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This is the full operational order of battle of the current United States Army, including the United States Army Reserve, United States Army National Guard, and joint elements with army elements. The below structure is current for 2020, but is continually updated.

Note on organisations:

Insignia used – some positions and commands will have a star-rating or insignia to further explain a unit's organisation, they will include:

Armoured BCT

Stryker BCT

Infantry BCT

Parachute BCT

Air Assault BCT

Corps Artillery

Air Defense Artillery

Aviation

Unit Structures

Combat Brigades

Armored Brigade Combat Team

Stryker Brigade Combat Team

Infantry Brigade Combat Team

The Infantry Brigade Combat Team or IBCT is the most common combat brigade in the United States Army, provided by the Regular Army and National Guard. The brigade consists of seven battalions and a separate company: Headquarters & Headquarters Company (HHC), three infantry battalions, a field artillery battalion, a cavalry squadron, a brigade engineer battalion, and a brigade support battalion.[1]

Cavalry Squadron

Infantry Battalion

The main 'punch' behind the infantry brigade combat team is the infantry battalion, which consists of a HHC, three Infantry rifle companies, and a weapons company (lettered A–C and D). The headquarters and headquarters company provides planning and intelligence, signal, and fire support to the battalion. The headquarters company has a battalion command section, a battalion staff section, a company headquarters, battalion medical, scout, and mortar platoons, a signal section, and a sniper squad. The headquarters company mortar platoon is equipped with 120-mm mortars (trailer towed) and 81-mm mortars (ground mounted). The battalion receives a forward support company (FSC) for sustainment purposes, normally in a direct support relationship.

Infantry rifle companies have three Infantry rifle platoons, a mortar section, a Raven unmanned aircraft system (UAS) team, and a headquarters section. Each rifle platoon has three Infantry rifle squads and a weapons squad. The mortar section has two squads, each with a 60-mm mortar. Habitual attachments to the Infantry rifle company include a fire support team at the company level and forward observer teams at the platoon level, medics assigned to the rifle platoons, and a senior medic at the company level.

The Infantry weapons company has a company headquarters and four assault platoons. Each assault platoon has two sections of two squads and a leader’s vehicle. Each squad contains four Soldiers and a vehicle mounting the heavy weapons. The heavy weapons can be tailored to a mission based on the commander’s mission analysis. Infantry weapons companies are equipped with the following weapons: the tube launched, optically tracked, wire guided/wireless guided Improved Target Acquisition System, the MK19, the M2, and the M240 series machine gun. While all of the weapons vehicles can mount the MK19 and the M2, only two vehicles per platoon are equipped to mount the Improved Target Acquisition System. Habitual attachments for the weapons company include a fire support team at the company level and medics.

Field Artillery Battalion

Brigade Engineer Battalion

Brigade Support Battalion

Airborne Brigade Combat Team

Airborne Brigade Combat Team (Air Assault)

Aviation

Department of the Army

Chart summarizing the organization of the Department of the Army's Headquarters as of 2010.

Headquarters, Department of the Army is the corporate office of the department which exercises directive and supervisory functions and consists of two separate staffs: the Office of the Secretary of the Army (10 United States Code § 7014[2]), the mainly civilian staff; and the Army Staff (10 United States Code § 7031,[3] & 10 United States Code § 7032[4]), the mainly military staff. The Office of the Secretary and the Army Staff are organized along similar lines, with civilians and military officers both overseeing similar program areas.[note 1]

Office of the Secretary of the Army

The Army Staff

The Army Staff is led by the chief of staff of the Army, a four-star general who is the highest-ranking officer in the Army and the Army member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The chief of staff is assisted in managing the Army Staff by the vice chief of staff of the United States Army, a four-star general and second highest-ranking officer in the Army. The Army Staff is divided into several directorates, each headed by a three-star general; a deputy chief of staff (DCS G–1 (personnel), G–2 (intelligence), G–3 (operations), G–4 (logistics),[10] G-5 (planning), G-6 (network), G-7 (training), G-8 (finance), and G-9 (installations) respectively).[11][12] the DCS G-3/5/7 is a single office for operations, plans, and training.

United States Army Forces Command

The United States Army Forces Command (FORSCOM) is the main combatant command of the United States Army headquartered at Fort Bragg in North Carolina. Lead by a four-star general, the command is responsible for commanding the main combat forces, National Guard, and Army Reserve forces. The main combat forces under FORSCOM include: I Corps, III Armored Corps, V Corps, XVIII Airborne Corps, Army National Guard, and Army Reserve Command.

National Training Center

The National Training Center is part of the US Army Forces Command (FORSCOM). The opposing force at the National Training Center (NTC) is the 11th Cavalry Regiment, the Blackhorse Cavalry, who are stationed at the base to provide an opposing force to units on a training rotation at Fort Irwin. In September 2017, a state-of-the-art hospital was opened that provides healthcare services to the Fort Irwin beneficiaries. Following the United States withdraw from Afghanistan in 2021 and the Russian invasion of Ukraine in early 2022, The National Training Center began to train Soldiers for future fights against major near-peer adversaries.[26]

I Corps

For operational purposes, I Corps is part of United States Army Pacific, but for administration is part of United States Forces Command. I Corps is responsible for operational deployments to the joint United States Indo-Pacific Command area of operations, including Asia, the Pacific, and the Indian Ocean areas.

7th Infantry Division

The 7th Infantry Division is responsible for overseeing the two stryker brigades combat teams of the 2nd Infantry Division and the separate 16th Combat Aviation Brigade. When deployed, the two brigades come under the 2nd Division, and are only under the 7th for administration while in the Continental United States.[39][39]

11th Airborne Division

A U.S. Army Alaska Stryker from Bravo Company, 3-21 Infantry Regiment, 1st Stryker Brigade Combat Team during Operation Arctic Pegasus at Deadhorse, Alaska, 3 November 2015.

On 5 May 2022, during a hearing of the Senate Armed Services Committee, Army Secretary Christine Wormuth and Army Chief of Staff General James McConville announced that U.S. Army Alaska would be reflagged as the 11th Airborne Division. On June 6, 2022, during separate ceremonies, the 1st Stryker Brigade Combat Team and 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team (Airborne), 25th Infantry Division were reflagged to the 1st Infantry Brigade Combat Team and 2nd Infantry Brigade Combat Team (Airborne), 11th Airborne Division respectively. All units from the former U.S. Army Alaska were absorbed under the new division. It was also announced that the 1st Infantry Brigade would divest its Strykers. Following these changes, the brigade would test several new vehicles to include the Cold-Weather All-Terrain Vehicle (CATV) to replace the former Strykers. The division's 2nd Brigade would remain largely unchanged.[42]

25th Infantry Division

Soldiers of the 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division move toward a simulated enemy during exercise Bronco Rumble at Schofield Barracks, Hawaii on May 8, 2013.

The 25th Infantry Division is a light infantry-roled division based in Hawaii. The division provides light infantry for the land-based elements of United States Indo-Pacific Command, which before 2022 also included a Stryker and Airborne brigade.

However, in 2021, the 3rd Brigade was reorganised from a Stryker BCT to an infantry BCT.[46] Then in 2022, as part of a reorganisation of United States Army Alaska, the former 1st Stryker and 4th Airborne BCTs of the division became part of a new 11th Airborne Division as the 1st and 2nd BCTs respectively.[42]

Army Japan

A Sikorsky HH-60 Black Hawk utility helicopter flying over Tokyo, Japan in 2011.

US Army Japan oversees all army troops based in the State of Japan and is also the main forward headquarters for I Corps.[56]

III Armored Corps

Stryker vehicles of the 3rd Cavalry Regiment on display at Ford Hood, Texas on November 23, 2015.

III Corps holds the major Armored formations of the US Army and is responsible for second wave deployment, and tasked with supporting deployments around the world. Sometime in 2020-2022, the 4th Infantry Division based at Fort Carson transferred from III Corps to I Corps, thereby taking the second infantry division from the corps, leaving just two armoured divisions and a Stryker Infantry division.

1st Cavalry Division

Soldiers from Company B, 2nd Battalion, 5th Cavalry Regiment, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division conduct urban assault training at Hohenfels Army base with Albanian infantrymen during the multi-national training exercise, Combined Resolve II.
Following the casing of the brigade, battalion and division colors, soldiers assigned to the 1st Cavalry Division Horse Detachment perform a cavalry charge accompanied by a helicopter flyover performed by the 1st Cavalry Division Air Cavalry Brigade on Fort Hood's Cooper Field, Texas, Dec. 12, 2008.

The 1st Cavalry Division is organised as an armored division alongside the 1st Armored Division, though retains its historical designation of a 'Cavalry Division'. The 1st Cavalry Division is one of two divisions in the U.S. Army which maintains a mounted colour guard. The 1st Cavalry Division Horse Cavalry Detachment is one of those, and provides ceremonial mounted guards when needed.[74]

Graphic representing the structure of the 1st Cavalry Division in 2022.

1st Armored Division

Soldiers with 1st Battalion, 6th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Armored Division form a defensive line with M1A1 Abraham tanks in order to defend Adowa village training site during the Network Integration Evaluation 16.2 at Fort Bliss, Texas, May 2, 2016.

The division has been reorganized under the new modular design after moving to Fort Bliss, in which the deployable unit of manoeuvre is a brigade rather than a division. It consists of a division headquarters battalion, three armored brigade combat teams, a combat aviation brigade, a sustainment brigade, and a division artillery,[86] field artillery battalions are assigned to their respective brigade combat teams.

1st Infantry Division

Soldiers assigned to 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, drive through the desert in M2 Bradley Infantry Fighting Vehicles during Decisive Action Rotation 13-03 at the National Training Center, Fort Irwin, Calif., Jan. 19, 2013.

The 1st Infantry Division is organised the same as the 1st Armored Division, minus one brigade. However, for historical purposes still holds the title of 'infantry division'.

4th Infantry Division

The 1st Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, trained and tested its units, Soldiers and capabilities June 9-17, 2020, during Operation Ray Flash.

The 4th Infantry Division is a heavy division of the U.S. Army, consisting of two stryker BCTs and one armored BCT.[93] The division is regionally aligned with Europe, and deploys brigade combat teams occasionally to Eastern Europe.

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HQ III Armored Corps
1st Cavalry Division
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1st Armored Division
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1st Infantry Division
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4th Infantry Division
Location of III Armored Corps major command headquarters locations.

XVIII Airborne Corps

The XVIII Airborne Corps oversees the main rapid deployment formations of the US Army: 82nd Airborne (Parachute), 101st Airborne (Air Assault), 3rd Infantry Division (Mechanised & Infantry), and 10th Mountain Division (Mountain & Light Assault).[95]

3rd Infantry Division

Vehicles from 2nd Battalion, 7th Infantry Regiment, 1st Armored Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division, prepare to move during Exercise Cold Response 16, a Norwegian-led cold weather training exercise.

The 3rd Infantry Division is one of two 'armored-centric infantry divisions' in the U.S. Army (the other being the 1st Infantry) and consists of two armored and one infantry brigade. The 3rd and 4th Infantry Divisions are both regionally aligned with Europe, and regularly deploy an armored BCT to Europe. Since 2022, the division regularly deploys a division-level headquarters to Europe, alongside at-least one armored brigade combat team.

10th Mountain Division (Light Infantry)

Soldiers from Charlie Company, 2nd Battalion, 22nd Infantry Regiment, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division and Iraqi army soldiers look for training camps and weapon caches along the Zaghytun Chay River, about 50 miles southeast of K irkuk, Iraq, Nov. 18, 2007.

The 10th Mountain Division (Light Infantry), despite its name, is not a mountain-trained formation, but rather a standard light infantry division, much like the 25th in the Pacific. The 10th however does maintain its 'Mountain' and 'Ranger' tabs because of tradition and its soldiers are occasionally trained at the Army Mountain Warfare School in Vermont. The commander of the 10th Mountain Division is also dual-hatted as the Garrison Commander of the Fort Drum Garrison.

82nd Airborne Division

The 82nd Airborne Division is the army's only parachute dedicated formation, and main rapid-deployment formation based at Fort Bragg in North Carolina.

101st Airborne Division (Air Assault)

The 101st Airborne Division is organised as an infantry division, with its units specially trained in helicopter assault tactics. For historical purposes, the division still keeps the name of 'Airborne Division'. Prior to 2016, the 82nd had four standard brigade combat teams and a combat aviation brigade. Each BCT had a cavalry squadron, two parachute infantry battalions, and one each of a field artillery, support, and special troops battalions. As part of the second wave of reforms however, the division was expanded with the 4th BCT disbanding while the 1st-3rd BCTs each gained a parachute infantry battalion and re-designated their support troops battalion as an engineer battalion. The division also gained an artillery headquarters (101st Airborne Division Artillery) and a sustainment brigade.

First United States Army

On order, First Army expands to nine Mobilization force generation installations (MFGI) to mobilize the Reserve component of the US Army. The Army Reserve mobilizes Focused readiness units (FRU) to meet Operational plan (OPLAN) requirements of the combatant commander (CCDR).[125]

First Army Division East

Graphic representing the structure of the United States Army's First Army Division East.

First Army Division West

Graphic representing the structure of the United States Army's First Army Division West.

Security Force Assistance Command

Soldiers of the 3rd Security Force Assistance Brigade placing their new brown berets on following the formation of the brigade.

The SFAC is an U.S. Army command which groups and coordinates the SFABs. The mission of the SFAB is to carry out train, advise, and assist (TAA) missions overseas with foreign nation military partners. SFABs are the United States Army's latest, and most potent solution to providing dedicated and trained personnel to relieve the Brigade Combat Teams from performing combat advisory missions.[181] Operating in units with roughly 800 personnel, SFABs are designed to be versatile and deployable worldwide and are made up exclusively of non-commissioned officers and commissioned officers however E-4s with promotable status are accepted and receive promotion to sergeant (E-5) upon graduation of MATA.[182]

Graphic representing the structure of the United States Army's Security Force Assistance Command.

32nd Army Air and Missile Defence Command

20th CBRNE Support Command

National Guard Divisions

For operational purposes, all National Guard divisions report to Army Forces Command and are presented below as 'direct reporting divisions'.

28th Infantry Division

The 28th Infantry Division is provided almost entirely by the Pennsylvania Army National Guard, with its headquarters based in South-Central Pennsylvania. The division's two combat brigades, the 2nd Infantry and 56th Stryker are both based in Western Pennsylvania, while the Divisional Artillery, 55th Maneuver Enhancement Bde (former 55th Heavy BCT), 213th Regional Support Group, and Combat Aviation Brigade are based in South-Western Pennsylvania; and finally the Sustainment Brigade is based in Ohio.

Full structure of the U.S. Army National Guard's 28th Infantry Division, including attached supporting units.

29th Infantry Division

53rd Infantry Brigade Combat Team, mobilized at Fort Hood, TX, one day prior to deploying to Kuwait and Iraq, March 2010

The 29th Infantry Division is a joint Virginia-Maryland National Guard division with elements from across the South-Eastern United States. The headquarters of the division is based at Fort Belvoir in Virginia, but its HQ Battalion is split with Maryland as-well. The 116th Infantry BCT and Divisional Artillery are the only elements also from Virginia; while the 30th Armoured BCT, 130th Maneuver Enhancement Bde, and Sustainment Brigade are from North Carolina; 53rd Infantry BCT from Florida; 142nd Field Artillery Bde from Arkansas; 226th Maneuver Enhancement Bde from Alabama; and the Combat Aviation Brigade from Maryland.

Graphic representing the full structure of the 29th Infantry Division of the U.S. Army National Guard; including the attached/aligned elements.

35th Infantry Division

The 35th Infantry Division has its headquarters provided by the Kansas Army National Guard, however it includes elements from throughout the central United States. The 155th Armored BCT is from Mississippi; 39th Infantry BCT in Arkansas; 45th Infantry BCT from Oklahoma; Divisional Artillery and 130th Field Artillery Brigade from Kansas; 67th Maneuver Enhancement Bde from Nebraska; 110th Maneuver Enhancement Bde and Combat Aviation Brigade from Missouri; and Sustainment Brigade from Tennessee.

36th Infantry Division

The 36th Infantry Division has the majority of its personnel from the Texas Army National Guard, but also includes elements from other states. In October 2022, as part of the new 'Divisional Alignment Program', the division was massively reorganised with the addition of the 155th Armored BCT and 81st Stryker BCT from the 35th Infantry and 7th Infantry Divisions respectively. The division subsequently lost its field artillery brigade and 256th Infantry BCT. In due course, the division will become a 'Standard Heavy' division, with its main fighting strength focused around armored brigade combat teams.[211][212]

Graphic representing the structure of the 36th Infantry Division less attached units as it appeared in March 2023.

38th Infantry Division

40th Infantry Division

The 40th Infantry Division consists mostly of California Army National Guard, but also includes other states units from the Western United States. The 81st Stryker BCT is from Washington; 29th Infantry BCT from Hawaii; 41st Infantry BCT from Oregon; 79th Infantry BCT, Divisional Artillery, Sustainment Brigade, and Combat Aviation Brigade from California; and 65th Field Artillery Brigade from Utah.

42nd Infantry Division

The 42nd Infantry Division had initially only had the 27th and 44th Infantry BCTs, however in 2021 following the end of the 'Associated Unit Program', Vermont's 86th Infantry BCT re-joined the division after a six year hiatus from the 10th Mountain Division. As of 2022, the 42nd Infantry Division consists mostly of New York Army National Guard personnel, but includes personnel from across the North-Eastern United States. The Division Headquarters, 27th Infantry BCT, Divisional Artillery, Sustainment Brigade, and Combat Aviation Brigade are from New York; 44th Infantry BCT from New Jersey; 86th Infantry BCT (Mountain) from Vermont; 197th Field Artillery Brigade from New Hampshire; and 26th Maneuver Enhancement Bde from Massachusetts.

Special Operations Command

The United States Army Special Forces Command is part of the joint United States Special Operations Command. Only army units will be listed however.

United States Army John F. Kennedy Special Warfare Center and School, The Special Operations Center of Excellence

1st Special Forces Command (Airborne)

The 1st Special Forces Command (Airborne) is a division-level special operations forces command within the United States Army Special Operations Command.[229] The command was first established in 1989 and reorganized in 2014 grouping together the Army Special Forces (a.k.a. "the green berets"), psychological operations, civil affairs, and support troops into a single organization operating out of its headquarters at Fort Bragg, North Carolina.[230]

The mission of 1SFC (A) is to organize, equip, train, and validate forces to conduct full-spectrum special operations in support of United States Special Operations Command (USSOCOM), Geographic Combatant Commanders, American ambassadors, and other governmental agencies. The new command includes all seven Special Forces groups (including the five active duty and two Army National Guard groups), two Psychological Operations groups, a civil affairs brigade, and a sustainment brigade. The Command has the ability to rapidly deploy a high-level headquarters to run sustained, unconventional campaigns in foreign theaters.[231][232]

Army Special Operations Aviation Command

Special Warfare Combatant-craft Crewmen from Special Boat Team 12, stationed at Naval Base Coronado, Calif., with the help of aviators from 4th Battalion, 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment conducted a Maritime External Air Transportation System training evolution in Moses Lake, Wash., May 21.

United States Army Special Operations Aviation Command (USASOAC) provides command and control, executive oversight, and resourcing of U.S. Army Special Operations Command (USASOC) aviation assets and units in support of national security objectives. USASOAC is responsible for service and component interface; training, doctrine, and proponency for Army Special Operations Aviation (SOA); system integration and fleet modernization; aviation resource management; material readiness; program management; and ASCC oversight. USASOAC was established March 25, 2011 consisting of 135 headquarters soldiers and subordinate units totalling more than 3,300 personnel, include the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment (Airborne), (160th SOAR) (A) which features 4 Aviation Battalions, the USASOC Flight Company, the Special Operations Aviation Training Battalion, the Systems Integration Management Office, and the Technology Application Projects Office.[233]

Training and Doctrine Command

U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command is charged with overseeing training of Army forces and the development of operational doctrine. TRADOC operates 37 schools and centers at 27 different locations. TRADOC schools conduct 1,304 courses and 108 language courses. The 1,304 courses include 516,000 seats (resident, on-site and distributed learning) for 443,231 soldiers; 36,145 other-service personnel; 8,314 international soldiers; and 28,310 civilians.

Combined Arms Center

The United States Army Combined Arms Center (USACAC) provides leadership and supervision for leader devleopment and professional military and civilian education; institutional and collective training; functional training; training support; battle command; doctrine; lessons learned and specified areas in order to serve as a catalyst for change and to support developing relevant and ready expeditionary land formations with campaign qualities in support of the joint force commander.[237]

Mission Command Center of Excellence

Cyber Center of Excellence

The United States Army Cyber Center of Excellence is the army's school for professional training of cyber and communications personnel. The center forms part of the Combined Arms Center and is based at Fort Gordon in Georgia. The commanding general of the Cyber Center of Excellence is also the garrison commander of Fort Gordon.

Intelligence Center of Excellence

The United States Army Intelligence Center of Excellence is the army's school for professional training of military intelligence personnel. The center forms part of the Combined Arms Center and its headquartered at Fort Huachuca in Arizona. The commanding general of the Intelligence Center of Excellence is also the garrison commander of Fort Huachuca.[240]

Medical Center of Excellence

Aviation Center of Excellence

The United States Army Aviation Center of Excellence is responsible for all U.S. Army aviation training and headquartered at Fort Rucker, Alabama.

Maneuver Support Center of Excellence

Engineer School

Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear School

The United States Army Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear School or simply the CBRN School is tasked with training troops of the Chemical Corps. The School is commanded by the Chief of Chemical who is also Commandant of the School.

Military Police School

Maneuver Center of Excellence

Armor School

Graphic representing the current structure of the United States Army Armor School.

The U.S. Army's Armor School's primary focus is the training of United States Army soldiers, non-commissioned officers, warrant officers, and commissioned officers in the operation, tactics, and maintenance of armor forces and equipment including the M1 Abrams main battle tank, the Bradley Fighting Vehicles, the Stryker Mobile Gun System, assorted crew-served and personal weapons, and various other equipment including radios.

United States Army Infantry School

Combined Arms Support Command

The Combined Arms Support Command (CASCOM) trains, educates, and develops adaptive Sustainment professionals for the total force while generating, synchronizing, and integrating innovative Army and Joint Sustainment capabilities, concepts, and doctrine to sustain LSCO in a Multi Domain Operations (MDO) environment and enable the Waypoint Force through FY22 activities and events in support of the Commander’s Lines of Effort (LOE).

Army Logistics University

Transportation School

Quartermaster School

Ordnance School

Soldier Support Institute

Fires Center of Excellence

Field Artillery School

Air Defense Artillery School

Recruiting Command

United States Army Recruiting Command Brigades and Battalions recruiting areas map.
A member of the US Army parachute team Golden Knights descending under his parachute, with an American flag.

United States Army Recruiting Command is responsible for manning of both the Regular Army and the Army Reserve and oversees recruiting operations in the United States, Puerto Rico, the U. S. Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and overseas U.S. bases.[267]

Cadet Command

United States Army Cadet Command is responsible for overseeing all Army Reserve Officers' Training Corps (Army ROTC).[274] Each brigade has a certain area of responsibility (AOR), including:

Map showing the areas overseen for each Army ROTC brigade.

Center for Initial Military Center

The United States Army Center for Initial Militia Training or USACIMT provides initial military training from three main locations. The 108th Training Command is part of the Center for operational purposes, but part of the United States Army Reserve Command for administration.[276]

Army Training Center Jackson

108th Training Command (Initial Entry Training)

While the 108th Training Command (Initial Entry Training) belongs to the U.S. Army Reserve, it is operationally controlled by Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC), which conducts Initial Military Training for both officers and enlisted Soldiers; supports CIMT, the ATCs, and USACC which includes support to more than 150 colleges and universities. The command provides professionally trained and ready Drill Sergeant units, Instructors, Leader Trainers, and Command expertise to conduct Initial Entry Training, Cadet Training, and Theater Security Cooperation Training.

95th Training Division (Initial Entry Training)

The 95th Training Division (Initial Entry Training) is headquartered at Fort Sill, Oklahoma and has units from coast to coast and Hawaii with it's peacetime mission being to support the Army’s Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC). In the event of mobilization, the division will augment TRADOC installations by providing companies or battalions as necessary. Additionally, the 95th will provide personnel and/or detachments to deploy in support of theater operations.

98th Training Division (Initial Entry Training)

The 98th Training Division (IET) has been a unit of the U.S. Army Reserve with the primary mission of training Soldiers in Basic Combat Training, Advanced Individual Training, Noncommissioned Officer and Officer professional development courses, Reserve Officer Training Corps instruction and One Station Unit Training in Engineer and Infantry specialties. After more than 45 years in Rochester, New York the headquarters relocated to Fort Benning, Georgia in July 2012, and continues to exercise command and control of four brigades located throughout twelve states in the eastern U.S. as well as Puerto Rico.

104th Training Division (Leader Training)

The 104th Training Division (LT) is a training component of the United States Army Reserve and a subordinate unit of the 108th Training Command (IET) located in Charlotte, N.C. The 104th Training Division (Leader Training) provides education and training to future officers and reception support to the Army Training Centers for an Army at war in support of a Nation at war.

Army Europe and Africa

In 2020, the Army announced that U.S. Army Africa will consolidate with U.S. Army Europe to form the new command of U.S. Army Europe and Africa.[280] The two commands were consolidated on November 20, 2020.[281][282] Since then, the command has overseen all operations and troops based in both Europe and Africa. U.S. Army Europe and Africa is aligned with two joint commands: United States European Command and United States Africa Command

V Corps

Two Stryker vehicles of Comanche Company, 1st Squadron, 2d Cavalry Regiment, Rose Barracks, Vilseck, Germany, perform movement to contact training at the Hohenfels Training Area while conducting their company external evaluations on April 25, 2012.
Paratroopers from 173rd Brigade Support Battalion, 173rd Airborne Brigade land after a jump at Juliet Drop Zone in Pordenone, Italy, Sept. 24.

On 11 February 2020, the United States Department of the Army announced the activation of corps headquarters (V Corps). V Corps Headquarters will have approximately 635 soldiers, with approximately 200 who will support an operational command post in Europe. The Corps Headquarters is projected to be operational by autumn 2020. The forward headquarters will "conduct operational planning, mission command and oversight of the rotational forces in Europe", and work alongside allies and partners to build readiness and enhance interoperability.[287]

Following the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, the corps headquarters was moved temporarily to Wiesbaden in Germany.[288]

Note: Since the formation of V Corps, the corps now oversees the three combat brigades of 7th Army Training Command. For administrative purposes, these brigades remain under the training command, but for operations will now come under V Corps. By November 2022 however – according to V Corps' website – the three brigades are now overseen directly by the corps.[289]

In 2022, the Army National Guard's 34th Infantry Division was officially aligned with the corps as part of the army's "Army 2030 Force Structure" concept.[290]

Graphic representing the structure of V Corps as it appears in 2022.

34th Infantry Division

The 34th Infantry Division is an infantry division of the national guard, with most of the division part of the Minnesota and Iowa National Guard. In 2011, it was staffed by roughly 6,500 soldiers from the Minnesota National Guard,[297] 2,900 from the Iowa National Guard, about 300 from the Nebraska National Guard, and about 100 from other states.[298] In 2022, the division shifted from Army Forces Command to V Corps as part of the new "Army 2030 Force Structure (WayPoint 2028)".[299][290]

By 2028, as part of the army's 'WayPoint 2028 Future Structure" programme, the division will be reorganised as a 'Penetration Division', and be reorganised as follows: 3 x Armored BCTs, and one each of an Artillery, Engineer, Protection, Sustainment, and Heavy Aviation Brigades, along with a divisional armored cavalry squadron.[299][290]

Graphic representing the structure of the 34th Infantry Division with attached units as it appears in 2022.

56th Artillery Command

A M270 MLRS of the 1st Battalion, 6th Field Artillery Regiment, 41st Field Artillery Brigade (FAB), conduct a simulated fire mission during Operation Centaur Forge at the 7th Army Training Command's Grafenwöhr Training Area in Germany, Nov. 6, 2019.

On April 12, 2021, the U.S. Secretary of Defense approved a Theater Fires Command for overseas stationing in Germany. Effective October 16, 2021, the 56th Artillery Command re-activated and returned to Germany to serve as the Force Field Artillery Headquarters for U.S. Army Europe and Africa, with a mission to synchronize, integrate, and control both lethal fires and nonlethal effects in support of the theater land component. U.S. Army Europe and Africa conducted a reactivation ceremony for the 56th Artillery Command, the European Theater’s Fires Command, November 8, 2021 at Lucius D. Clay Kaserne, Wiesbaden, Germany.[313][314]

Southern European Task Force, Africa

'United States Army Southern European Task Force, Africa' was formed in 2008 as 'U.S. Army Africa', however in 2020 was merged with U.S. Army Europe. As a consequence U.S. Army Europe became 'U.S. Army Europe and Africa', and the African element became 'U.S. Army Southern European Task Force, Africa' and based at Caserma Ederle in Vicenza, Italy.[319][281][282] SETAF-AF is now the United States Army service component command of United States Africa Command (USAFRICOM or AFRICOM).[320][321][322][323]

7th Army Training Command

Since the standing up of V Corps, 7th Army Training Command now only provides training assistance for the four combat formations of US Army Europe-Africa. Since the reformation of V Corps, the operational control of the combat forces in Europe was transferred from the 7th Army Training Command.

10th Army Air and Missile Defence Command

The 10th Army Air and Missile Defence Command is a theatre level Army air and missile defence organization and directly subordinated to United States Army Europe. On order, the 10th AAMDC deploys worldwide to conduct joint and combined/coalition air missile defence ops for US European Command. The 10th AAMDC serves as the United States Army in Europe's executive agent for all theatre air and missile defence ops and air missile defence force management.

21st Theater Sustainment Command

The 21st Theater Sustainment Command is a two-star theater sustainment command which provides combat service support throughout the area of responsibility for United States European Command and United States Africa Command.

7th Mission Support Command

The 7th Mission Support Command is part of the Army Reserve, and not a regular command, though is under the operational control of U.S. Army Europe and Africa.

Army North

A stinger missile is fired from the Avenger weapon system at an aerial target of the coast on Onslow Beach March 15, 2013. The vehicle belongs to the 2nd Battalion, 263rd Air Defense Artillery Regiment.

United States Army North (Fifth Army) is a regional army and oversees the defence and support of North America, the Caribbean, and Central America. The army supports and comes under command of the joint United States Northern Command for operations.

263rd Army Air and Missile Defence Command

377th Theater Sustainment Command

The 377th Sustainment Command is a theater-level support formation of the United States Army Reserve.

4th Expeditionary Sustainment Command

143rd Expeditionary Sustainment Command

If mobilised, the 143rd Sustainment Command comes under the control of the 1st Theater Sustainment Command.[353]

310th Expeditionary Sustainment Command

316th Expeditionary Sustainment Command

Army Reserve Sustainment Command

Deployment Support Command

46th Military Police Command

Army South

Pfc. Kelly Cardenas, with the Rhode Island National Guard’s 115th Military Police Co., watches from an observation tower at Camp Delta as Soldiers with the 525th Military Police Battalion participate in a formation run at Joint Task Force Guantanamo, July 7.

United States Army South is an Army Service Component Command (ASCC) responsible for army operations in the Caribbean, Central America, and South America. For operations, the command reports to the joint United States Southern Command.

807th Medical Command

807th Medical Command is part of the Army Reserve and manages the deployable field medical units providing medical, dental, preventive medicine, and veterinary support. 807th Medical Command (Deployment Support) is responsible for all operational reserve medical units west of the Mississippi river, excluding Louisiana.[364]

Army Central

United States Army Central encompasses the Middle East, and up until the Fall of Kabul in August 2021, the command oversaw the deployment of forces into the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan.

335th Signal Command (Theater)

The 335th Signal Command provides signal and cyber units in direct support of Army Central Command in Southwest Asia and combatant commanders throughout the globe. Its primary mission is plan, engineer, install, operate, maintain, secure, and defend the Army’s portion of the Department of Defense Information Network in support of U.S. Army, Joint, and Combined Forces Commanders.[371] For administration, the command is part of United States Army Reserve Command.

1st Theater Sustainment Command

The 1st Theater Sustainment Command provides sustainment mission command and executes anticipatory operational-level sustainment support to Army, Joint, Interagency, and Multinational Forces; sets the theater; and conducts theater security cooperation within the U.S. Central Command (USCENTCOM) area of responsibility in order to enable unified land operations in support of Combatant Command directives.

Army Pacific

United States Army Pacific or USARPAC is an Army Service Component Command headquartered at Fort Shafter in Hawaii. The Army is responsible for overseeing all operations in the joint Indo-Pacific Command region of operations. Since 4 June 2021, General Charles A. Flynn has been the commanding general of Army Pacific.[374]

311th Signal Command (Theater)

The 311th Signal Command provides communications and cyber protection for United States Indo-Pacific Command and United States Army Pacific.[382]

94th Army Air and Missile Defence Command

8th Theater Sustainment Command

The 8th Theater Sustainment Command (8th TSC), as the senior Army logistics command in the United States Pacific Command's Area of Responsibility (AOR), provides command and control of all assigned and attached and units under its operational control (OPCON); trains, equips and tailors forces, as required; plans and generates expeditionary combat support/Combat Sustainment Support (CS/CSS) capability; and provides support of joint and combined forces across the full spectrum of military support in the Pacific AOR.[388]

Eighth Army

The Eighth Army comprises all U.S. Army troops based in the Republic of South Korea.

2nd Infantry Division

The 2nd Infantry Division is the only permanently overseas deployed division of the U.S. Army and oversees the division's own support troops. The two combat brigades of the division are placed under the 7th Infantry Division for administration while based in Washington, but remain under the operational control of the 2nd Division.

[[Fichier:Modèle:Géolocalisation/North Pacific|750px|((#if:|(({alt))}|Coldstreamer20/Brouillon1 est dans la page North Pacific.]]<div style="position: absolute; z-index: 2; top: Erreur d’expression : caractère de ponctuation « [ » non reconnu.%; left: Erreur d’expression : caractère de ponctuation « [ » non reconnu.%; height: 0; width: 0; margin: 0; padding: 0;">
I Corps HQ
7th Infantry Division
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25th Infantry Division
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11th Airborne Division
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Army Japan/I Corps Forward HQ
Location of I Corps major command headquarters locations.

United States Army Reserve Command

For operational purposes, United States Army Reserve Command falls under control of United States Forces Command, but for administrative purposes is its own command.[395]

Military Intelligence Readiness Command

Army Reserve Legal Command

76th Operational Response Command

The 76th Operational Response Command is a two-star Army Reserve command based at Fort Douglas in Utah. The command is tasked with coordinating the Army Reserve's Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear (CBRN) Defense elements.[405]

63rd Readiness Division

The 63rd Readiness Division is one of a only a few remaining regional Army Reserve commands left in Army Reserve Command. The 63rd Readiness Division provides base operations support in much of the Western United States. Though its units are spread throughout the states, the 63rd Readiness Division provides regional oversight for the following states: Arizona, Arkansas, California, Nevada, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas.[411]

81st Readiness Division

The 81st Readiness Division provides base army reserve support for the South Eastern United States. Though its units are spread throughout the states, the 81st Readiness Division provides regional oversight for the following states: Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee.[411]

88th Readiness Division

The 88th Readiness Division provides army reserve base support for the Northern United States. Though its units are spread throughout the states, the 88th Readiness Division provides regional oversight for the following states: Colorado, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Washington, Wisconsin, Wyoming.[411]

99th Readiness Division

The 99th Readiness Division provides army reserve base support for the North Eastern United States. Though its units are spread throughout the states, the 99th Readiness Division provides regional oversight for the following states: Connecticut, District of Columbia, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, and West Virginia.[411]

1st Mission Support Command

1st Mission Support Command is the regional Army Reserve formation for Puerto Rico and the United States Virgin Islands.

9th Mission Support Command

9th Mission Support Command is overseeing the Army Reserve units based in Alaska, Hawaii, Guam, and American Samoa minus the 100th Infantry Battalion.[424]

412th Engineer Command

416th Engineer Command

79th Theater Sustainment Command

The 79th Sustainment Command (SSC) is headquartered at Joint Forces Training Base (JFTB) Los Alamitos, California. Major subordinate commands of the 79th SSC include the 4th Sustainment Command (Expeditionary) in San Antonio, Texas, the 311th Sustainment Command (Expeditionary) in Los Angeles, California, the 364th Sustainment Command (Expeditionary) in Marysville, Washington, and the 451st Expeditionary Sustainment Command in Wichita, Kansas.

103rd Sustainment Command (Expeditionary)

311th Expeditionary Sustainment Command

364th Expeditionary Sustainment Command

451st Expeditionary Sustainment Command

80th Training Command (The Army School System)

94th Training Division (Force Sustainment)

100th Training Division (Leader Development)

102nd Training Division (Maneuver Support)

84th Training Command (Unit Readiness)

78th Training Division (Operations)

86th Training Division

87th Training Division

On 22 September 2021, the 87th Training Division was reactivated in Hoover, Alabama. The 87th Training Division designs, develops, and executes Live, Virtual, and Constructive (LVC) training exercises and conducts Mission Command and Staff Training (MCST).[447]

91st Training Division

Atlantic Training Division

3rd Medical Command (Deployment Support)

Army Reserve Medical Command

Medical Readiness Training Command

200th Military Police Command

Army Reserve Aviation Command

The Army Reserve Aviation Command is an Army Reserve division-sized command, and alongside seeing two Army Reserve Aviation Brigades, also has operational command over the 77th Combat Aviation Brigade of the Arkansas National Guard.[452]

United States Army Civil Affairs and Psychological Operations Command (Airborne)

350th Civil Affairs Command

The 350th Civil Affairs Command is headquartered in Pensacola, Florida and commands the 321st Civil Affairs Brigade (Texas) and 1st Civil Affairs & Psychological Operations Training Brigade at Fort Bragg. The 350th is regionally aligned with United States Southern Command.

351st Civil Affairs Command

The 351st Civil Affairs Command is headquartered in Mountain View, California and commands the 358th Civil Affairs Brigade (California & Arizona) and the 364th Civil Affairs Brigade (Oregon, Colorado, Utah, and Washington). The 350th is regionally aligned with United States Indo-Pacific Command.

352nd Civil Affairs Command

The 352nd Civil Affairs Command is headquartered at Fort George G. Meade in Maryland and commands the 354th Civil Affairs Brigade (Maryland, New York, Michigan, North Carolina, and Virginia) and the 360th Civil Affairs Brigade (South Carolina, Ohio, Arkansas, Maryland, Florida, and Tennessee). The 350th is regionally aligned with both United States African Command and United States Central Command.

353rd Civil Affairs Command

The 353rd Civil Affairs Command is headquartered at in Staten Island, New York and commands the 304th Civil Affairs Brigade (Pennsylvania, New York, New Jersey, Connecticut and Rhode Island) and the 308th Civil Affairs Brigade (Illinois, Minnesota, Michigan, Missouri, and Wisconsin). The 353rd is regionally aligned with United States European Command..

National Guard Bureau

The Official seal of the National Guard Bureau
Seal of the United States Army National Guard.

The National Guard Bureau is the federal instrument responsible for the administration of the National Guard established by the United States Congress as a joint bureau of the Department of the Army and the Department of the Air Force. It was created by the Militia Act of 1903. The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008, elevated the National Guard to a joint function of the Department of Defense. This act also elevated the Chief of the National Guard Bureau from Lieutenant General (Three Stars) to General (Four Stars) with the appointment of General Craig R. McKinley, U.S. Air Force. The National Guard Bureau holds a unique status as both a staff and operation agency.

Represented below are the Army National Guard units listed by state, however since some states have other states' units under their command, they are listed under this tab separately.

In 2020, as part of the Army's new 'Army 2030' initiative, combat forces will transition from the 'Brigade-centric' formations to the old-style 'Division-centric' formations. Under this program, the National Guard will be reorganised into eight divisions (currently eight exist), however unlike their current formations, the new divisions will be deployable. The current national guard divisions are designed to be 'modular' meaning they can change depending on the desired formation needed, such as adding manoeuvre enhancement brigades or removing divisional artillery, etc. As part of the changes, the national guard will provide eight divisions, with the regular army providing 10 (an increase of eight).[459]

Army National Guard staff organizational chart

66th Theater Aviation Command

The 66th Theater Aviation Command was formed in 2008 and commands several of the Army National Guard's specialist aviation units, including fixed with aviation battalions. As of 2022, the command consists of three brigade-sized formations: 185th Aviation Brigade (focused on Heavy Lift & Supply); 449th Combat Aviation Brigade (focused on assault and forward deployments); and the 204th Theater Airfield Operations Group (focusing on aviation support).

Alabama Army National Guard

The Alabama Army National Guard was originally formed in 1807. The Alabama Army National Guard forms the land element of the Alabama National Guard, and in 2017 consisted of 9,640 guardsmen.[37] In addition the below units, the Alabama Guard also provides the two-star 167th Sustainment Command (U.S. Army North); 20th Special Forces Group; 226th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade (29th Infantry Division); 1st Battalion, 167th Infantry Regiment (53rd Infantry BCT); 1st Battalion, 173rd Infantry Regiment (256th Infantry BCT); and 1st Battalion, 117th Field Artillery Regiment (142nd Field Artillery Brigade).

167th Theater Sustainment Command

The 167th Theater Sustainment Command is operationally aligned with United States Army North and provides support to the command.

Alaska Army National Guard

The Alaska Army National Guard was originally formed in 1940. The Alaska Army National Guard forms the land element of the Alaska National Guard, and in 2017 consisted of 1,731 guardsmen.[37] In addition the below elements, the Alaska Guard provides the 1st Battalion, 207th Aviation Regiment (40th Infantry Division), 1st Battalion, 297th Infantry Regiment (29th Infantry BCT), and 49th Missile Defence Battalion (100th Missile Defence Brigade).

Arizona Army National Guard

The Arizona Army National Guard was originally formed in 1940. The Arizona Army National Guard forms the land element of the Arizona National Guard, and in 2017 consisted of 5,305 guardsmen.[37] In addition the below elements, the Arizona Guard provides the 1st Battalion, 158th Infantry Regiment (29th Infantry BCT), 1st Battalion, 285th Aviation Regiment (29th Combat Aviation Brigade) and 2nd Battalion, 285th Aviation Regiment (77th Combat Aviation Brigade).

Arkansas Army National Guard

The Arkansas Army National Guard was originally formed in 1804. The Arkansas Army National Guard forms the land element of the Arkansas National Guard, and in 2017 consisted of 5,994 guardsmen.[37] In addition the below units, the Arkansas Guard provides the 39th Infantry BCT (36th Infantry Division), 77th Combat Aviation Brigade (66th Aviation Command), and 142nd Field Artillery Brigade (29th Infantry Division).

California Army National Guard

The California Army National Guard was originally formed in 1849. The California Army National Guard forms the land element of the California National Guard, and in 2017 consisted of 14,242 guardsmen.[37] In addition the below units, the California Guard provides the 44th Infantry Division; 1st Battalion, 144th Field Artillery (11th Cavalry Regiment); F Battery, 144th Field Artillery (65th Field Artillery Brigade); 340th Brigade Support Battalion (65th Field Artillery Brigade), and 6th Battalion, 52nd Aviation Regiment (11th Expeditionary Combat Aviation Brigade).

Colorado Army National Guard

The Colorado Army National Guard or COANG is the army component of the Colorado National Guard, belonging to the Colorado Department of Military and Veterans Affairs. According to the DoD Defense Manpower Data Center, the Colorado ANG has a strength of 3,766 personnel as of 30 September 2017.[477] The Colorado ANG provides the below units along with the following assigned to other commands: 169th Field Artillery Brigade (HQ, 540th Signal Coy, 3/157th Field Artillery, and 147th BSB) – 34th Infantry Division; 117th Space Battalion [1st Space Brigade]; 100th Missile Defence Brigade (HQ); 1/157th Infantry Regiment [86th Infantry BCT]; and the 5th Battalion, 19th Special Forces Group (Airborne).

Connecticut Army National Guard

Delaware Army National Guard

District of Columbia Army National Guard

Florida Army National Guard

Georgia Army National Guard

Guam Army National Guard

Hawaii Army National Guard

Idaho Army National Guard

Illinois Army National Guard

Indiana Army National Guard

Iowa Army National Guard

Kansas Army National Guard

Kentucky Army National Guard

Louisiana Army National Guard

Maine Army National Guard

Maryland Army National Guard

Massachusetts Army National Guard

Michigan Army National Guard

Minnesota Army National Guard

Mississippi Army National Guard

184th Expeditionary Sustainment Command

Missouri Army National Guard

Montana Army National Guard

Nebraska Army National Guard

Nevada Army National Guard

New Hampshire Army National Guard

New Jersey Army National Guard

New York Army National Guard

New Mexico Army National Guard

North Carolina Army National Guard

North Dakota Army National Guard

Ohio Army National Guard

Oklahoma Army National Guard

Oregon Army National Guard

Pennsylvania Army National Guard

Puerto Rico Army National Guard

Rhode Island Army National Guard

South Carolina Army National Guard

South Dakota Army National Guard

Tennessee Army National Guard

Texas Army National Guard

Utah Army National Guard

Vermont Army National Guard

Virgin Islands Army National Guard

Virginia Army National Guard

Washington Army National Guard

West Virginia Army National Guard

Wisconsin Army National Guard

Wyoming Army National Guard

Army Service Component Commands

Army Cyber Command

Army Intelligence and Security Command

Army Counterintelligence Command

7th Signal Command (Theater)

United States Army Materiel Command

The United States Army Materiel Command (AMC) is the primary provider of materiel to the United States Army. The Command's mission includes the management of installations, as well as maintenance, and parts distribution. The AMC operates depots; arsenals; ammunition plants; and other facilities, and maintains the Army's prepositioned stocks, both on land an afloat.[556][557]

Army Contracting Command

Mission & Installation Contracting Command

The MICC supports the warfighter by acquiring equipment, supplies and services vital to the U.S. Army mission and well-being of Soldiers and their families. The command also supports the Army's contingency and wartime missions by rapidly deploying trained and ready contingency contracting Soldiers around the world to procure sweet goods and services in austere environments.

Installation Management Command

Military Surface Deployment and Distribution Command

Army Sustainment Command

Army Corps of Engineers

Transatlantic Division

North Atlantic Division

Great Lakes and Ohio River Division

Mississippi Valley Division

South Atlantic Division

Northwestern Division

Pacific Ocean Division

Southwestern Division

Army Medical Command

Regional Health Command Atlantic

Regional Health Command Central

Regional Health Command Europe

Regional Health Command Pacific

Medical Research & Materiel Command

United States Military Academy

Color Guard of the West Point Corps of Cadets on Parade.

The United States Military Academy, also simply known as West Point is the main United States service academy located in West Point, New York.

Military District of Washington

Note: because of the unique organisation of the 3rd Infantry Regiment, it's subordinated companies and platoons are shown which are difference from the normal infantry battalions.

Space and Missile Defence Command

The United States Army Space and Missile Defence Command or USASMDC is an Army Service Component Command which provides space control and Missile Defence operations on behalf of the United States Army. The command is operationally subordinated to the join United States Space Command and United States Strategic Command.

Space and Missile Defence Center of Excellence

The Space and Missile Defence Center of Excellence is the U.S. Army’s force modernization proponent, responsible for managing Army change to doctrine, organization, training, materiel, leadership and education, personnel, facilities and policy, or DOTMLPF-P, requirements for space, global ballistic Missile Defence and high altitude capabilities within the Army. It also represents Army equities across the joint community. Within the capabilities of Army and joint space, Missile Defence and high altitude, the Space and Missile Defence Center of Excellence trains and educates agile, adaptive and ready Soldiers and leaders, executes life-cycle management for U.S. Army space operations officers, develops the Army space cadre and enables informed decision-making.

Provost Marshal General

The United States Army Provost Marshal General a United States Army staff position that handles investigations of U.S. Army personnel. It is the highest-ranking provost marshal position in the U.S. Army, reporting to the Chief of Staff of the United States Army. The position brings all aspects of law enforcement in the U.S. Army in a single office.[585]

Criminal Investigations Division

Army Corrections Command

United States Army Corrections Command (USACC) is a three-star separate support command of the U.S. Army. The command reports to the Army Provost Marshal General and falls under his direct control.

Army Futures Command

75th Innovation Command

Also now known as the U.S. Army Reserve Innovation Command (USARIC),[590] as of January 2018, this unit was designated as the 75th Innovation Command and all previously subordinate units outside of headquarters and headquarters company were assigned to the 84th Training Command. The command is part of the United States Army Reserve Command, but is operationally subordinated to the Army Futures Command.

NATO

Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe

Sources

Footnotes

Notes

  1. Understanding the Army Requirements Oversight Council (AROC)[5][6][7] See Joint Requirements Oversight Council
  2. The 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment is equipped with M113A3 armored personnel carriers which are specifically designed to look like Russian T-72/80/90 Main Battle Tanks and BMP-2 Infantry Fighting Vehicles.
  3. For administrative purposes, the squadron is under the 1st Air Cavalry Brigade, however is operationally independent under the Division HQ.
  4. The 3rd Cavalry Regiment was an independent stryker brigade combat team until October 2022 when it re-joined the 1st Cavalry Division. The brigade is due to convert to an Armored BCT and transfer its strykers in return for Bradleys to Fort Carson.
  5. For operational purposes, the 1st Battalion, 143rd Infantry Regiment is attached to the 173rd Airborne BCT, but under the 56th Infantry BCT for administration. Therefore, this brigade for operational purposes has only two infantry battalions.
  6. Consists of five companies: 1 x Light Attack (Boeing AH-6M), 1 x Light Assault (Boeing MH-6M), 1 x Medium Attack (MH-60M DAP), 1 x Medium Assault (MH-60M), and an aviation maintenance company.
  7. Consists of five companies: 1 x Medium Assault (MH-60M), 2 x Heavy Assault (Boeing MH-47G), 1 x Extended-Range Multi-Purpose Company (General Atomics MQ-1C UAVs), and an aviation maintenance company
  8. Consists of four companies: 1 x Medium Assault (MH-60M), 2 x Heavy Assault (MH-47G), and an aviation maintenance company.
  9. Consists of four companies: 1 x Medium Assault (MH-60M), 2 x Heavy Assault (MH-47G), and 1 x aviation maintenance company
  10. Had Russian Mil Mi-17s till Invasion of Ukraine, then transferred to Ukraine
  11. Provides training for four trades: Armor Crewman (19K), Cavalry Scouts (19D) M1A2 SEPv2 Abrams System Maintainer (91A), and Bradley Fighting Vehicle System "Maintainer" (91M)
  12. The battalion teaches Field Artillery Basic Officer Leaders Course, Phase 2(BOLC-B); Warrant Officer Basic Course (WOBC); Warrant Officers' Advanced Course (WOAC), CCC and functional courses.
  13. The 1st Battalion, 78th Field Artillery conducts Advanced Individual Training for the 13-series (Field Artillery) Military Occupational Specialties (MOS) of 13B (Cannon Crewmember), 13F (Joint Fire Support Specialist), 13J (Field Artillery Automated Tactical Data System Specialist), 13M (Multiple Launch Rocket System Crewmember), and 13R (Firefinder Radar Operator).
  14. Each Cyber Protection Center is the the size equivalent to a battalion and includes three 'Cyber Protection Teams', which are company sized.

Citations

  1. « Brigade Combat Team », sur United States Army Publication Directorate, Headquarters, Department of the Army, (consulté le ), p. 17–27
  2. 10 U.S.C. § 7014
  3. 10 U.S.C. § 7031
  4. 10 U.S.C. § 7032
  5. Army Publishing Directorate sample search: AR 5-22 AR 5-22 — THE ARMY FORCE MODERNIZATION PROPONENT SYSTEM Army Publications Home page
  6. Army Strategy Note (ASN) proponent: G-3/5/7 (LTG James E. Rainey) (1 April 2022) INSTITUTIONAL STRATEGY SD 12 STRATEGY NOTE 2022-04, should be read in conjunction with How the Army Runs
  7. US Army War College (USAWC) School of Strategic Landpower (2019-2020) How the Army Runs: a senior leader reference handbook 32nd edition. 560 pages
  8. (en) « Organization | The United States Army », sur Organization | The United States Army (consulté le )
  9. « Programs | PEO IEW&S », sur peoiews.army.mil (consulté le )
  10. a et b Carter,Jr., Archer & Murray, « Description of Army Staff Functions: Targets for Planning Aids » [archive du ],
  11. a et b « NATO SHAPE structure » [archive du ], sur nato.int
  12. Erreur de référence : Balise <ref> incorrecte : aucun texte n’a été fourni pour les références nommées dtic
  13. United States Code (1956) TITLE 10 AND TITLE 32, UNITED STATES CODE
  14. (en) « HQDA G-4 DIRECTORATES », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  15. (en) « G-6 », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  16. (en-US) « Lieutenant General Scott A. Spellmon », sur www.usace.army.mil (consulté le )
  17. « The United States Army Judge Advocate General's (JAG) Corps », sur www.jagcnet.army.mil (consulté le )
  18. (en) « U.S. Army Office of the Provost Marshal General », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  19. « Office of the Provost Marshal General Organizational Chart », sur army.mil, Office of the Provost Marshal General, (consulté le )
  20. (en) « U.S. Army Medical Command | MEDCOM », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  21. « OCAR », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  22. « Home », sur www.forscom.army.mil (consulté le )
  23. « JRTC and Fort Polk Homepage :: Joint Readiness Training Center and Fort Polk », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  24. « JRTC Operations Group :: Joint Readiness Training Center and Fort Polk », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  25. « Air Traffic Services Command :: Fort Rucker », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  26. (en) « US Army using lessons from Ukraine war to aid own training », (consulté le )
  27. « 11th ACR », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  28. « 916th Support Brigade :: FORT IRWIN », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  29. (en) « I Corps | The United States Army », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  30. a et b (en) « New Signal Brigade activates at Joint Base Lewis-McChord », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  31. (en) « I Corps prepares for Operation PATHWAYS, showcases well-disciplined, combat-ready force », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  32. (en) « 17th Field Artillery Brigade on Instagram: "Thank you to all the participants and guests that attended in support of the 1st Battalion, 3rd Field Artillery Regiment's activation ceremony yesterday morning. Please consider following us on Facebook as well for more photos and information on the 17th Field Artillery Brigade!" », sur Instagram (consulté le )
  33. (en) « America’s First Corps on Instagram: "#ICYMI the 17th Field Artillery Brigade activated the 1st battalion, 3rd Field Artillery Regiment on Watkins Field Oct. 18. The new regiment is the latest in Field Artillery technology and firepower. », sur Instagram (consulté le )
  34. « 593rd Expeditionary Sustainment Command », sur United States Army Website (consulté le )
  35. (en) « 593d ESC Welcome Letter », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  36. (en) « 53rd Transportation Battalion (Movement Control) Activates at JBLM », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  37. a b c d e f et g « Last Active Duty Combat Support Hospital converts to new Hospital Center, Field Hospital design », sur United States Army Website, (consulté le )
  38. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa et ab « List of Military Police Brigade Level and Above Commands and Military Police Battalion Level Commands », sur Fort Leonard Wood Website, (consulté le )
  39. a et b (en) « 7th ID », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  40. a et b « Summer 2022 Infantry Magazine », Infantry, vol. 111, no 2, ((Article)) : paramètre « date » manquant (lire en ligne)
  41. (en) « 'Born in Battle', 16th CAB Begins Service at JBLM », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  42. a et b (en) « Army activates Arctic-focused 11th Airborne Division in Alaska, cuts Strykers », sur Stars and Stripes (consulté le )
  43. « Units », sur 11thairbornedivision.army.mil (consulté le )
  44. a b c d e f g h i j et k « Division Sustainment Operations », sur United States Army Publication Directorate, Headquarters, Department of the Army, (consulté le ), p. 37–40
  45. « 1st Battalion, 52d Aviation Regiment | Lineage and Honors | U.S. Army Center of Military History (CMH) »
  46. (en) Michelle Tan, « 25th Infantry Division to shrink and shed Strykers this spring », sur Army Times, (consulté le )
  47. « Units :: U.S. Army Garrison Hawaii », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  48. (en) « Today we held a ceremony to formally activate the 125th Intelligence Electronic Warfare Battalion, our #EyesofLightning. A new battalion that undoubtedly adds to the success and lethality of the division. Welcome to #ourarmyohana LTC Glover and CSM Riddle. », sur Instagram, (consulté le )
  49. « 2nd Infantry Brigade Combat Team :: U.S. Army Garrison Hawaii », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  50. a et b 2021 Force Structure Update, pp. 32–35
  51. (en) « Army to pair National Guard, Reserve units with active-duty units », sur Stars and Stripes (consulté le )
  52. (en) Sgt 1st Class Jeff Lowry 38th Infantry Division Public Affairs, « National Guard soldiers switch patches, align with active-duty division », sur Greensburg Daily News (consulté le )
  53. « 3rd Infantry Brigade Combat Team :: U.S. Army Garrison Hawaii », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  54. « 7,200 more Hawaii-based troops heading out | starbulletin.com | News | /2008/05/19/ », sur archives.starbulletin.com (consulté le )
  55. (en) « 125th Finance Battalion Activation/ LTC Leviticus D. Pope Assumed Command », sur DVIDS (consulté le )
  56. « Assistant Chief of Staff, G-1 (Personnel) », sur www.usarj.army.mil (consulté le )
  57. « US Army Japan Home », sur www.usarj.army.mil (consulté le )
  58. « Map of Honshu », sur www.usarj.army.mil (consulté le )
  59. (en) « III Armored Corps », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  60. « 11th Corps Signal Brigade :: U.S Army Fort Hood », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  61. « 504th Expeditionary Military Intelligence Brigade :: U.S Army Fort Hood », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  62. « 75th Field Artillery Brigade| Fort Sill | Oklahoma | Fires Center of Excellence », sur sill-www.army.mil (consulté le )
  63. (en) CurrentOps.com, « 36th Engineer Brigade », sur currentops.com (consulté le )
  64. « 36th Engineer Brigade :: U.S Army Fort Hood », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  65. « 20thEngineers.com - The Modular Era », sur www.20thengineers.com (consulté le )
  66. « 13th Expeditionary Sustainment Command :: U.S Army Fort Hood », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  67. (en) Staff Sgt Jill People , 13th SC(E) Public Affairs, « 61st Quartermaster Battalion (Petroleum) reactivates at Fort Hood », sur Fort Hood Sentinel (consulté le )
  68. « 1st Medical Brigade :: U.S Army Fort Hood », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  69. « 9th Hospital Center :: 1st Medical Brigade », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  70. (en) « 115th CSH converts to 32nd Hospital Center », sur DVIDS (consulté le )
  71. « 627HC Units :: Fort Carson », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  72. (en) CurrentOps.com, « 89th Military Police Brigade », sur currentops.com (consulté le )
  73. « 89th Military Police Brigade :: U.S Army Fort Hood », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  74. a et b (en-US) « Division Current Units », sur 1st Cavalry Division Association (consulté le )
  75. (en) « 1st Cavalry Division reactivates division cavalry squadron », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  76. (en) « Black Knights, Families, and Friends, I would like to inform and invite you to two significant events occurring for the 5th Cavalry Regiment in October. », sur Instagram (consulté le )
  77. (en) 1st Cav Div Press Release, « ‘First Team’ integrates ‘Brave Rifles’ once again », sur Fort Hood Sentinel (consulté le )
  78. (en) David A. Bryant | Herald staff writer, « ‘Brave Rifles’ to rejoin ‘First Team’ this fall », sur The Killeen Daily Herald (consulté le )
  79. « 3d Cavalry Regiment :: U.S Army Fort Hood », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  80. (en) « First Team troopers moving into newly-renovated Fort Hood barracks », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  81. « (({1))} »
  82. « 1CD Special Troops Battalion - Homepage », sur www.first-team.us (consulté le )
  83. (en) Sgt Froylan Grimaldo 1st Cavalry Division, « America’s ‘First Team’ reactivates the 15th Finance Battalion », sur The Killeen Daily Herald (consulté le )
  84. (en) « 1CDSB converts 553 CSSB into a DSSB, refocusing mission », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  85. « Yoakum-Defrenn Army Heliport », sur Instagram, 1st Air Cavalry Brigade, (consulté le )
  86. The Fires Battalions remain integral to the BCTs; Division Artillery (DIVARTY) is responsible for training and readiness for the artillery battalions. ("DIVARTY back in Army 'Iron Steel' Brigade comes to Bliss, 212th FB bids farewell" Fort Bliss Bugle « https://web.archive.org/web/20160817142654/http://fortblissbugle.com/divarty-back-in-army-iron-steel-brigade-comes-to-bliss-212th-fb-bids-farewell/ »(Archive.orgWikiwixArchive.isGoogleQue faire ?), )
  87. « 1st Armored Division :: Fort Bliss, Texas », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  88. « 3rd BCT, 1st Armored Division :: Fort Bliss, Texas », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  89. (en) « Historic 4-60 ADA reactivated with Fort Sill ceremony », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  90. (en) « 1AD DIVARTY on Instagram: "Last Monday, BG Bell presided over a patching ceremony at Ft. Sill, officially recognizing 4-60 ADAR as the newest battalion in the 1st Armored Division! Welcome to the 1st Armored Division 4-60 ADAR!" », sur Instagram (consulté le )
  91. a b c d e f g h i et j « Redbook Year in Review, 2022 Issue 2 », sur dvidshub.net, (consulté le )
  92. « 1st Infantry Division's Homepage », sur www.1id.army.mil (consulté le )
  93. (en) Todd South, « The Army’s transformation begins with these new units », sur Army Times, (consulté le )
  94. « 4ID Units :: Fort Carson », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  95. a et b « XVIII Airborne Corps :: Fort Bragg », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  96. « 35TH SIGNAL BRIGADE - U.S. ARMY », sur web.archive.org, (consulté le )
  97. a et b « DIVARTY, Division Artillery », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  98. (en) « Unit activates at Fort Gordon », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  99. « 18th Field Artillery Brigade :: Fort Bragg », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  100. (en) « US Army Exercise Paints Long Range Picture with HIMARS Demonstration », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  101. « 20th Engineers Brigade :: Fort Bragg », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  102. « 46th Engineer Battalion :: Joint Readiness Training Center and Fort Polk », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  103. « 7th Transportation Brigade (Expeditionary) », sur Joint Base Langley-Eustis (consulté le )
  104. « 3rd Expeditionary Sustainment Command :: Fort Bragg », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  105. « 44th Medical Brigade :: Fort Bragg », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  106. a et b « Units & Tenant Activities :: U.S. Army Aberdeen Proving Ground », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  107. « 16th Military Police Brigade :: Fort Bragg », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  108. a et b « 3rd Infantry Division », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  109. (en) « Back to the Future: US Army Reactivates Divisional Military Intelligence Battalion », sur Coffee or Die, (consulté le )
  110. (en) « 3rd Infantry Division new Airborne Armor unit parachutes tanks to the battlefield », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  111. « 3rd Infantry Division is proud to announce the Airborne Armor Tab, now available to the most elite of our armor Soldiers. », sur Instagram, 3rd Infantry Division, (consulté le )
  112. « 1-28 », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  113. « Georgia National Guard > Leadership > 48th Infantry Brigade Combat Team », sur ga.ng.mil (consulté le )
  114. « 3rd Sustainment Brigade Special Troops Battalion », sur www.globalsecurity.org (consulté le )
  115. « 10th Mountain Division (LI) :: Fort Drum », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  116. (en) « Fort Drum’s Light Fighters School dedicated to honor WWII hero from 10th Mountain Division », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  117. « 10th Combat Aviation Brigade :: Fort Drum », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  118. « 82nd Airborne Division :: Fort Bragg », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  119. a b et c « When we say Guns and Leaders to the front, we mean THESE GUNS AND LEADERS!!! », sur Facebook, 82nd Airborne Division, (consulté le )
  120. (en) « First Infantry Division’s Finance Unit transfers authority to 82nd Airborne's Finance Battalion in Kuwait », sur DVIDS (consulté le )
  121. a b et c « Today 82nd Airborne Division Sustainment Brigade welcomed the 307th Brigade Support Battalion, 407th Brigade Support Battalion, and 82nd Brigade Support Battalion as the newest battalions into our formation. », sur Facebook, 82nd Airborne Division Sustainment Brigade, (consulté le )
  122. « 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) :: FORT CAMPBELL », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  123. « 101st Airborne Division Artillery :: FORT CAMPBELL », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  124. « 101st Combat Aviation Brigade :: FORT CAMPBELL », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  125. « Army Reserve preparing to fight on a new battlefield », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  126. « First Army > Mission > Unit Locator », sur www.first.army.mil (consulté le )
  127. a b et c « U.S. Army Reserve > Commands > Functional > 85th USAR SPT CMD > 85th SC Units », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  128. « 85th USAR SPT CMD », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  129. « First Army > Mission > Units > Division East », sur www.first.army.mil (consulté le )
  130. (en) milesidea.com, « 1AE », sur Army Training Support (consulté le )
  131. (en) Alamy Limited, « A 1st Battalion, 409th Brigade Engineer Battalion observer coach/trainer attacks Soldiers from 818th Maintenance Company and 826th Ordnance Company during a dismounted live fire, Jan. 27, at Fort Knox. 1-409th BEB OC/Ts took up arms as opposition forces to create a realistic training environment Stock Photo - Alamy », sur www.alamy.com (consulté le )
  132. (en) « 3rd Battalion, 410th Regiment BEB », sur Facebook (consulté le )
  133. (en) « 4th Cavalry Multi-Functional Training Brigade - 1-410th Change of Responsibility | Facebook | By 4th Cavalry Multi-Functional Training Brigade | 4th Cavalry Multi-Functional Training Brigade was live. », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  134. (en) « 4-410th Brigade Support Battalion », sur Facebook (consulté le )
  135. (en) « 3/339th Logistics Support Battalion dominate Lanes Training Competition », sur DVIDS (consulté le )
  136. (en) « 1st Battalion, 305th Infantry, 177th Armored Brigade », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  137. (en) « 2-305th Field Artillery Battalion "Red Team" », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  138. (en) « 3D BN, 315th Regiment Family Readiness », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  139. (en) « 1-335 Infantry Battalion », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  140. (en) « 2-289th Infantry FRG », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  141. (en) « 1-345th Brigade Engineer Battalion », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  142. (en) « 1-314th Infantry Regiment hosts Change of Responsibility », sur DVIDS (consulté le )
  143. (en) « 3rd Battalion, 314th Field Artillery Regiment », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  144. (en-US) « 307th Inf. Reg. builds on foundation », sur Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst (consulté le )
  145. a et b (en) « Reserve mobilization supports multi-compo training mission », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  146. (en) « 3-312th Training Support Battalion Mobilizes to Fort Hood », sur DVIDS (consulté le )
  147. (en) « 2nd Battalion, 307th Regiment Field Artillery Battalion », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  148. (en) « 2-315th BEB Change of Responsibility | Join us as the 2nd Brigade Engineer Battalion, 315th Regiment, transfers the responsibility of senior enlisted advisor from Command Sgt. Maj. Walter... | By 174th Infantry Brigade | Facebook », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  149. (en) « 1-315th BSB », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  150. (en) « 188th Infantry Brigade », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  151. (en) « 1-306th Infantry Battalion, First Army », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  152. Major L. Burton Brender, « Finding the Right Talent: The 2-357th Infantry Battalion's Officer Marketplace Experience », sur benning.army.mil (consulté le )
  153. (en) « 2-306th Battalion gets back to basics », sur DVIDS (consulté le )
  154. (en) « 4-306th Brigade Engineer Battalion », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  155. (en) « 5-306th Brigade Support Battalion, 188th IN BDE », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  156. (en-US) « First Army Division West Newcomers Welcome Video », sur www.first.army.mil (consulté le )
  157. (en) « 1st Battalion, 360th Infantry Regiment », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  158. (en) « 3rd Battalion, 362nd Infantry Regiment », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  159. (en) « 2nd Battalion, 362nd Field Artillery », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  160. (en) « 1-362 ADA Battalion ready to train the nation's defenders », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  161. (en) « 1-361st Engineer Battalion earns FORSCOM Supply Excellence Award », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  162. (en) « 3-364th Engineers welcome new senior enlisted leader », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  163. (en) « 2-393 Brigade Support Battalion- Dakota Battalion », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  164. (en) « RedBall Express 2-356TH Logistical Support Battalion », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  165. (en) « 1st Battalion, 393rd Regiment - BSB », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  166. (en) « 1-395th Brigade Engineer Battalion », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  167. (en) « Log into Facebook », sur Facebook (consulté le )
  168. (en) « Division West medical battalion is sole trainer for deploying Guard, Reserve units », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  169. (en) « 1-310th BEB Relinquish of Responsibility », sur DVIDS (consulté le )
  170. (en) « 3-340th Brigade Engineer Battalion - 181st Inf Bde », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  171. (en) « 1-291st BSB », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  172. (en) « 1-337th Brigade Support Battalion », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  173. (en) « 1-351 Brigade Support Battalion », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  174. (en) « 2-358th Armor Battalion Welcomes New Commander », sur DVIDS (consulté le )
  175. (en) « 3-358th FA Regiment », sur DVIDS (consulté le )
  176. (en) « 1-357th BSB », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  177. « 3-356th Logistics Support Battalion/189th CAB :: U.S. Army Fort Hunter Liggett », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  178. (en) CurrentOps.com, « 166th Aviation Brigade », sur currentops.com (consulté le )
  179. « Its always hard to say goodbye! », sur Facebook, 166th Avn Bde "Archangels", (consulté le )
  180. (en) Jason Douglas | Herald correspondent, « Aviation training brigade returns to Fort Hood », sur The Killeen Daily Herald (consulté le )
  181. « Security force assistance brigades to free brigade combat teams from advise, assist mission », sur www.army.mil, (consulté le )
  182. « 1st Security Force Assistance Brigade promotes first Soldiers under new promotion policy », sur www.army.mil, (consulté le )
  183. « Security Force Assistance Command :: Fort Bragg », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  184. « 3rd Battalion 353rd Training Regiment - About :: Joint Readiness Training Center and Fort Polk », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  185. (en) Maj Allie Scott/U S. Army/DVIDS, « 3rd Battalion, 353rd Regiment receives new battalion commander in ceremony », sur West Central's Best (consulté le )
  186. « Fort Benning | 1st Security Force Assistance Brigade », sur www.benning.army.mil (consulté le )
  187. (en) S. O. F. News, « 54th SFAB - ARNG's Security Force Assistance Brigade », sur SOF News, (consulté le )
  188. (en) « Florida Guard's 54th Security Force Assistance Brigade battalions activate », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  189. « 32nd Army Air and Missile Defense Command », sur United States Army (consulté le )
  190. « 11th Air Defense Artillery Brigade », sur United States Army Website – Fort Bliss (consulté le )
  191. « 31st Air Defense Artillery Brigade », sur United States Army Website – Fort Sill (consulté le )
  192. a et b (en-US) « 'Bullet made out of light': Army to field first Stryker-mounted combat laser in next 45 days », sur Breaking Defense, (consulté le )
  193. « 69th Air Defense Artillery Brigade », sur United States Army Website – United States Army Foot Hood (consulté le )
  194. « 108th Air Defense Artillery Brigade », sur United States Army Website – Fort Bragg (consulté le )
  195. « 20th CBRNE Command », sur United States Army 20th CBRNE Command (consulté le )
  196. « 48th Chemical Brigade: Subordinate Units », United States Army, (consulté le )
  197. « Units », 20th CBRNE Command (consulté le )
  198. (en) Transformation of the Pennsylvania Army National Guard's 56th Brigade Into a Stryker Brigade Combat Team: Environmental Impact Statement, (lire en ligne)
  199. (en-US) « Pa. Army National Guard Soldiers compete in Best Warrior Competition », sur Pennsylvania National Guard (consulté le )
  200. (en) « 165th Military Police Battalion conducts Change of Responsibility », sur DVIDS (consulté le )
  201. a b c et d « List of United States Army National Guard Units, Command Level, State, Effective Date, and Unit Long Name », sur National Guard Website, National Guard Bureau (consulté le )
  202. « Arkansas National Guard > Home > Unit Directory > 142nd », sur arkansas.nationalguard.mil (consulté le )
  203. (en) CitizenSoldier, « Alabama Guardsmen Load Railcars, Operation Western Strike », sur Citizen-Soldier, (consulté le )
  204. (en) CurrentOps.com, « 130th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade », sur currentops.com (consulté le )
  205. (en-US) « National Guard brigade takes on Army modernization mission », sur National Guard (consulté le )
  206. a et b (en) « 690th Brigade Support Battalion and 109th Military Police Battalion Reorganization Ceremony », sur DVIDS (consulté le )
  207. (en) CurrentOps.com, « 226th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade », sur currentops.com (consulté le )
  208. « Kansas Adjutant General's Department - 130th Field Artillery », sur kansastag.gov (consulté le )
  209. a et b « Annual Report 2018 », Nebraska National Guard,
  210. « 110th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade », sur web.archive.org, (consulté le )
  211. (en-US) « 36th Infantry Division - Texas Army National Guard », sur tmd.texas.gov (consulté le )
  212. a b et c (en-US) « Divisional alignment with 36th Infantry Division bring opportunities to 81st Stryker Brigade Combat Team », sur Texas Military Department (consulté le )
  213. (en-US) « Tennessee National Guard’s 278th Armored Cavalry Regiment aligns with 36th Infantry Division in Texas », sur Clarksville Online, (consulté le )
  214. (en-US) Demetrius Harper • •, « Tanks Headed Back to the Texas National Guard », sur NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth (consulté le )
  215. (en-US) « 176 Engineer Brigade », sur tmd.texas.gov (consulté le )
  216. (en-US) « 36th Sustainment Brigade », sur tmd.texas.gov (consulté le )
  217. « 111 Sustainment Brigade - Texas Military Department », sur tmd.texas.gov (consulté le )
  218. (en-US) « 136 Maneuver Enhancement Brigade », sur tmd.texas.gov (consulté le )
  219. « 38th Sustainment Brigade », sur www.in.ng.mil (consulté le )
  220. « Home », sur hi.ng.mil (consulté le )
  221. (en) « Cal Guard's 79th IBCT unites with Puerto Rico-based unit », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  222. (en-US) « The 204th MEB Slotted for Two Annual Training Events in 2020 », sur Utah National Guard (consulté le )
  223. (en) « Warfighter: Always ready to deploy – Fort Carson Mountaineer » (consulté le )
  224. « 204th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade », sur ut.ng.mil (consulté le )
  225. « 42d Infantry Division Units », sur dmna.ny.gov (consulté le )
  226. « 369th Sustainment Brigade - Unit information », sur dmna.ny.gov (consulté le )
  227. « 42nd Combat Aviation Brigade (CAB) - Unit information », sur dmna.ny.gov (consulté le )
  228. « Military Intelligence Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment | Lineage and Honors | U.S. Army Center of Military History », sur history.army.mil (consulté le )
  229. Joseph Trevithick, « The U.S. Army Has Quietly Created a New Commando Division », sur Medium.com, (consulté le )
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  233. (en) Potter, Emily, « USASOAC unveils new DUI », United States Army Special Operations Command, Fort Bragg, NC,‎ (lire en ligne)
  234. « USASOAC Home Page », sur www.soc.mil (consulté le )
  235. « U.S. Army Training Doctrine and Command – Victory Starts Here », sur www.tradoc.army.mil (consulté le )
  236. (en-US) « Army Capabilities Integration Center (ARCIC) », sur USAASC (consulté le )
  237. « US Army Combined Arms Center », sur usacac.army.mil (consulté le )
  238. « US Army Combined Arms Center », sur usacac.army.mil (consulté le )
  239. « United States Army Cyber Center of Excellence », sur Official Homepage of the United States Army Cyber Center of Excellence (consulté le )
  240. a et b « U.S. ARMY INTELLIGENCE CENTER OF EXCELLENCE (USAICOE) », sur United States Army Fort Huachuca Website (consulté le )
  241. « B Troop – 4th U.S. Cavalry Regiment (Memorial) », sur Fort Huachuca, Arizona Website (consulté le )
  242. « 32nd Medical Brigade Website », sur medcoe.army.mil (consulté le )
  243. « U.S. Army Aviation Center of Excellence :: Fort Novosel », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  244. a b et c « Maneuver Support Center of Excellence 2021 Organizational Chart », sur home.army.mil, (consulté le )
  245. « United States Army Engineer School », sur U.S. Army Fort Leonard Wood (consulté le )
  246. « U.S. Army CBRN School :: FORT LEONARD WOOD », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  247. « 3rd CM BDE :: FORT LEONARD WOOD », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  248. « U.S. Army Military Police School :: FORT LEONARD WOOD », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  249. « MCoE Homepage », sur www.benning.army.mil (consulté le )
  250. « Fort Benning | MCDID », sur www.benning.army.mil (consulté le )
  251. « Fort Moore | U.S. Army Armor School », sur www.moore.army.mil (consulté le )
  252. « Fort Benning | 316th Cavalry Brigade », sur www.benning.army.mil (consulté le )
  253. « Fort Benning | 194th Armored Brigade », sur www.benning.army.mil (consulté le )
  254. « Fort Moore | U.S. Army Infantry School », sur www.moore.army.mil (consulté le )
  255. « Fort Moore | 197th Infantry Brigade », sur www.moore.army.mil (consulté le )
  256. « Fort Moore | 198th Infantry Brigade », sur www.moore.army.mil (consulté le )
  257. « Fort Moore | 199th Infantry Brigade », sur www.moore.army.mil (consulté le )
  258. « Fort Moore | Airborne and Ranger Training Brigade (ARTB) », sur www.moore.army.mil (consulté le )
  259. Maj. Gen. Stephen R. Lyons, « Organization and Functions: United States Army Combined Arms Support Command and Sustainment Center of Excellence », sur United States Army Combined Arms Support Command and Sustainment Center of Excellence Website, (consulté le )
  260. « 23rd Brigade - Quartermaster School », sur quartermaster.army.mil (consulté le )
  261. « USAFAS | Fort Sill | Oklahoma | Fires Center of Excellence », sur sill-www.army.mil (consulté le )
  262. « 428th Field Artillery Brigade | Fort Sill | Oklahoma | Fires Center of Excellence », sur sill-www.army.mil (consulté le )
  263. « 2-2 FA | Fort Sill | Oklahoma | Fires Center of Excellence », sur sill-www.army.mil (consulté le )
  264. « 434th Field Artillery Brigade | Fort Sill | Oklahoma | Fires Center of Excellence », sur sill-www.army.mil (consulté le )
  265. « Air Defense Artillery School | Fort Sill | Oklahoma | Fires Center of Excellence », sur sill-www.army.mil (consulté le )
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  268. « 1st Recruiting Brigade », sur recruiting.army.mil (consulté le )
  269. « 3rd Recruiting Brigade », sur recruiting.army.mil (consulté le )
  270. « 5th Recruiting Brigade », sur recruiting.army.mil (consulté le )
  271. « 6th Recruiting Brigade », sur recruiting.army.mil (consulté le )
  272. « Medical Recruiting Brigade », sur recruiting.army.mil (consulté le )
  273. « Marketing and Engagement Brigade », sur recruiting.army.mil (consulté le )
  274. « History | U.S. Army Cadet Command », sur www.cadetcommand.army.mil (consulté le )
  275. « Commanding General | U.S. Army Cadet Command », sur www.cadetcommand.army.mil (consulté le )
  276. a et b « CIMT », sur usacimt.tradoc.army.mil (consulté le )
  277. « 165th Infantry Brigade :: U.S. Army Fort Jackson », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  278. « 193rd Infantry Brigade :: U.S. Army Fort Jackson », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  279. a b c et d « U.S. Army Reserve > Commands > Functional > 108th TNG CMD > 108Units », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  280. (en) Ryan Lucas, « Army Consolidating Europe, Africa Commands », Association of the United States Army,‎ (lire en ligne)
  281. a et b « U.S. Army Europe and Africa Commands consolidate », sur Army.mil, (consulté le )
  282. a et b « U.S. Army Europe and Africa Command Biography », sur U.S. Army Europe and Africa
  283. « U.S. Army Europe and Africa Units », sur www.europeafrica.army.mil (consulté le )
  284. « Units », sur www.2sigbde.army.mil (consulté le )
  285. « 66th MI Public Website », sur www.inscom.army.mil (consulté le )
  286. « Units and Organizations », sur www.usanato.army.mil (consulté le )
  287. « V Corps Headquarters (Forward) in Poland to be located in Poznan », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  288. (en) « Hundreds of V Corps Soldiers depart for Germany in support of NATO allies », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  289. « V Corps Home », sur www.vcorps.army.mil (consulté le )
  290. a b et c (en-US) « 34th Red Bull Infantry Division – Minnesota National Guard » (consulté le )
  291. « V Corps Home », sur www.vcorps.army.mil (consulté le )
  292. « 41st FAB », sur www.41fab.army.mil (consulté le )
  293. (en) « 41st Field Artillery Brigade Returns to Germany », sur DVIDS (consulté le )
  294. a b c d e f g h et i « Bavaria U.S. Military Combat Units :: U.S. Army Garrison Bavaria », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  295. (en) « History in the making: Reactivating the 1st Battalion, 77th Field Artillery Regiment », sur DVIDS (consulté le )
  296. a b et c « Units/Tenants :: U.S. Army Garrison Ansbach », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  297. « Guard101.ppt » [archive du ], Slide 6, Minnesota National Guard (consulté le )
  298. Ben Corell, « 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 34th Infantry Div 2010–11 Afghan Deployment Report », The 34th ID Association Newsletter,‎ , p. 4 (lire en ligne [archive du ], consulté le )
  299. a et b (en) « WayPoint in 2028 – Multidomain Operations », sur DVIDS (consulté le )
  300. (en) Access Idaho, « 116th Cavalry Brigade Combat Team », sur Military Division (consulté le )
  301. (en-US) « 1st Armored Brigade Combat Team, 34th Infantry Division – Minnesota National Guard » (consulté le )
  302. (en-US) « | Units – Iowa National Guard » (consulté le )
  303. (en-US) « 32nd Infantry Brigade Combat Team | Wisconsin National Guard », sur ng.wi.gov, (consulté le )
  304. (en-US) « After reorganization, new Red Arrow engineer unit learning new role », sur Wisconsin National Guard, (consulté le )
  305. (en-US) « About the Wyoming Army Guard », sur Wyoming Military Department (consulté le )
  306. « 169th Field Artillery BDE », sur co.ng.mil (consulté le )
  307. (en) « Pennsylvania Army National Guard Supports Defender Europe 22 », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  308. (en) Indiana National Guard, « 219th Engineer Brigade », sur Indiana National Guard, (consulté le )
  309. « Map », sur www.il.ngb.army.mil (consulté le )
  310. (en-US) « 347th Regional Support Group – Minnesota National Guard » (consulté le )
  311. (en-US) « Minnesota National Guard stands up new logistics units – Minnesota National Guard » (consulté le )
  312. (en-US) « 34th Expeditionary Combat Aviation Brigade – Minnesota National Guard » (consulté le )
  313. (en) « Blast from the past: Cold War artillery command in Germany resurrected and restructured », sur Stars and Stripes (consulté le )
  314. (en-US) Valerie Insinna, « Army reactivates theater artillery command amid Russian build-up near Ukraine », sur Breaking Defense, (consulté le )
  315. (en-US) « 56th Artillery Command Reactivation Ceremony », sur www.europeafrica.army.mil (consulté le )
  316. a et b Multi-Domain Transformation Paper, p. 12
  317. a b et c « The Army's Multi-Domain Task Force (MDTF) », sur Federation of American Scientists Project on Government Secrecy, Congressional Research Service, (consulté le )
  318. (en-US) « Media Advisory - U.S. Army Europe and Africa to activate 2nd Multi-Domain Task Force », sur U.S. Army Europe and Africa (consulté le )
  319. (en) Ryan Lucas, « Army Consolidating Europe, Africa Commands », Association of the United States Army,‎ (lire en ligne)
  320. « SETAF Takes on a new mission », United States Army,
  321. « SETAF assumes new mission as Army AFRICOM component », United States Army,
  322. « U.S. Army Africa official mission statement » [archive du ], (consulté le )
  323. « U.S. Army Southern European Task Force, Africa »
  324. (en) « About », sur www.setaf-africa.army.mil (consulté le )
  325. « INSCOM - U.S. Army Intelligence & Security Command », sur www.inscom.army.mil (consulté le )
  326. (en) « 173rd Airborne Brigade becomes a brigade combat team », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  327. (en-US) « Guard reactivates only airborne battalion », sur National Guard (consulté le )
  328. « Units », sur www.7atc.army.mil (consulté le )
  329. « JMRC », sur www.7atc.army.mil (consulté le )
  330. « 10th AAMDC », sur www.10thaamdc.army.mil (consulté le )
  331. (en) « 52nd Air Defense Artillery Brigade Activation Ceremony », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  332. Will Morris, « Air defense artillery unit is activated in Germany for the first time in decades », sur Stripes,com (consulté le )
  333. « Army rebuilding short-range air defense », US Army (consulté le )
  334. « 21st Theater Sustainment Command > Units », sur www.21tsc.army.mil (consulté le )
  335. « TLSC-E1 », sur www.21tsc.army.mil (consulté le )
  336. « 7th EN », sur www.21tsc.army.mil (consulté le )
  337. « 16SB », sur www.21tsc.army.mil (consulté le )
  338. « Thanks to 16th BDE PAO for the amazing pictures of the 106th Finance Battalion's activation ceremony that took place on the 15th of the June 2022. », sur Facebook, 106th Finance Battalion, (consulté le )
  339. « 30th MED », sur www.21tsc.army.mil (consulté le )
  340. (en) « The 519th Hospital Center and 512th Field Hospital », sur Defense Visual Information Distribution Service, (consulté le )
  341. « 18 MP », sur www.21tsc.army.mil (consulté le )
  342. « 7th Mission Support Command », sur United States Army Reserve Official Website (consulté le )
  343. « 7th MSC Units », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  344. « 361st CA BDE », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  345. « Organization », sur www.arnorth.army.mil (consulté le )
  346. (en) CurrentOps.com, « United States Army North », sur currentops.com (consulté le )
  347. (en) CurrentOps.com, « 263rd Army Air and Missile Defense Command », sur currentops.com (consulté le )
  348. « South Carolina National Guard : Units », sur www.scguard.ng.mil (consulté le )
  349. a et b (en) « 263rd Army Air and Missile Defense Command outgoing commander address troops, says his farewell », sur DVIDS (consulté le )
  350. (en) « 1-178th Field Artillery, South Carolina National Guard, conducts Army Combat Fitness Test », sur DVIDS (consulté le )
  351. « 377Units », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  352. « 4th Sustainment Command (Expeditionary) », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  353. « Our Units », sur www.1tsc.army.mil (consulté le )
  354. « 143rd ESC », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  355. « 310th ESC », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  356. « 316th ESC », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  357. « Army Reserve Sustainment Command », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  358. « U.S. Army Reserve > Commands > Functional > 377th TSC > DSC > DSC Units », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  359. « Organization », sur www.arsouth.army.mil (consulté le )
  360. (en) CurrentOps.com, « Joint Interagency Task Force South », sur currentops.com (consulté le )
  361. « Brigade Units », sur 470th Military Intelligence Brigade Website (consulté le )
  362. « 525th Military Police Battalion », sur www.arsouth.army.mil (consulté le )
  363. « 1st Battalion, 228th Aviation Regiment », sur www.jtfb.southcom.mil (consulté le )
  364. « U.S. Army Reserve > Commands », sur www.usar.army.mil
  365. « U.S. Army Reserve > Commands > Functional > 807th MCDS > 807 MCDS Units », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  366. « Units | U.S. Army Central », sur www.usarcent.army.mil (consulté le )
  367. « 4th BCD | U.S. Army Central », sur www.usarcent.army.mil (consulté le )
  368. « INSCOM - U.S. Army Intelligence & Security Command », sur www.inscom.army.mil (consulté le )
  369. « Area Support Group Kuwait | U.S. Army Central », sur www.usarcent.army.mil (consulté le )
  370. « Task Force Spartan | U.S. Army Central », sur www.usarcent.army.mil (consulté le )
  371. « 335th SC », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  372. « 335th SC Units », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  373. « Our Units », sur www.1tsc.army.mil (consulté le )
  374. (en) Kyle Rempfer, « Lt. Gen. Charles Flynn slated to command US Army Pacific, and 14 other promotions », sur Army Times, (consulté le )
  375. « Units », sur www.usarpac.army.mil (consulté le )
  376. (en) « 5-3FA Continues to progress the Army’s first Long-Range Hypersonic Systems Battery », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  377. (en) « Dark Eagle is on the move: Soldiers complete New Equipment Training », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  378. (en) « Third Multi-Domain Task Force activated for Indo-Pacific duty », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  379. « 500th MI Brigade », sur www.inscom.army.mil (consulté le )
  380. « Subordinate Units – 196th Infantry Brigade / United States Army Pacific », sur United States Army Pacific Website (consulté le )
  381. (en) « 18th MEDCOM », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  382. (en) « 311th Signal Command (Theater); 25 Years of Signal-Cyber Excellence in the Indo-Pacific », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  383. « Units », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  384. « 41st Signal Battalion Task Organization », sur Eighth Army (consulté le )
  385. a et b « Units/Tenants :: United States Army in Alaska », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  386. « U.S. Army Japan > Units > 38th Air Defense Artillery Brigade > Subordinate Units > 1st Battalion, 1st Air Defense Artillery Regiment > History », sur www.usarj.army.mil (consulté le )
  387. « Task Force Talon Infographic », sur Anderson Air Force Base Website (consulté le )
  388. « 8th Theater Sustainment Command Mission » [archive du ], United States Army Pacific Web Site, U.S. Army (consulté le )
  389. a et b (en) « 8th Theater Sustainment Command | The United States Army », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  390. (en) « 303rd Ordnance Battalion (EOD) Activates in Hawaii », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  391. « INSCOM - U.S. Army Intelligence & Security Command », sur www.inscom.army.mil (consulté le )
  392. a et b « Dragon Flyer – Magazine of the 501st Military Intelligence Brigade », sur 501st Military Intelligence Brigade Website, (consulté le )
  393. (en) « 19th Expeditionary Sustainment Command », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  394. Capt. Frank Spatt, « New Air Cavalry Squadron activated at Camp Humphreys »,
  395. (en) CurrentOps.com, « United States Army Reserve Command », sur currentops.com (consulté le )
  396. « Army Reserve Careers Group Units », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  397. « U.S. Army Reserve > Commands > Functional > MIRC > MIRC Units », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  398. « U.S. Army Reserve > Commands > Functional > MIRC », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  399. « U.S. Army Reserve > Commands > Functional > MIRC > MIRC Units », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  400. a b et c « NECPC :: Devens », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  401. (en) Lauren Coontz, « Inside the Secret World of Human Intelligence Collectors at the ‘Interrogation Olympics’ », sur Coffee or Die Magazine, (consulté le )
  402. a et b (en) « JB MDL Fort Dix Celebrating 115th Army Reserve Birthday. April 21, 2023. », sur DVIDS (consulté le )
  403. « Home :: ASA DIX - Developmental », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  404. « U.S. Army Reserve Legal Command Units », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  405. « About Us », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  406. « U.S. Army Reserve > Commands > Functional > 76th ORC > 76th ORC Units », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  407. (en-US) « Army Reserve Chemical Brigade reactivated during historic ceremony », sur U.S. Army Reserve (consulté le )
  408. « 455th Chemical Brigade », sur www.globalsecurity.org (consulté le )
  409. (en) « 76th ORC Soldiers Compete in the FY22 Consortium Best Warrior Competition », sur DVIDS (consulté le )
  410. « Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 455th Chemical Brigade | Lineage and Honors | U.S. Army Center of Military History », sur history.army.mil (consulté le )
  411. a b c et d « Regional United States Army Reserve Retirement Services Teams Map », sur Soldier for Life (consulté le )
  412. « 63rd RD Units », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  413. a et b (en) « 205th Theater Public Affairs Support Element », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  414. « Out Units », sur 81st Rediness Division (consulté le )
  415. « U.S. Army Reserve > Commands > Geographic > 88th Readiness Division > 88th RSC Units », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  416. « U.S. Army Reserve > Commands > Geographic > 99th Readiness Division > 99th RSC Units », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  417. « 1st MSC Units », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  418. (en-US) « Caribbean Geographical Command is a reality », sur U.S. Army Reserve (consulté le )
  419. Staff Sgt. Karla M. Arroyo Rosario, « The Army Reserve Caribbean Geographic Command has a New Commander », sur army.mil, 363rd Public Affairs Detachment, United States Army, (consulté le )
  420. (en) « The 1st Mission Support Command welcomes new commanding officer », sur DVIDS (consulté le )
  421. « 333th Regiment | Lineage and Honors | U.S. Army Center of Military History », sur history.army.mil (consulté le )
  422. (en-US) « 1-333rd Multifunctional Training Battalion », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  423. a et b « Units/Tenants :: FORT BUCHANAN », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  424. a et b « 9th MSC », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  425. « U.S. Army Reserve > Commands > Geographic > 9th MSC > 9th MSC Units », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  426. « U.S. Army Reserve > Featured > Ambassador Program > Find an Ambassador > Hawaii », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  427. (en) « Army RC Units », sur Civil Affairs Association (consulté le )
  428. « U.S. Army Reserve > Featured > Ambassador Program > Find an Ambassador > Hawaii », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  429. « U.S. Army Reserve > Featured > Ambassador Program > Find an Ambassador > Hawaii », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  430. « U.S. Army Reserve > Featured > Ambassador Program > Find an Ambassador > Hawaii », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  431. « U.S. Army Reserve > Featured > Ambassador Program > Find an Ambassador > Hawaii », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  432. « U.S. Army Reserve > Commands > Functional > 412th TEC > 412thTECUnits », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  433. « U.S. Army Reserve > Commands > Functional > 416th TEC > 416th TEC Units », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  434. « 79thTSCUnits », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  435. « 103units », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  436. « U.S. Army Reserve > Commands > Functional > 79th TSC > 311th ESC > 311ESCUnits », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  437. « U.S. Army Reserve > Commands > Functional > 79th TSC > 364th ESC > 364ESCUnits », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  438. « U.S. Army Reserve > Commands > Functional > 79th TSC > 451st ESC > 451ESCUnits », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  439. « U.S. Army Reserve > Commands > Functional > 80th TNG CMD > 80th TC (TASS) Units », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  440. (en) « 3/379th Logistics Support Battalion Hosts Annual Logistics Warrior Competition », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  441. « 94th TD (FS) », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  442. « 100th TD (LD) », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  443. « 83rd USARRTC », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  444. « 102nd TD (MS) », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  445. « U.S. Army Reserve > Commands > Functional > 84th TNG CMD > 84th TC Units », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  446. a b c et d « U.S. Army Reserve > Commands > Functional > 84th TNG CMD > 84th TC Units », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  447. « About Us », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  448. « 87th TNG DIV », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  449. « U.S. Army Reserve > Commands > Functional > 3rd MCDS > 3rd MCDSUnits », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  450. « U.S. Army Reserve > Commands > Functional > ARMEDCOM > ARMEDCOM Units », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  451. « 200th MP Units », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  452. a et b « Aviation Command », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  453. « 11th ECAB », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  454. « 244 Units », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  455. a b c d et e « U.S. Army Reserve > Commands > Functional > USACAPOC > USACAPOC Units », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  456. « 151st Theater Information Operations group », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  457. « 350th CACOM », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  458. « U.S. Army Reserve > Featured > Ambassador Program > Find an Ambassador > Hawaii », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  459. (en-US) « Army National Guard to establish eight Divisions by aligning existing ARNG Division Headqu », sur National Guard (consulté le )
  460. a et b (en) « New Army Guard company, battalion headquarters activated at NGB », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  461. (en) CurrentOps.com, « 66th Aviation Command », sur currentops.com (consulté le )
  462. (en-US) « State Aviation Command – Louisiana National Guard » (consulté le )
  463. (en) CurrentOps.com, « Army National Guard Element, JFHQ Alabama », sur currentops.com (consulté le )
  464. (en) CurrentOps.com, « 167th Sustainment Command », sur currentops.com (consulté le )
  465. (en) CurrentOps.com, « 135th Sustainment Command », sur currentops.com (consulté le )
  466. (en) CurrentOps.com, « 111th Ordnance Group », sur currentops.com (consulté le )
  467. « Alaska Army National Guard », sur ak.ng.mil (consulté le )
  468. (en) CurrentOps.com, « Army National Guard Element, JFHQ Alaska », sur currentops.com (consulté le )
  469. « Army National Guard | Department of Emergency and Military Affairs », sur dema.az.gov (consulté le )
  470. (en) CurrentOps.com, « Army National Guard Element, JFHQ Arizona », sur currentops.com (consulté le )
  471. (en-US) Aerotech News, « 153rd BSB becomes 153rd Combat Sustainment Support Battalion », sur The Thunderbolt - Luke AFB, (consulté le )
  472. (en-US) « 215th Regional Training Institute (RTI) AZARNG - », sur www.part-time-commander.com, (consulté le )
  473. « Arkansas National Guard > Home > Unit Directory », sur arkansas.nationalguard.mil (consulté le )
  474. (en) CurrentOps.com, « Army National Guard Element, JFHQ Arkansas », sur currentops.com (consulté le )
  475. (en) « Army | Cal Guard » (consulté le )
  476. (en) CurrentOps.com, « Army National Guard Element, JFHQ California », sur currentops.com (consulté le )
  477. (en) « Military Active-Duty Personnel, Civilians by State », sur Governing, (consulté le )
  478. « Colorado Army National Guard », sur co.ng.mil (consulté le )
  479. « Units », sur ct.ng.mil (consulté le )
  480. « Home », sur www.de.ng.mil (consulté le )
  481. « District of Columbia National Guard > Components > Units > District of Columbia Army National Guard », sur dc.ng.mil (consulté le )
  482. « Commands », sur fl.ng.mil (consulté le )
  483. « The Army School System », sur www.globalsecurity.org (consulté le )
  484. (en) « 211th Regiment - Florida RTI », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  485. (en) « 211th Regiment change of command ceremony », sur DVIDS (consulté le )
  486. (en) « 211th Regiment - Florida RTI », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  487. (en) « 211th Regiment - Florida RTI », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  488. (en) « 211th Regiment - Florida RTI », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  489. « Georgia National Guard > Leadership > Georgia Army National Guard », sur ga.ng.mil (consulté le )
  490. (en) « Units », sur dod.hawaii.gov (consulté le )
  491. (en) Access Idaho, « Idaho Army National Guard », sur Military Division (consulté le )
  492. « Map », sur www.il.ngb.army.mil (consulté le )
  493. « Indiana National Guard > About > Organization », sur www.in.ng.mil (consulté le )
  494. (en) Indiana National Guard, « 81st Troop Command », sur Indiana National Guard, (consulté le )
  495. (en-US) « | Units – Iowa National Guard » (consulté le )
  496. « Kansas Adjutant General's Department - Army National Guard », sur www.kansastag.gov (consulté le )
  497. « Kentucky Guard > Army Guard », sur ky.ng.mil (consulté le )
  498. « Facebook », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  499. (en-US) « Louisiana National Guard – Louisiana National Guard » (consulté le )
  500. « Maine National Guard > Units », sur www.me.ng.mil (consulté le )
  501. (en-US) « Organization », sur Maryland.gov Military Department (consulté le )
  502. (en-US) « 629th (Expeditionary) Military Intelligence Battalion Activation » (consulté le )
  503. « Michigan National Guard > About Us > Units », sur minationalguard.dodlive.mil (consulté le )
  504. (en-US) « Units – Minnesota National Guard » (consulté le )
  505. (en-US) « 84th Troop Command – Minnesota National Guard » (consulté le )
  506. (en-US) « 175th Regiment (Regional Training Institute) – Minnesota National Guard » (consulté le )
  507. (en-US) « Units », sur ms.ng.mil (consulté le )
  508. « 184th Sustainment Command | Mississippi National Guard », sur www.ng.ms.gov (consulté le )
  509. « Missouri National Guard > About Us > Our Force », sur www.moguard.ngb.mil (consulté le )
  510. « Montana National Guard », sur www.montanaguard.com (consulté le )
  511. « NENG Major Commands », sur ne.ng.mil (consulté le )
  512. « Joint Force Headquarters Biennial Report 2021–2022 », sur Nevada National Guard Website (consulté le )
  513. « New Hampshire National Guard > Components > Army », sur nh.ng.mil (consulté le )
  514. « New Jersey Army National Guard », sur www.nj.gov (consulté le )
  515. « New York National Guard Military Units and Facilities », sur dmna.ny.gov (consulté le )
  516. « ARNG Flight Det NY - Unit information », sur dmna.ny.gov (consulté le )
  517. « Army National Guard », sur nc.ng.mil (consulté le )
  518. « Units / Tenants :: Fort Bragg », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  519. (en) « Home », sur North Dakota National Guard (consulté le )
  520. « Ohio Army National Guard », sur www.ong.ohio.gov (consulté le )
  521. « Oklahoma National Guard > Units », sur ok.ng.mil (consulté le )
  522. « Army National Guard », sur www.pa.ng.mil (consulté le )
  523. (en) « 201st Regional Training Institute - RTI », sur www.facebook.com (consulté le )
  524. « Army Units », sur ri.ng.mil (consulté le )
  525. « South Carolina National Guard : Units », sur www.scguard.ng.mil (consulté le )
  526. « South Dakota National Guard | SD Army National Guard », sur sd.ng.mil (consulté le )
  527. (en) « Army Guard », sur www.tn.gov (consulté le )
  528. (en-US) « Army National Guard - Texas Military Department », sur tmd.texas.gov (consulté le )
  529. « Command Structure », sur ut.ng.mil (consulté le )
  530. « Units », sur vt.public.ng.mil (consulté le )
  531. « VI Army Guard », sur vi.ng.mil (consulté le )
  532. « Virginia Army Guard », sur va.ng.mil (consulté le )
  533. (en) efelle creative, « Army Guard | Washington State Military Department, Citizens Serving Citizens with Pride & Tradition », sur mil.wa.gov (consulté le )
  534. « Units », sur www.wv.ng.mil (consulté le )
  535. (en-US) « About the Wyoming Army Guard », sur Wyoming Military Department (consulté le )
  536. « INSCOM - U.S. Army Intelligence & Security Command », sur www.inscom.army.mil (consulté le )
  537. « Welcome to the 780th Military Intelligence Brigade », sur www.inscom.army.mil (consulté le )
  538. « Cyber Protection Brigade | Hunter Brigade - LandWarNet eUniversity », sur cpb.army.mil (consulté le )
  539. « How We Fight - LandWarNet eUniversity », sur cpb.army.mil (consulté le )
  540. « Subordinate Units », sur www.1stiocmd.army.mil (consulté le )
  541. a b c d et e « Units/Tenants :: FORT BELVOIR », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  542. « INSCOM - U.S. Army Intelligence & Security Command », sur www.inscom.army.mil (consulté le )
  543. « INSCOM - U.S. Army Intelligence & Security Command », sur www.inscom.army.mil (consulté le )
  544. « INSCOM - U.S. Army Intelligence & Security Command », sur www.inscom.army.mil (consulté le )
  545. « INSCOM - U.S. Army Intelligence & Security Command », sur www.inscom.army.mil (consulté le )
  546. « INSCOM - U.S. Army Intelligence & Security Command », sur www.inscom.army.mil (consulté le )
  547. « INSCOM - U.S. Army Intelligence & Security Command », sur www.inscom.army.mil (consulté le )
  548. (en) « US Army activates new counterintelligence command », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  549. « INSCOM - U.S. Army Intelligence & Security Command », sur www.inscom.army.mil (consulté le )
  550. (en) « 7th Signal Command (Theater) », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  551. « 21st Signal Brigade :: U.S. Army Fort Detrick », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  552. « Fort A.P. Hill Units and Tenants », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  553. « Network Enterprise Center 21st Signal Brigade », sur home.army.mil (consulté le )
  554. « 93rd Signal Brigade », sur web.archive.org, (consulté le )
  555. « 106th Signal Brigade - JBSA, TX », sur www.samhouston.army.mil (consulté le )
  556. « AMC Major Subordinate Commands », sur www.amc.army.mil (consulté le )
  557. « Ensuring Readiness for Strategic Support: Strategic Power Projection », sur www.army.mil (consulté le )
  558. « U.S. Army Contracting Command – Reporting Units » (consulté le )
  559. « ECC | Subordinate Commands », sur web.archive.org, (consulté le )
  560. (en) « Kuwait Contracting Brigade Changes Command », sur DVIDS (consulté le )
  561. « 409th Contracting Support Brigade », sur www.409csb.army.mil (consulté le )
  562. (en-US) « 410th Contracting Support Brigade welcomes new commander », sur Joint Base San Antonio (consulté le )
  563. « 410th CSB », sur web.archive.org, (consulté le )
  564. « Army Sustainment Command », sur www.aschq.army.mil (consulté le )
  565. « U.S. Army Petroleum Center », sur usapc.army.mil (consulté le )
  566. « ASC Packaging Storage and Containerization Center », sur www.pscc.army.mil (consulté le )
  567. « 401st Army Field Support Brigade – Factsheet » [archive du ] (consulté le )
  568. « Army Sustainment Command > Units > 401st », sur www.aschq.army.mil (consulté le )
  569. « Army Sustainment Command > Units > 402nd », sur www.aschq.army.mil (consulté le )
  570. « Army Sustainment Command > Units > 403rd », sur www.aschq.army.mil (consulté le )
  571. « Army Sustainment Command > Units > 404th », sur www.aschq.army.mil (consulté le )
  572. « AFSB Europe », sur www.afsbeurope.army.mil (consulté le )
  573. (en-US) Cameron Porter et Aerotech News, « U.S. Army activates prepositioned stocks in Europe », sur Aerotech News & Review, (consulté le )
  574. « Army Sustainment Command > Units > 406th », sur www.aschq.army.mil (consulté le )
  575. « Army Sustainment Command > Units > 407th », sur www.aschq.army.mil (consulté le )
  576. « Locations », sur www.usace.army.mil (consulté le )
  577. « Home », sur www.tad.usace.army.mil (consulté le )
  578. « Home | Army Medicine », sur armymedicine.health.mil (consulté le )
  579. « Regional Command Center Atlantic | Army Medicine », sur armymedicine.health.mil (consulté le )
  580. « Regional Health Command Central | Army Medicine », sur armymedicine.health.mil (consulté le )
  581. « Regional Health Command Europe | Army Medicine », sur armymedicine.health.mil (consulté le )
  582. « Regional Health Command Pacific | Army Medicine », sur armymedicine.health.mil (consulté le )
  583. « HOME », sur www.smdc.army.mil (consulté le )
  584. « 1st Space Brigade », sur www.smdc.army.mil (consulté le )
  585. Taylor, Scott. "Provost Marshal General back in the saddle again", Military Police, April 2004. Accessed October 12, 2009. "With an office in the Pentagon (a first for the position), the Provost Marshal General now serves as the Army Staff's single source for law enforcement, providing executive oversight for planning, resourcing, policy making, and execution of full-spectrum law enforcement and security support to the Army. Functional areas include criminal investigations, police intelligence, physical security, corrections and internment, and antiterrorism."
  586. « 6th Military Police Group (CID) », sur www.cid.army.mil (consulté le )
  587. « 701st Global Military Support », sur www.cid.army.mil (consulté le )
  588. Charlotte Richter, « 40th, 705th MP Battalions inactivate, designate new units »,
  589. « USAMRDC: Subordinate Commands », sur mrdc.health.mil (consulté le )
  590. (en) « 75th Innovation Command », sur DVIDS Hub (consulté le )
  591. « 75th Innovation CMD », sur www.usar.army.mil (consulté le )
  592. (en) « 75th IC Presentation », sur www.massnationalguard.org (consulté le )
  593. (en) « The First Pass Among Innovators: Mountain View Group establishes presence during first-ever change of command ceremony », sur DVIDS (consulté le )
  594. « Chapter 9 650TH Military Intelligence Group - FM 34-37 Strategic, Departmental, and Operational IEW Operations Preliminary Draft », sur irp.fas.org (consulté le )

References