Luxembourg Army

Luxembourg Army
Lëtzebuerger Arméi, Armée luxembourgeoise, Luxemburger Armee

Cap Badge of the Luxembourg Army
Founded 16 February 1881
Current form 29 June 1967
Headquarters Military Centre, Diekirch
Leadership
Commander-in-Chief Grand Duke Henri
Minister for Defence Etienne Schneider
Chief of Defence Romain Mancinelli
Manpower
Military age 18-24
Available for
military service
118,665 males, age 16-49 (2010 est.),
117,456 females, age 16-49 (2010 est.)
Fit for
military service
97,290 males, age 16-49 (2010 est.),
96,361 females, age 16-49 (2010 est.)
Reaching military
age annually
3,263 males (2010 est.),
3,084 females (2010 est.)
Expenditures
Budget 279 million $ (2011)[1]
Percent of GDP 0.5% (2011)
Related articles
History Military history of Luxembourg
Ranks see Grades and insignia

The Luxembourg Army is the national military of Luxembourg. The army has been an all-volunteer force since 1967. It has a current strength of approximately 450 professional soldiers—340 enlisted recruits and 100 civilians—with a total budget of $369 million, or 0.9% of GDP.

The army is under civilian control, with the Grand Duke as Commander-in-Chief. The Minister for Defence, currently Etienne Schneider, oversees army operations. The professional head of the army is the Chief of Defence, who answers to the minister.

Luxembourg has participated in the Eurocorps, has contributed troops to the UNPROFOR and IFOR missions in former Yugoslavia, and has participated with a small contingent in the current NATO SFOR mission in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Luxembourg troops have also deployed to Afghanistan, to support ISAF. The army has also participated in humanitarian relief missions such as setting up refugee camps for Kurds and providing emergency supplies to Albania.

History

Militia (1817–1841)

On 8 January 1817, William I, Grand Duke of Luxembourg, published a constitutional law governing the organization of a militia, the main provisions of which were to remain in force until the militia was abolished in 1881. The law fixed the militia's strength at 3,000 men. Until 1840, Luxembourg’s militiamen served in units of the Royal Netherlands Army. Enlisted men served for five years: the first year consisted of active service, but during each of the subsequent four years of service they were mobilised only three times per year.[2]

Federal Contingent (1841-1867)

In 1839, William I became a party to the Treaty of London by which the Grand-Duchy lost its western, francophone territories to the Belgian province of Luxembourg. Due to the country's population having been halved, with the loss of 160,000 inhabitants, the militia lost half its strength. Under the terms of the treaty, Luxembourg and the newly formed Duchy of Limburg, both members of the German Confederation, were together required to provide a federal contingent consisting of a light infantry battalion garrisoned in Echternach, a cavalry squadron in Diekirch, and an artillery detachment in Ettelbruck. In 1846, the cavalry and artillery units were disbanded and the Luxembourg contingent was separated from that of Limburg. The Luxembourg contingent now consisted of two light infantry battalions, one in Echternach and the second in Diekirch; two reserve companies; and a depot company.[3]

In 1866, the Austro-Prussian war resulted in the dissolution of the German Confederation. Luxembourg was declared neutral in perpetuity by the 1867 Treaty of London, and in accordance its fortress was demolished in the following years. In 1867, the Prussian garrison left the fortress, and the two battalions of Luxembourgish light infantry entered the city of Luxembourg that September.[3]

A new military organization was established in 1867, consisting of two battalions, known as the Corps des Chasseurs Luxembourgeois, having a total strength of 1,568 officers and men. In 1868, the contingent came to consist of one light infantry battalion of four companies, with a strength of 500 men. On 16 February 1881, the light infantry battalion was disbanded with the abolition of the militia-based system.[4]

Gendarmes and Volunteers Corps

Soldiers of the Corps des Gendarmes et Volontaires pose for a photograph, 1910.

On 16 February 1881, the Corps des Gendarmes et Volontaires (Corps of Gendarmes and Volunteers) was established. It was composed of two companies, a company of gendarmes and one of volunteers. In 1939, a corps of auxiliary volunteers was established and attached to the company of volunteers. Following the occupation of Luxembourg by Germany in May 1940, recruitment for the company of volunteers continued until 4 December 1940, when they were moved to Weimar, Germany, to be trained as German police.[5]

Luxembourg Battery

Luxembourg troops training in an English seaside town in 1943.

In 1944 during World War II, the Luxembourg Government, while exiled in London, made agreements for a group of seventy Luxembourg volunteers to be assigned to the Artillery Group of the 1st Belgian Infantry Brigade, commonly known as the Brigade Piron. This contingent was named the Luxembourg Battery. Initially, it was under Belgian officers. Later, from August 1944, these were joined by Luxembourgish officers, who had received training in Britain.[6]

Several Luxembourgish NCOs and half of the country's troops had fought in North Africa in the French Foreign Legion. The rest were people who had escaped from Luxembourg, and young men evading forcible conscription into the Wehrmacht by fleeing to Britain. The Luxembourg unit landed in Normandy on 6 August 1944, two months after the D-Day landings.[6]

The Luxembourg Battery was equipped with four Ordnance QF 25 pounder howitzers, which were named after the children of Grand Duchess Charlotte: Princesses Elisabeth, Marie Adelaide, Marie Gabriele and Alix.[6]

Post-Liberation Luxembourg Army

In 1944, obligatory military service was introduced. In 1945, the Corps de la Garde Grand Ducale (Grand Ducal Guard Corps) garrisoned in the Saint-Esprit barracks in Luxembourg City and the 1st and 2nd infantry battalions were established, one in Walferdange and the other in Dudelange. The Luxembourg Army took charge of part of the French zone of occupation in Germany, the 2nd Battalion occupying part of the Bitburg district and a detachment from the 1st Battalion part of the Saarburg district. The 2nd Battalion remained in Bitburg until 1955. Luxembourg signed the Treaty of Brussels in March 1948, and the North Atlantic Treaty in 1949.

Setting up an army after the war proved more difficult than predicted.[7] To a certain extent, the authorities could rely on escaped German conscripts and Luxembourgers who had joined Allied armies;[7] however, they had to find a way to train officers. Initially, British military advisers came to Luxembourg, where training was carried out by British officers and NCOs.[7] But officer training, in the long term, would have to be done in military schools abroad. Belgium and France were both interested in helping and offered solutions.[7] In the end, the government opted for a compromise solution, by sending some officer cadets to the École spéciale militaire de Saint-Cyr in France and others to the Royal Military Academy in Belgium. This eventually led to disunity within the Luxembourg officer corps due to differences in training and promotion.[7]

In 1951, the Grand Ducal Guard relocated to Walferdange and integrated with the Commandement des Troupes. The Guard had special units for reconnaissance, radiac reconnaissance, and anti-air warfare. From 1955, it was organised into a headquarters company, a garrison platoon, a reconnaissance company and two training companies. In 1959, the Commandement des Troupes was disbanded and the Grand Ducal Guard was integrated into the Commandement du Territoire (Territorial Command). The force was reduced to a single company, a corporals' training school, and a weapons platoon. In 1960, the Grand Ducal Guard was again reorganised into four platoons, temporarily grouped into intervention and reinforcement detachments. In 1964, the Grand Ducal Guard was organized into a HQ, three platoons, a reinforcement platoon, and the NCO school.

On 28 February 1966, the Grand Ducal Guard was officially disbanded.

Korean War

A Luxembourg soldier in Korea, 1953.

In 1950, seventeen countries, including Luxembourg, decided to send armed forces to assist the Republic of Korea. The Luxembourg contingent was incorporated into the Belgian United Nations Command or the Korean Volunteer Corps. The Belgo-Luxemburgish battalion arrived in Korea in 1951, and was attached to the US 3rd Infantry Division. Two Luxembourger soldiers were killed and 17 were wounded in the war. The Belgo-Luxembourgish battalion was disbanded in 1955.

Groupement Tactique Régimentaire and Home Command

In 1954, the Groupement Tactique Régimentaire (GTR) (Regimental Tactical Group) was established as Luxembourg’s contribution to NATO. It consisted of three infantry battalions, an artillery battalion, and support, medical, transport, signals, engineering, heavy mortar, reconnaissance, and headquarters companies. The GTR was disbanded in 1959.

In addition to the GTR, the Army also included the Home Command, composed of headquarters, military police, movement and transportation companies, a static guard battalion, and a mobile battalion.

1st Artillery Battalion

In 1961, the 1st Artillery Battalion was placed at NATO's disposal. The battalion was organised into three batteries, each with six 105 millimetres (4.1 in) field howitzers (British 25 pounder guns converted to 105 mm caliber) from the former GTR artillery battalion, an HQ battery, and a service battery. In 1963, the battalion was attached to the US 8th Infantry Division. In 1966, the Grand Ducal Guard was disbanded and its tasks were transferred to and performed by the 1st Artillery Battalion until it too was disbanded, in 1967.

1st Infantry Battalion

Compulsory military service was abolished in 1967 and the 1st Infantry Battalion was established, consisting of a headquarters and services unit, two motorized infantry companies, and a reconnaissance company with two reconnaissance (recce) platoons and an anti-tank platoon. From 1968 onwards, it formed a part of NATO’s ACE Mobile Force (Land) (AMF(L)). In 1985, a reinforced company—consisting of an AMF Company with two recce platoons and an anti-tank platoon, a forward air-control team, a national support element for logistics, and a medical support element—replaced the battalion. In 2002 the AMF(L) was dissolved.

Recent international operations

Luxembourg has participated in the Eurocorps since 1994, has contributed troops to the UNPROFOR and IFOR missions in former Yugoslavia, and has participated with a small contingent in the current NATO SFOR mission in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The Luxembourg army is integrated into the Multinational Beluga Force under Belgian command. Luxembourg troops have also deployed to Afghanistan, to support ISAF. Luxembourg financially supported international peacekeeping missions during the 1991 Persian Gulf War in Rwanda and, more recently, in Albania. The army has also participated in humanitarian relief missions such as setting up refugee camps for Kurds and providing emergency supplies to Albania.

Luxembourg Army Organization

Luxembourgish soldiers during National Day.
Companies
A - D (Diekirch)
Luxembourg Army - unit locations

The army is under civilian control, with the Grand Duke as Commander-in-Chief. The Minister for Defence, currently Etienne Schneider, oversees army operations. The professional head of the army is the Chief of Defence, currently Romain Mancinelli, who answers to the minister. The Grand Duke and the Chief of Defence are the only generals, with colonels as Deputy Chief of Defence and head of the Military Training Centre.

Until 1999, the army was integrated into the Force Publique (Public Force), which included the Gendarmerie and the Police, until the Gendarmerie was merged with the Grand Ducal Police under a different minister in 2000. The army has been an all-volunteer force since 1967.[8] It has a current strength of approximately 450 professional soldiers—340 enlisted recruits and 100 civilians—with a total budget of $369 million, or 0.9% of GDP.

The Luxembourg Army is a battalion-sized formation with four separate compagnies (companies) under the control of the Centre Militaire (Military Centre), located in the Caserne Grand-Duc Jean barracks on Herrenberg hill near the town of Diekirch. Luxembourg has no navy, as the country is landlocked. It has no air force either, although it does have aircraft.[9]

Compagnie A

Compagnie A, the first of two rifle companies that forms the Luxembourg contingent of the Eurocorps, is normally integrated into the Belgian contribution during operations. As such, it participates in Eurocorps' contribution to the NATO Response Force (entire company) and the EU Battlegroups (one platoon). The company consists of a command element and three reconnaissance platoons of four sections each, plus a command section. Each section is equipped with two armoured M1114 HMMWVs, each armed with a .50 caliber M2 Browning machine gun. The command section has a MAN X40 truck in addition to its pair of HMMWVs.

Compagnie B

Compagnie B, currently known as the Reconversion Service, is the educational unit of the Army, providing various educational courses for personnel to take in preparation for advancement. On 19 May 2011, Company B was redesignated as the Service de Reconversion (Reconversion Service) with the mission to prepare volunteer soldiers for the return to civilian life.[10] The service includes the L'Ecole de l'Armee (Army School). In order to attend this school a soldier must have at least eighteen months of service. The school is divided into two sections:

Compagnie C

Compagnie C, better known as the Compagnie Commandement et Instruction (Staff & Instruction Company), is the main military training unit of the Luxembourg Army, with instruction given in:

This company is also responsible for the army's Elite Sports Section, reserved for sportsmen in the Army. Following their basic training, these soldiers join the Section de Sports d'Elite de l'Armée (SSEA).

Compagnie D

Compagnie D is the second rifle company – it provided Luxembourg's contribution to NATO's ACE Mobile Force (Land) (disbanded in 2002) as the Luxembourg Reconnaissance Company. Luxembourg's participation in various UN, EU, and NATO missions is drawn from Compagnie D, which mirrors Compagnie A in organisation, with a command element and three reconnaissance platoons.

Special Forces of Luxembourg

Luxembourg has two reconnaissance platoons, declared to NATO's Allied Mobile Force. They are typically referred to as Elite Forces, rather than Special Forces.

The Grand Ducal Police has the Unité Spéciale de la Police.

Uniform

Guard in front of the Grand Ducal Palace, Luxembourg in 2009
Guard in front of the Grand Ducal Palace, Luxembourg in 2013

Luxembourg military uniforms are similar to British uniforms, consisting of dress, service or garrison, and field uniforms, often worn with a black beret. Dress uniforms are worn mostly on formal occasions, while service uniforms are worn for daily duty. Luxembourg Army uniforms consist of service and field attire for summer and winter, as well as a dress uniform and mess jacket for officers. The winter service dress uniform, of olive drab wool, consists of a single-breasted coat having patch pockets with flaps, a khaki shirt and tie, and trousers that are usually cuffless. The summer uniform is similar, but made of light tan material. Combat uniforms in olive-green, khaki-drab, or woodland camouflage pattern, worn with the United States PASGT helmet, are virtually indistinguishable from those worn until the 1990s by the United States Army.

Careers

Officers

Those who have completed high school will enter a special thirteen-week basic training in the Army as warrant officers, then attend the military officer school for five years (normally in Brussels, Belgium), before becoming a lieutenant in the Luxembourg Army.

Aspiring officers are sent to the Belgian École Royale Militaire in Brussels, or the Ecole Spéciale Militaire de Saint-Cyr in France. After the first two years at these schools, officer-cadets receive the title of lieutenant.[11]

After leaving military academy, officer candidates become probationary officers for a period of twenty-four months.[11] The probation period consists of specialised military-branch training at a school abroad, and practical service within one of the Army's units. If they succeed during this probation, their appointment as lieutenants is made permanent.[11]

NCOs

Those who have completed five years of high school and have served four months as voluntary soldiers, will do a nine-month stage at the Infantry Training Department of the Belgian Army in Arlon, before becoming sergeants in the Luxembourg Army.

Career Corporals

Those who haven't completed five years of high school may, after three years of service, become career corporals in the Luxembourg Army, if they pass physical and mental tests. They also have to pass a part of the NCO School in Belgium.

Grades and Insignia

Officers

NATO code OF-10 OF-9 OF-8 OF-7 OF-6 OF-5 OF-4 OF-3 OF-2 OF-1 OF(D) Student officer
Luxembourg Luxembourg
(Edit)
No equivalent No equivalent
No equivalent
Général-Commandant en Chef[12] Général-Chef d'État-Major Colonel Lieutenant-Colonel Major Capitaine Premier-Lieutenant Lieutenant Aspirant-Officier

NCOs and enlisted

NATO CodeOR-9OR-8OR-7OR-6OR-5OR-4OR-3OR-2OR-1
Luxembourg Luxembourg
(Edit)
Adjudant-Major Adjudant-Chef Adjudant Sergent-Chef Premier Sergent Sergent Premier Caporal-Chef Caporal-Chef Caporal de première classe Caporal Premier Soldat-Chef Soldat-Chef Soldat première classe Soldat

Equipment

Weapons

Steyr AUG A1.
Luxembourgish HMMWV on national day.
Luxembourg roundel
A NATO E-3 with the roundel of Luxembourg painted on its tail.

Vehicles

Aircraft

NATO acquired eighteen E-3A AWACS aircraft and registered them in Luxembourg, since the country had no air force. The first E-3 was delivered in January 1982. Following one loss in July 1996, there are seventeen E-3As currently in the inventory. The aircraft are registered to Luxembourg, flown by NATO pilots, and based at the NATO Air Base Geilenkirchen.

Aircraft Origin Type Variant In service Notes
AWACS
Boeing E-3 Sentry United States early warning and control E-3A 17[20] under NATO command – modified version of the Boeing 707-300
Transport
Airbus A400M Atlas European Union tactical airlift on order 1, in cooperation with the Belgian Air Component[20]

Retired

Aircraft Origin Type Variant In service Notes
Piper PA-18 Super Cub United States Trainer, Liaison aircraft L-18C 3 in service from 1952 to 1968.[21]

Communications Equipment

Former Equipment

Notable Soldiers

Footnotes

  1. Defence Expenditures of NATO Countries (1990-2011)
  2. "La Milice (1817-1841)" [The Militia (1817-1841)]. Lëtzebuerger Arméi (in French). Armée luxembourgeoise. 2017. Retrieved 10 March 2017.
  3. 1 2 "Le Contingent Fédéral (1841-1867)" [The Federal Contingent (1841-1867)]. Lëtzebuerger Arméi (in French). Armée luxembourgeoise. 2017. Retrieved 10 March 2017.
  4. "Le Corps de Chasseurs Luxembourgeois (1867-1881)" [The Light Infantry of Luxembourg (1867-1881)]. Lëtzebuerger Arméi (in French). Armée luxembourgeoise. 2017. Retrieved 10 March 2017.
  5. "Le Corps des Gendarmes et Volontaires (1881-1944)" [The Corps of Gendarmes and Volunteers (1881-1944)]. Lëtzebuerger Arméi (in French). Armée luxembourgeoise. 2017. Retrieved 11 March 2017.
  6. 1 2 3 "Les luxembourgeois de la "Brigade PIRON"" [The Luxembourgers of the "PIRON Brigade"]. Lëtzebuerger Arméi (in French). Armée luxembourgeoise. 2017. Retrieved 11 March 2017.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 Trausch, Gilbert (1992). Histoire du Luxembourg. Hatier. p. 186. ISBN 2-218-03855-2.
  8. "Mémorial A, 1967, No. 43" (PDF) (in French). Service central de législation. Retrieved 11 September 2006.
  9. "Luxembourg Defence Information - Luxembourg Armed Forces - Luxembourg Army - European Defence Information". www.armedforces.co.uk. Retrieved 2016-11-30.
  10. "Service de Reconversion". Armee.lu. Armée luxembourgeoise. Archived from the original on July 14, 2014.
  11. 1 2 3 "Officiers de carrière: Engagement – Formation – Nomination". Armee.lu. Armée luxembourgeoise / Gouvernment du Grand-Duché de Luxembourg. Archived from the original on July 14, 2014.
  12. Rank reserved to HRH the Grand Duke in his quality of Commander in Chief. Not officially included in the NATO ranks insigna list.
  13. PICTURE http://www.armyrecognition.com/europe/Belgique/exhibition/Active_Lion/images/Active_Lion_2005_Belgium_Army_10.JPG
  14. "Looking for luxembourg soldiers - Page 8". Retrieved 23 October 2014.
  15. PICTURE http://www.armyrecognition.com/europe/Belgique/exhibition/Active_Lion/images/Active_Lion_2005_Belgium_Army_08.JPG
  16. Archived July 14, 2014, at the Wayback Machine.
  17. http://www.wort.lu/wort/web/letzebuerg/artikel/2010/06/98079/neue-dienstwagen-fuer-die-polizei.php Archived February 24, 2012, at the Wayback Machine.
  18. "Commercialmotor.com - Scania gets its call-up papers for over 100 military trucks! Biglorryblog salutes a Swedish 8x8 bruiser...". Retrieved 23 October 2014.
  19. Archived July 2, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.
  20. 1 2 "World Air Forces 2015 pg. 24". Flightglobal Insight. 2015. Retrieved 2 October 2015.
  21. "Info on retired Luxembourg Army Aviation aircraft (Piper Super Cubs) active during the 1950s and 1960s". 11 January 2013. Retrieved 11 January 2013.
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