Difference between revisions of "Community Defence Forces"
(→Combined Staff: Changed name to Strategic command) |
(→Land units) |
||
Line 16: | Line 16: | ||
Combat units in the land forces are organized on the following basis: | Combat units in the land forces are organized on the following basis: | ||
Platoon 20-40 soldiers Vice Officer | Platoon 20-40 soldiers Vice Officer | ||
− | Company 50-150 soldiers Chief Officer | + | Company 50-150 soldiers Officer or Chief Officer |
− | Battalion 300-1000 soldiers Vice Commander | + | Battalion 300-1000 soldiers Chief Officer or Vice Commander |
Brigade 1000-4000 Commander | Brigade 1000-4000 Commander | ||
Division 8000-20000 soldiers Vice Marshal | Division 8000-20000 soldiers Vice Marshal | ||
Line 24: | Line 24: | ||
The fully mobilised army consists of: | The fully mobilised army consists of: | ||
3 100/0 divisions, each of: | 3 100/0 divisions, each of: | ||
− | 3 field, 1 | + | 3 field (infantry or armoured), 1 artillery, 1 engineering, 1 support brigades |
3 80/20 divisions, each of: | 3 80/20 divisions, each of: | ||
− | 2 field, 1 | + | 2 field, 1 artillery, 1 engineering, 1 support + 1 Civil Guard brigades |
3 60/40 divisions, each of: | 3 60/40 divisions, each of: | ||
− | 1 field, 1 | + | 1 field, 1 artillery, 1 engineering, 1 support + 2 Civil Guard brigades |
5 10/90 divisions, each: | 5 10/90 divisions, each: | ||
− | + | Civil Guard: 3 infantry, 1 engineering, 1 support brigades | |
+ | fulltime soldiers: artillery brigade + armoured units attached to Civil Guard | ||
==Air units== | ==Air units== |
Revision as of 18:27, 30 August 2005
The Community Defence Forces are the all-environment armed forces of Sober Thought. Service in peacetime is voluntary.
Contents
Strategic command
The nominal Commander-in-Chief of the CDF is the Community Conscience of Sober Thought. In practice, control is exercised by the Combined Staff containing the five chief marshals of the CDF. The five positions are Chief of the Combined Staff, Deputy Chief, Chief of the Land Staff, Chief of the Air Staff and Chief of the Naval Staff, and only the latter three must have had their main military experience serving with the environment they represent.
The combined staff is tasked with recruiting, training and organizing troops. It also makes strategic plans, then assigns the operational plans to the command, formation or unit it has designated to execute it. The chief of each of the three environments have only a support role and do not interfere with operations directly.
Operational Command
It is a central principle of the CDF that those who make operational plans should execute them. Therefore, the subordinate commanders of the Combined Staff actually make the detailed plans and put them into practice so that staff errors are borne by themselves in combat.
As an integrated armed forces, operational commands may combine air, sea and land elements without specific distinction. Task forces of all sizes are quickly created and all elements fall under the command of a single person. Furthermore, after the House of the Provinces has voted to make it so, the provincial Civil Guards may be directly integrated into the CDF for tactical or strategic purposes.
Land units
(As conceived when the nation's population was still counted in millions rather than billions)
Combat units in the land forces are organized on the following basis:
Platoon 20-40 soldiers Vice Officer Company 50-150 soldiers Officer or Chief Officer Battalion 300-1000 soldiers Chief Officer or Vice Commander Brigade 1000-4000 Commander Division 8000-20000 soldiers Vice Marshal Corps 20000-60000 soldiers Marshal
The fully mobilised army consists of:
3 100/0 divisions, each of: 3 field (infantry or armoured), 1 artillery, 1 engineering, 1 support brigades 3 80/20 divisions, each of: 2 field, 1 artillery, 1 engineering, 1 support + 1 Civil Guard brigades 3 60/40 divisions, each of: 1 field, 1 artillery, 1 engineering, 1 support + 2 Civil Guard brigades 5 10/90 divisions, each: Civil Guard: 3 infantry, 1 engineering, 1 support brigades fulltime soldiers: artillery brigade + armoured units attached to Civil Guard
Air units
(As conceived when the nation's population was still counted in hundreds of millions)
Air units are organized on the following basis:
Flight 2-4 aircraft under an Officer Squadron 6-12 aircraft under a Chief Officer Wing 20-40 aircraft under a Vice Commander Group 40-100 aircraft under a Commander Division 100-150 aircraft under a Vice Marshal Air Force 150+ aircraft under a Marshal
The following squadrons are organized:
1 airborne warning and control, 6 electronic warfare planes 3 maritime patrol, 27 reconnaissance-bomber planes 4 strategic transport, 24 jets carrying 7200 soldiers 10 tactical transport, 80 propellered aircraft carrying 8000 soldiers 10 helicopter transport, 100 transport helicopters carrying 50 soldiers 12 fighter, 120 jets for combat air patrol, ground attack, air defence 2 bomber, 18 jet bombers
In addition, the land formations directly incorporate the following air squadrons:
5 helicopter attack, 60 gunnery helicopters 15 utility helicopter, 180 attack-light transport helicopters 5 ground attack, 60 ground support planes
In addition, the naval units directly incorporate the following helicopter units:
3 composite squadrons of 36 on 3 assault ships under Chief Officers 1 squadron-equivalent of 12 on 6 supply ships under Officers 1 composite flight of 4 on the troop ship under an Officer 1 composite flight of 4 on the missile cruiser under an Officer 1 squadron-equivalent of 6 on three missile destroyers under Officers 1 squadron-equivalent of 15 on 15 frigates under Vice Officers
(As conceived when the nation's population was still counted in hundreds of millions)
Combat Ships
1 missile cruiser fleet flag ship, 11 000 tonnes, 550 crew under a Commander 3 missile destroyers squadron flag ship, 5 400 tonnes, 320 crew under a Vice Commander 15 anti-submarine frigates, 4 000 tonnes, 210 crew under a Chief Officer 12 minesweeping boats, 800 tonnes, 30 crew under an Officer 15 attack boats, 400 tonnes, 35 crew under an Officer
Combined Operations and Support Ships
1 troopship strategic transport of 4 000 soldiers, 540 crew under a Commander 3 assault ships amphibious landing, 250 soldiers, 100 sailors and 100 air crew under Vice Commander 6 supply ships strategic supply (food, fuel, ammunition, stores), 100 crew under a Chief Officer 3 boat tenders (modified frigates exchanging weapons for storage) tactical and boat flotillas supply, 110 crew under a Vice Commander
Civil Guard
Each province maintains its own Civil Guard, which may be directed by the provincial government in times of unrest or emergency. Additionally, the guards may be called upon for service with the CDF in times of war or tension.
Obviously, the size of the civil guard differs as widely as the population of each of the provinces. Listed below is the rank of the head of the Civil Guard and the approximate strength of the guard:
- Central Province, Marhsal, three operational divisions and assorted independent units totalling about 70 battalions
- Hochelaga, Marhshal, two operational divisions totalling about 40 battalions
- Thuvia, Vice Marshal, four operational brigades and a few independent units totalling 26 battalions
- Western Province, Vice Marshal, three operational brigades and a few independent units totally 20 battalions
- Lakes Province, Chief Commander, one operational brigade and two independent units totalling seven battalions
- Plains Province, Chief Commander, one operational brigade and one independent unit totalling six battalions
- South Island, Chief Commander, one operational brigade and one independent unit totalling six battalions
- Capital Province, Commander, four independent battalions with a central staff
- Braunekuste, Commander, four independent battalions with a central staff
- North Island, Commander, three independent battalions with a central staff
- Potato Island, Vice Commander, three independent companies with a central staff in a battalion equivalent
Rank, typical posting
Chief Marshal, serving only on the Combined Staff Marshal, commanding land corps, land armies, air forces, naval fleets Vice Marshal, commanding land divisions, air divisions, naval squadrons Chief Commander, deputy commander of above Commander, land brigades, air groups, the largest naval ships Vice Commander, land battalions, air wings, large naval ships Chief Officer, land companies, air squadrons, smaller naval ships Officer, deputy commander of above, air flights, naval ship divisions, naval boats Vice Officer, deputy commander of above, land platoons, naval boats Chief Warrant Officer (land): Brigade Sergeant Major, Battalion SM, Base SM Chief Warrant Officer (naval): Fleet Petty Officer, Squadron PO, Base PO Chief Warrant Officer (air): Group Sergeant, Wing Sergeant, Base Sergeant Warrant Officer (land): Company Sergeant Major Warrant Officer (naval): Ship Petty Officer Warrant Officer (air): Squadron Sergeant Vice Warrant Officer (land): Platoon Sergeant Major Vice Warrant Officer (naval): Boat Petty Officer, Division Petty Officer (ships) Vice Warrant Officer (air): Flight Sergeant Sergeant (land), Petty Officer (naval), Sergeant (air) Corporal (land), Leading Sailor (naval), Corporal (air) Private (land), Sailor (naval), Flier (air)