenhigh, Sept 1998–Nov 2000
- Admiral Sir Alan West, Nov 2000–Sept 2002
- Admiral Sir Jonathon Band, Sept 2002–Nov 2005
- Admiral Sir James Burnell-Nugent, Nov 2005–Nov 2007
- Admiral Sir Mark Stanhope, Nov 2007–June 2009
- Admiral Sir Trevor Soar, June 2009–[12]
Vice Admiral George Zambellas will be Commander-in-Chief Fleet from January 2012.[13]
List of Deputy Commanders
Deputy Commanders have included:[11]
- Vice Admiral Sir Roy Newman, Feb 1990–June 1992
- Vice Admiral Sir Geoffrey Biggs, June 1992–June 1994
- Vice Admiral Sir Jonathan Tod, June 1994–June 1997
- Vice Admiral Sir Jeremy Blackham, June 1997–Jan 1999
- Vice Admiral Sir Fabian Malbon, Jan 1999–May 2001
- Vice Admiral Sir Jonathon Band, May 2001–July 2002
- Vice Admiral Sir Mark Stanhope, July 2002–June 2004
- Vice Admiral Sir Timothy McClement, June 2004–Oct 2006
- Vice Admiral Paul Boissier, Oct 2006–July 2009
- Vice Admiral Sir Richard Ibbotson, July 2009–Jan 2011
- Vice Admiral George Zambellas, Jan 2011–
Vice Admiral Philip Jones will be Deputy Commander-in-Chief Fleet from December 2011.[11]
References
- ^ a b c d Navy Command Headquarters Royal Navy
- ^ Joint Force Command: Organisation, Roles, Mission
- ^ Fleet Battle Staff Headquarters
- ^ Commander UK Maritime Force
- ^ Cougar
- ^ New Admiral Visits Fleet Flagship
- ^ Commander UK Amphibious Force
- ^ Sea Your History
- ^ Plymouth Maritime Headquarters (Mount Wise)
- ^ NATO Handbook07, uploaded March 25, 1993
- ^ a b c Royal Navy Senior Appointments
- ^ "Admiral Sir Trevor Soar takes up Navy fleet position". Portsmouth News. 2009-06-11. http://www.portsmouth.co.uk/newshome/Admiral-Sir-Trevor-Soar-takes.5355818.jp. Retrieved 2009-06-12.
- ^ Service Appointmemnts, The Times, 1 October 2011
External links