United States Army
The
Army is the branch of the
United States armed forces which has primary responsibility for land-based military operations. Historically, the Army was formed before the establishment of the
United States, on
June 14,
1775, to meet the demands of the
American Revolutionary War.

Components of the U.S. Army
The U.S. Army has three components:\n* The Regular Army\n* The Army Reserve\n* The National Guard of the several States and territories
All three components have taken part in every war of the United States from World War I onward. By design, the use of the Army Reserve and National Guard has increased after the Vietnam War. Reserve and Guard units took part in the Gulf War, peacekeeping in Kosovo, and the 2003 invasion of Iraq.
Structure of the U.S. Army
Officially, a member of the U.S. Army is called a 'Soldier,' with a capital letter.
The U.S. Army is structured roughly: \n:#army group - when required \n:#field army\n:#corps, which consists of two or more divisions and usually has an armored cavalry regiment in support.\n:#division\n:#brigade or group: Most American Army divisions are organized in three or more brigades. (See also regiment for cavalry units.)\n:#battalion or squadron: Infantry, artillery and armor units are organized into battalions. Cavalry units are formed into squadrons. A battalion-sized unit is commanded by a lieutenant colonel.\n:#company or battery or troop: Artillery units are formed into batteries. Cavalry units are formed into troops. A company-sized unit is usually led by a captain.\n:#platoon. Platoons are usually led by a first or second lieutenant.\n:#squad or section\n:#crew or fire team. Fire teams usually consist of four Soldiers: a fire team leader, a grenadier, and two riflemen.
The Army is organized by function. Combat forces include Infantry, Armor, Cavalry, and Special Operations Forces. Combat support troops include Artillery, Army Air Corps, Army Corps of Engineerss, Army Quatermaster Corps, Army Medical Corps, Army Transportation, Army Ordnance Corps, Adjutant General's Corps, Signal Corps. Support troops include the Judge Advocate Generals Corps.
Rank Structure
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\nThe Officer Corps provides leadership and managerial functions, and is composed of \n*Company Grade officers \n**Second Lieutenant (2LT; pay grade O-1) - gold bar, \n**First Lieutenant (1LT; pay grade O-2) - silver bar, \n**Captain (CPT; pay grade O-3) - two silver bars, \n*Field Grade officers \n**Major (MAJ; pay grade O-4)- gold oak leaf, \n**Lieutenant Colonel (LTC; pay grade O-5)- silver oak leaf, \n**Colonel (COL; pay grade O-6)- silver eagle, \n*and General officers \n**Brigadier General (BG; pay grade O-7)- one star, \n**Major General (MG; pay grade O-8)- two stars, \n**Lieutenant General (LTG; pay grade O-9)- three stars, \n**General (GEN; pay grade O-10) - four stars\n**General of the Army - five stars in a pentagon \n** General of the Armies - six stars, Held by George Washington, John Pershing and Ulysses S Grant
There are several sources of commissioned officers:\n* The U.S. Military Academy at West Point, New York commissions its graduates as second lieutenants in the Regular Army. Graduates of other military academies of the United States may elect to be commissioned in the Army\n* Enlisted soldiers who successfully pass Officer Candidate Schools (OCS)\n* College graduates who underwent Army Reserve Officer Training Corps courses at a four-year university\n* Lawyers, doctors, nurses, veterinarians, and chaplains may be directly commissioned into their respective corps
Officers receive a commission assigning them to the Officer Corps from the President. All newly commissioned officers receive a commission as a reserve officer. Upon attaining the rank of Major, they can be appointed into the Regular Army with the advice and consent of the United States Senate. Commissioned officers are assigned to a branch of service until they reach the rank of Brigadier General, where it is assumed that they are competent to command soldiers of all branches.
Once commissioned, an officer attends several levels of professional education, starting with branch qualification in their respective branch and concluding in Command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. Professional education is required for promotion at certain grades.
The Warrant Officer is a single track specialty officer. Initially appointed an officer by the Secretary of the Army via a warrant, he/she is commissioned by the President upon promotion to the rank of Chief Warrant Officer Two (CW2). The warrant officer is managed as a company grade officer, but receives limited field grade privilege upon promotion to Chief Warrant Officer Four (CW4).
The primary source for Warrant Officers is the U.S. Army Warrant Officer Candidate School at Fort Rucker, Alabama.
The Non-Commissioned Officer Corps (or NCO Corps) is the first line of leadership for the enlisted members of the Army, and includes the ranks of \n*Corporal (CPL; pay grade E-4) (two stripes up), \n*Sergeant (SGT; pay grade E-5)(three stripes up), \n*Staff Sergeant (SSG; pay grade E-6)(three stripes up and one down), \n*Sergeant First Class (SFC; pay grade E-7) and Platoon Sergeant (PSG; pay grade E-7) (three stripes up and two down), \n*Master Sergeant (MSG; pay grade E-8) (three stripes up and three down), \n*First Sergeant (1SG; pay grade E-8) (which holds the same enlisted pay grade as Master Sergeant, but which carries extra administrative duties - three stripes up and three down with a lozenge in the center), \n*Sergeant Major (SGM; pay grade E-9) (three stripes up and three down with a star in the center), \n*Command Sergeant Major (CSM; pay grade E-9) (three stripes up and three down with a wreathed star in the center) \n*and Sergeant Major of the Army (of whom there is only one, and who advises the Chief of Staff of the Army on matters relating to Enlisted personnel - three stripes up and three down with a centered eagle accompanied with two stars).
Training for NCOs takes place at any of the various NCO training centers around the world.
The quality of the NCO has built the reputation of the United States Army. Until relatively recent history, most countries depended upon their officer corps to micromanage strategy, tactics and virtually every other aspect of military operations. With the development of the NCO Corps, the United States Army took a giant step toward utilizing the skills, intelligence, adaptability and independence of its citizens during times of conflict. The confidence and esteem in which the Officer Corps holds the NCOs which serve in the United States Army is based upon hard-won combat experience. This experience has repeatedly shown that rank is no indicator of leadership ability, and that leaders will emerge during times of hardship and conflict.
The lowest enlisted ranks are: \n*Private (PV1; pay grade E-1) (no rank insignia), \n*Private Enlisted Grade 2 (PV2; pay grade E-2) (one chevron pointing up), \n*Private First Class (PFC; pay grade E-3) (one stripe up and a curved stripe (a rocker below), \n*and Specialist (SPC; pay grade E-4) (which is the same Enlisted Grade as Corporal, but which requires technical leadership skills, as opposed to the combat leadership skills required of corporal -a dark green patch with an eagle centered). A Specialist ranks below a corporal in terms of chain of command.
Training for enlisted soldiers usually consists of Basic Training, and Advanced Individual Training in their primary Military Occupational Specialty (MOS) at any of the numerous MOS training facilities around the world.
All members of the Army must take an oath upon being sworn in as members, swearing (or affirming) to "protect the Constitution of the United States from all enemies, both foreign and domestic." This emphasis on the defense of the United States Constitution illustrates the concern of the framers that the military be subordinate to legitimate civilian authority.\n \nThe civilian executive is the Secretary of the Army who heads the United States Department of the Army, formerly called the Secretary of War who headed the United States Department of War or the War Office for short, at the founding of the Republic.\n
Leadership
The professional head of the United States Army is the Army Chief of Staff. This position is filled by a four star general who sits on the Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee. As with the other members of that committee, the Army Chief of Staff is not in the direct chain of command. His function is administrative and policy making. The current Army Chief of Staff is General Peter Schoomaker.
The most senior Army generals who are directly in the chain of command are those who head up the regional joint commands around the world. An example is General John Abazaid, CINCCENTCOM, the Commander-in-Chief Central Command. Three star positions in the Army include some deputy commanders-in-chief of the regional commands, heads of the army sections of those commands, and the general officers commanding of corps.
Major Commands of the United States Army
\nMajor Commands of the US Army
\n\n| Major Command and Commanders | Location of Headquarters | \n
\n| Intelligence & Security Command (INSCOM)-Major General John F. Kimmons | Fort Belvoir, Virginia |
\n| Criminal Investigation Command (CID)-Major General Donald J. Ryder | Fort Belvoir, Virginia |
\n| Corps of Engineers (USACE)-Lieutenant General Robert B. Flowers | Washington, D.C. |
\n| Medical Command (MEDCOM)-Lieutenant General James B. Peake | Fort Sam Houston, Texas |
\n| Army Materiel Command (AMC)-General Paul J. Kern | Alexandria, Virginia |
\n| Training & Doctrine Command (TRADOC)-Lieutenant General Larry R. Jordan | Fort Monroe, Virginia |
\n| Forces Command (FORSCOM)-General Larry R. Ellis | Fort McPherson, Georgia |
\n| US Army South (ARSO)-Major General Alfred A. Valenzuela | Fort Sam Houston, Texas |
\n| Special Operations Command (ARSOC)-Lieutenant General Philip R. Kesinger | Fort Bragg, North Carolina |
\n| Military Traffic Management Command (MTMC)-Major General Ann E. Dunwoody | Fort Eustis, Alexandria, Virginia |
\n| Space & Missile Defense Command (SMDC)-Lieutenant General Joseph M. Consumano, Jr. | Arlington, Virginia |
\n| 8th US Army (EUSA)-Lieutenant General Charles C. Campbell | Yongsan Army Garrison, Seoul |
\n| Army Pacific Command (ARPAC)-Lieutenant General James L. Campbell | Fort Shafter, Hawaii |
\n| US Army Europe, 7th Army (AREUR)-General B. B. Bell | Campbell Barracks, Heidelberg, Germany |
\n| Army Central Command (ARCENT)-Lieutenant General David D. McKiernan | Fort McPherson, Georgia |
\n| Army Reserve Command (ARC)-Lieutenant General James R. Helmly | Fort McPherson, Georgia |
\n| Army National Guard (ARNG)-Lieutenant General Roger G. Schultz | Washington, D.C. |
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Formations of the United States Army
First Army "First In Deed" (Reserve)
- 78th "Lightning" Division, Edison, NJ (Training Support)\n::1st Brigade (Training Support)\n::2nd Brigade (Training Support)\n::3rd Brigade (Training Support)\n::4th Brigade (Training Support)\n::5th Brigade "We Dare" (Training Support)
- 85th "Custer" Division (Training Support)\n::1st Brigade (Training Support)\n::2nd Brigade (Training Support)\n::3rd Brigade (Training Support)\n::4th Brigade (Training Support)
\n:87th Division "Golden Acorn", Birmingham, AL (Training Support)\n::1st Brigade (Training Support)\n::2nd Brigade (Training Support)\n::3rd Brigade (Training Support)\n::4th Brigade (Training Support)\n::5th Brigade (Training Support)
- Army Units\n::4th Cavalry Brigade (Training Support)\n::157th Infantry Brigade (Training Support)\n::188th Infantry Brigade (Training Support)\n::205th Infantry Brigade (Separate) (Light)
Third Army: Army Central Command (ARCENT)\n:C/JTF-Kuwait \n:ARCENT Kuwait \n:ARCENT Saudi \n:ARCENT Qatar \n:Army Prepositioned Stock (APS-3) \n:Army Prepositioned Stock (APS-5)
Fifth Army (Reserve)
- 7th Infantry Division "Bayonets", Carson, CO (Light)\n::39th Infantry Brigade (Light) (Separate)\n::41st Infantry Brigade (Light) (Separate)\n::45th Infantry Brigade (Light) (Separate)
- 75th Division, Houston, TX (Training Support)\n::1st Brigade (Training Support)\n::2nd Brigade (Training Support)\n::3rd Brigade (Training Support)\n::4th Brigade (Training Support)
- 91st Division, Houston, TX (Training Support)\n::1st Brigade (Training Support)\n::2nd Brigade (Training Support)\n::3rd Brigade (Training Support)\n::4th Brigade (Training Support)
- Army Units\n::5th Armored Brigade (Training Support)\n::120th Infantry Brigade (Training Support)\n::166th Aviation Brigade (Training Support)\n::191st Infantry Brigade (Training Support)
Seventh Army: United States Army Europe
- V Corps, Heidelberg, Germany\n::1st Infantry Division ("The Big Red One")\n::1st Armored Divsion-- Wiesbaden, Germany
Eighth Army: Korea\n::2nd Infantry Division ("Indian Head" Division) \n::25th Infantry Division (Light) ("Tropic Lightning")
- I Corps, Fort Lewis, Washington ("America's Corps")\n:::3rd Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division (Light)\n:::1st Brigade, 25th Infantry Division (Light)
- III Corps, Fort Hood, Texas\n::1st Cavalry Division\n::4th Infantry Division (Mechanized)\n:--III Corps U.S. Army National Guard\n::7th Infantry Division (Light) ("Bayonet" Division)\n \n:XVIII Airborne Corps\n::3rd Infantry Division (Mechanized) ("Rock of the Marne")\n:::3rd Brigade ("Sledgehammer").
- 10th Mountain Division (Light)\n:::1st Brigade\n:::2nd Brigade\n:::27th Brigade (Orions)-- New York National Guard\n::82nd Airborne Division\n:::82nd Aviation Brigade
- 325th Airborne Infantry Regiment\n::::2nd Battalion 325th Airborne Infantry Regiment \n::::3rd Battalion 325th Airborne Infantry Regiment \n:::504th Parachute Infantry Regiment \n::::1st Battalion 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment\n::::3rd Battalion 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment
- 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment \n::::1st Battalion 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment\n::::2nd Battalion 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment\n::::3rd Battalion 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment
- 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) (Screaming Eagles)-- Fort Campbell, Kentucky
\n::XVIII Airborne Corps Artillery\n:::18th Field Artillery Brigade
- 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment
- 16th Military Police Brigade (Airborne)
- 18th Aviation Brigade (Airborne)
\n::20th Engineer Brigade (Combat)(Airborne)
- 35th Signal Brigade (Airborne)
\n:::108th Air Defense Artillery Brigade
- 229th Aviation Regiment (Attack)\n::::1-229th Attack Helicopter Battalion
- 3-229th Attack Helicopter Regiment
- 525th Military Intelligence Brigade (Airborne)
See also
\n* List of U.S. Army bases\n*
United States armed forces\n*
Special Operations Forces\n*
Comparative military ranks
External link
\n*Official website\n*Army Decorations - for Valor or Service:
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Category:United States armed forcesCategory:U.S. Dept. of Defense\n\nCategory:United States Army