Chief of the Defence Staff (France)
The French Republic Chief of the Defence Staff Chef d'État-Major des Armées | |
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E.M.A Insignia Insigne de l'État-Major des armées | |
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Ministry of Defence | |
Member of | Chiefs of Staff Committee |
Reports to | Minister of Defence |
Seat | Paris, France |
Nominator | Minister of Defence |
Appointer |
President of the Republic Require Prime Minister's countersignature |
Term length | No fixed term |
Formation | 25th Chief since April 28, 1948 |
First holder | Jean-Louis Borel (1874-1875) |
Website | http://www.defense.gouv.fr |
French Armed Forces |
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Components |
Ranks |
History |
The Chief of the Defence Staff (French: Chef d'État-Major des Armées) (acronym: C.E.M.A) is the chief of defence of the French military.
C.E.M.A is currently held by Général Pierre de Villiers.
Functions
The Chef d'État-Major des Armées (English: Chief of the Defense Staff; French: CEMA) is, in virtue of decree dispositions of July 15, 2009, under the authority of the President of France and the French government, responsible for the use of forces and assuming the command of all military operations. CEMA is the military counselar of the government. CEMA has authority over the:
- Chief of Staff of the French Army (French: Chef d'État-Major de l'Armée de Terre, CEMAT)
- Chief of Staff of the French Air Force (French: Chef d'État-Major de l'Armée de l'Air, CEMAA)
- Chief of Staff of the French Navy (French: Chef d'État-Major de la Marine, CEMM)
- Direction générale de la Gendarmerie Nationale (French: Direction Générale de la Gendarmerie nationale (DGGN)
- Directors and general chiefs of various inter-arm institutions that are attached to his command structure. CEMA is the authority of the l'État-Major des armées.
CEMA responsibilities consist of:
- The inter-arm organizations and the general organization of the armed forces
- The expression of the need in material of human resources of the armed forces, the inter-arm institutions, and the definition of the ensemble format of the armed forces.
- The preparation and condition assignments of recruiting in the armed forces
- Support of the armed forces ( CEMA determines the general organizations and objectives. CEMA assures the operational maintenance in condition of all equipments. CEMA determines the inter-arm needs of various material infrastructures and that of the armed fores while verifying status of operability)
Responsibilities and authorities
The Chief of the Defence Staff (C.E.M.A) of the armed forces assumed two principal functions:
- Assisting the Minister of Defence in the preparation and organisation of the armed forces
- under the authority of the President and the Government, maintaining overall command of military operations and proposing the military measures to adopt (general strategy).
C.E.M.A is responsible for :
- Conduct of operations : plans of use, general articulation of forces, distribution of operational means between theatre commanders (over whom he has full authority)
- Forces preparation : CEMA is in check of forces aptitude in missions completion and has a permanent right of inspection over these forces;
- Future Preparation : planning and programming of military capacities. Oversees in effect of coherence in means of the armed forces and participates to the preparation and various executions of associated military and defence budgets.
- Inter-arm organization: Oversees the coherence of the armed forces organization
- Military relations with foreign militaries: CEMA directs French foreign military missions in foreign theatres, organizes the participation of the armed forces in regards to military cooperations, following international mandated negotiations and represents France at the varuous military committees of international organizations.
Directly under the CEMA authority are :
- Chief of Staff of the French Army (CEMAT)
- Chief of Staff of the French Air Force (CEMAA)
- Chief of Staff of the French Navy (CEMM)
- Direction générale de la Gendarmerie Nationale (DGGN)
- The Inspection of the Armed Forces (IDA)
- Superior commanders in the collective and overseas territorial departments and the commanders of the French forces in foreign areas (COMSUP and COMFOR), the général officers of the defense security zones (OGZDS) and the military departmental deleguates (DMD)
- Inter-arm institutions:
- Direction du renseignement militaire (DRM) – Directorate of Military Intelligence
- French Special Operations Command (French: Commandement des Opérations Spéciales (COS))
- état-major interarmées de force et d'entraînement (EMIA-FE)
- Direction centrale du service de santé des armées (DCSSA) – Military Medical Services
- Direction centrale du service des essences des armées (DCSEA) – Military Fuel Services
- Direction interarmées des réseaux d'infrastructures et des systèmes d'information (DIRISI)– Inter-arm infrastructure and Information Systems Directorate
- enseignement militaire supérieur.
Chefs d'État-Major des armées
Chef d'État-Major général de l'Armée (1874-1914)
- Général de division Jean-Louis Borel : 1874-1875
- Général de division Henri Gresley : 1875-1877
- Général de division Marie-Joseph François de Miribel : 1878-1879
- Général de division Léopold Davout (1829-1904) : 1879-1880
- Général de division Omer Arsène Blot : 1880-1881
- Général de division Achille Ernest Vuillemot : 1882-1883
- Général de division Amédée de Cools : 1884-1885
- Général de division Savin de Larclause : 1886-1887
- Général de division Charles Haillot : 1888-1890
- Général de division Joseph de Miribel : 1891-1893
- Général de division Raoul Le Mouton de Boisdeffre : 1894-1898
- Général de division Paul Marie Brault : 1899-1901
- Général de division Jean Pendezec : 1901-1905
- Général de division Jean Brun (général) : 1906-1909
- Général de division Édouard Laffon de Ladebat : 1910-1911
- Général de division Auguste Dubail : 1911
- Général de division Joseph Joffre : 1912-1914
Commandant en chef des armées françaises (1915-1918)
While non official, the term Generalissimo or « French: Généralissime » was employed since 1914 to designate the individual who in reality was « Commandant en Chef des Armées du Nord et du Nord-Est » (English: Commander-in-Chief of the armies of the North and North-East). The term would be made official in 1915 when Joffre was also given command over the Salonika front (a degree of authority not enjoyed by his successors). The rank and post was successively occupied by three generals during World War I: Joseph Joffre, who occupied the rank and functions from August 1914 without bearing the official title, then Robert Nivelle and Philippe Pétain.
Général Ferdinand Foch was the Assistant Commander-in-Chief of the Northern Zone under Joseph Joffre in autumn 1914; this role later crystallised into command of French Army Group North, a position which Foch held until December 1916. Subsequently, Foch became Supreme Allied Commander on the Western Front with the title Généralissime in 1918 then was designated as « Commandant en Chef des Armées Alliées » (English:Commander-in-Chief of Allied Forces) starting May 14, 1918.[1] Foch was promoted to Marshal of France prior the planning of the offensive that led to the Armistice of 11 November 1918. Following the armistice, Marshal Ferdinand Foch was elevated to the diginity of the Marshal of Great Britain and Poland.
N# | Portrait | Rank | Name | Service Branch | Command Tenure | Minister of War | President of France | ||
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Tenure From | Tenure Until | Duration of Teunure | |||||||
17. | Generalissimo Général de division[2] (elevated to the diginity of Maréchal de France) | Joseph Joffre | French Army | December 2, 1915 | December 17, 1916 | 1 year, 15 days | Joseph Gallieni Pierre Roques Louis Lyautey | Raymond Poincaré | |
18. | Général de division | Robert Nivelle | French Army | December 17, 1916 | May 15, 1917 | 149 days | Louis Lyautey Lucien Lacaze Paul Painlevé | Raymond Poincaré | |
19. | Général de division (elevated to the dignity of Maréchal de France) | Philippe Pétain | French Army | May 17, 1917 | March 28, 1918 | 315 days | Paul Painlevé Georges Clemenceau | Raymond Poincaré |
Commandant en chef des Armées alliées (1918-1920)
N# | Portrait | Rank | Name | Service Branch | Command Tenure | Minister of War | President of France | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tenure From | Tenure Until | Duration of Teunure | |||||||
20. | Marshal of France Supreme Allied Commander on the Western Front with title bearing Généralissime (British Field Marshal 22nd Royal First Honorary Colonel Marshal of Poland following the war) | Ferdinand Foch | French Army | March 28, 1918 | January 10, 1920 | 1 year, 288days | Georges Clemenceau | Raymond Poincaré |
Chef d'État-Major général des armées françaises (1920-1940)
N# | Portrait | Rank | Name | Service Branch | Command Tenure | Prime Minister | President of France | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tenure From | Tenure Until | Duration of Teunure | |||||||
21. | Général d'armée | Edmond Buat | French Army | June 24, 1920 | December 30, 1923 | 3 years, 189 days | Alexandre Millerand Georges Leygues Aristide Briand Raymond Poincaré |
Paul Deschanel Alexandre Millerand | |
22. | Generalissimo | Marie-Eugène Debeney | French Army | January 1, 1924 | 1930 | 6 years | Raymond Poincaré Frédéric François-Marsal Édouard Herriot Paul Painlevé Aristide Briand André Tardieu |
Alexandre Millerand Gaston Doumergue | |
23. | Général d'armée | Maxime Weygand | French Army | 1930 | 1935 | 5 years | Camille Chautemps André Tardieu Théodore Steeg Pierre Laval |
Gaston Doumergue | |
24. | Général d'armée | Maurice Gamelin | French Army | 1935 | 1940 | 5 years | Pierre Laval Albert Sarraut Léon Blum Camille Chautemps Édouard Daladier Paul Reynaud |
Gaston Doumergue Paul Doumer Albert Lebrun |
Chef d'État-Major général des forces armées (1948-1950)
N# | Portrait | Rank | Name | Service Branch | Command Tenure | Prime Minister | President of France | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tenure From | Tenure Until | Duration of Teunure | |||||||
25. | Général de division | Henri Zeller | French Army | April 28, 1948 | March 31, 1950 | 1 year, 337 days | Robert Schuman André Marie Henri Queuille Georges Bidault |
Vincent Auriol |
Chef d'État-Major combiné des forces armées (1950-1953)
N# | Portrait | Rank | Name | Service Branch | Command Tenure | Prime Minister | President of France | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tenure From | Tenure Until | Duration of Teunure | |||||||
26. | Général de division | Henri Zeller | French Army | April 1, 1950 | August 20, 1951 | 1 year, 144 days | Henri Queuille René Pleven |
Vincent Auriol | |
27. | Air Force General 1st Air Force General in this post |
Charles Léchères | French Air Force | August 20, 1951 | August 20, 1952 | 1 year, 0 days | Henri Queuille René Pleven Edgar Faure Antoine Pinay |
Vincent Auriol | |
28. | Général d'armée (elevated to the dignity of Maréchal de France) |
Alphonse Juin | French Army | August 20, 1952 | August 17, 1953 | 362 days | Antoine Pinay René Mayer Joseph Laniel |
Vincent Auriol |
Chef d'État-Major des forces armées (1953-1958)
N# | Portrait | Rank | Name | Service Branch | Command Tenure | Prime Minister | President of France | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tenure From | Tenure Until | Duration of Teunure | |||||||
29. | Général d'armée | Paul Ély | French Army | August 18, 1953 | June 3, 1954 | 289 days | Joseph Laniel | Vincent Auriol René Coty | |
30. | Général d'armée | Augustin Guillaume | French Army | June 4, 1954 | February 28, 1956 | 1 year, 269 days | Joseph Laniel Pierre Mendès France Edgar Faure Guy Mollet |
René Coty | |
31. | Général d'armée | Paul Ély | French Army | March 2, 1956 | May 16, 1958 | 2 years, 75 days | Guy Mollet Maurice Bourgès-Maunoury Félix Gaillard Pierre Pflimlin |
René Coty |
Chef d'État-Major général des armées (1958-1961)
N# | Portrait | Rank | Name | Service Branch | Command Tenure | Prime Minister | President of France | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tenure From | Tenure Until | Duration of Teunure | |||||||
32. | Général d'armée | Henri Lorillot | French Army | May 17, 1958 | June 8, 1958 | 22 days | Pierre Pflimlin Charles de Gaulle |
René Coty | |
33. | Général d'armée | Paul Ély | French Army | June 9, 1958 | February 11, 1959 | 247 days | Charles de Gaulle Michel Debré |
René Coty Charles de Gaulle | |
34. | Général d'armée | Gaston Lavaud | French Army | February 25, 1959 | April 10, 1961 | 2 years, 44 days | Michel Debré | Charles de Gaulle |
Chef d'État-Major interarmées (1961-1962)
N# | Portrait | Rank | Name | Service Branch | Command Tenure | Prime Minister | President of France | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tenure From | Tenure Until | Duration of Teunure | |||||||
35 | Air Force General 2nd Air Force General in this post |
André Martin | French Air Force | April 11, 1961 | July 15, 1962 | 1 year, 95 days | Michel Debré Georges Pompidou |
Charles de Gaulle |
Chef d'État-Major des armées (1962-Present)
See also
- Jean de Lattre de Tassigny
- Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the US counterpart
- Chief of Federal Armed Forces Staff, the German counterpart
- Chief of the Defence Staff (United Kingdom), UK counterpart
- Chief of Staff of the French Army (French: Chef d'État-Major de l'Armée de Terre, CEMAT)
- Chief of Staff of the French Air Force (French: Chef d'État-Major de l'Armée de l'Air, CEMAA)
- Chief of Staff of the French Navy (French: Chef d'État-Major de la Marine, CEMM)
- Direction générale de la Gendarmerie Nationale (French: Direction Générale de la Gendarmerie nationale (DGGN))
- French Special Operations Command (French: Commandement des Opérations Spéciales (COS))
- Chief of the Military Staff of the President of the Republic
- Head of the Prime Minister's military cabinet
- Head of the Minister of Defence's military cabinet
References
- ↑ Lexique des termes employés en 1914-1918
- ↑ The highest rank then
- ↑ « Jean-Louis Georgelin nommé chef d'État-Major des armées ».
- ↑ « L’amiral Guillaud, nouveau chef d’État-Major des armées », sur le site defense.gouv.fr.
- ↑ Mesures d'ordre individuel.
Sources
- This page is a translation of fr:Chef d'état-major des armées.
- (French) Décret N° 2009-869. Retrieved on 2013-07-10.