Unteroffizier

Unteroffizier
(Heer / Luftwaffe)
Rank insignia German NCO rank
Introduction 1957
Rank group Non-commissioned officers
Army / Air Force Unteroffizier
Navy Maat
NATO
equivalent
OR-5b[1]
US
UK
  • Army: no equivalent
  • Air Force: Sergeant

Unteroffizier is a military rank of the Bundeswehr and of former German speaking armed forces (Heer/ Luftwaffe). Equivalent in Anglophone armed forces is: 1. Army: Sergeant; 2. US Air Force: Staff Sergeant; 3. UK RAF: Sergeant. However, Unteroffizier is also the collective name to all Non-commissioned officers (short: NCO; US colloquy. also noncom).

Bundeswehr

rank insignia field- and battle dress
Heer
Luftwaffe
Marine

Unteroffizier (English: Subordinate Officer, otherwise historically a sergeant; Origin and meaning of "Korporal", in German. [2] is both a specific military rank as well as a collective term for non-commissioned officers of the German military that has existed since the 17th century.[3]

The term continues to be used by the modern-day German and Swiss armies.

There are two classes of non-commissioned officers (in the following, the titles of the German Navy (Deutsche Marine) are given in brackets):

Informally, the non-commissioned officers with portepee are often called "the Feldwebel [Bootsmann] ranks" or even all together Feldwebel [Bootsleute], which creates a similar confusion as exists already with the word Unteroffizier. In the navy, the official terms remain more common. The word Unteroffizier, in turn, is getting a third meaning, namely: non-commissioned officer without portepee, as opposed to Feldwebel.

Unteroffizier translates as "subordinate-officer" and, when meaning the specific rank, is in modern-day usage considered the equivalent to Sergeant rank under the NATO-standard rank scale, historically though the Unteroffizier rank was considered a Corporal[4] and thus similar in duties to a British Army Corporal. In times of peace an Unteroffizier was a career soldier who trained conscripts or led squads and platoons. He could rise through the ranks to become an "Unteroffizier mit Portepee", i.e. a Feldwebel, which was the highest rank a career soldier could reach. Since the German officer corps was immensely class conscious a rise through the ranks from a NCO to become an officer was hardly possible except in times of war. The Unteroffizierskorps was made up of professional soldiers which formed the backbone of German armies. This tradition has not been changed by the Bundeswehr where all ranks of Unteroffizier and up consist only of professional soldiers who sign up for a period extending conscription.

Unteroffizier is one of the few German military ranks whose insignia has remained unchanged over the past one hundred years. The shoulder boards of a modern Unteroffizier are relatively similar to the World War I and World War II designs.

A modern-day German Bundeswehr Army Unteroffizier typically commands squad sized formations or acts as an assistant platoon NCO. The rank is also used in the modern-day German Air Force. In the Bundeswehr the grade of Stabsunteroffizier (a Junior NCO) ranks between Unteroffizier and Feldwebel (a Senior NCO).

Preceded by
junior Rank
Oberstabsgefreiter (OR4a)

(German NCO rank)
Unteroffizier

Succeeded by
senior Rank
Stabsunteroffizier (OR5a)

References

  1. The abbreviation "OR" stands for "Other Ranks / fr: sous-officiers et militaires du rang / ru:другие ранги, кроме офицероф"
  2. BROCKHAUS, The encyclopedia in 24 volumes (1796–2001), Volume 22: 3-7653-3676-9, page 634
  3. Duden; Origin and meaning of "Korporal", in German.