DEPARTMENT of the ARMY the Pentagon, Washington, DC 20310 Phone, 703–697–5081
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY The Pentagon, Washington, DC 20310 Phone, 703–697–5081. Internet, www.army.mil. SECRETARY OF THE ARMY THOMAS E. WHITE Under Secretary of the Army LES BROWNLEE Assistant Secretary of the Army (Acquisition, CLAUDE M. BOLTON, JR. Logistics, and Technology) Assistant Secretary of the Army (Civil Works) LES BROWNLEE, Acting Assistant Secretary of the Army (Financial SANDRA PACK Management and Comptroller) Assistant Secretary of the Army (Installations MARIO P. FLORIO and Environment) Assistant Secretary of the Army (Manpower REGINALD J. BROWN and Reserve Affairs) General Counsel STEVEN J. MORELLO Administrative Assistant to the Secretary of the JOEL B. HUDSON Army Director, Information Systems for Command, LT. GEN. PETER M. CUVIELLO Control, Communications, and Computers Inspector General LT. GEN. MICHAEL W. ACKERMAN Auditor General FRANCIS E. REARDON Deputy Under Secretary of the Army JOHN W. MCDONALD Deputy Under Secretary of the Army WALTER W. HOLLIS (Operations Research) Chief of Legislative Liaison MAJ. GEN. JOE G. TAYLOR Chief of Public Affairs MAJ. GEN. LARRY D. GOTTARDI Director, Small and Disadvantaged Business TRACEY L. PINSON Utilization Office of the Chief of Staff: Chief of Staff, United States Army GEN. ERIC K. SHINSEKI Vice Chief of Staff GEN. JOHN M. KEANE Director of the Army Staff LT. GEN. KEVIN P. BYRNES Army Staff: Assistant Chief of Staff for Installation MAJ. GEN. R.L. VAN ANTWERP Management Deputy Chief of Staff, G–2LT. GEN. ROBERT W. NOONAN, JR. Deputy Chief of Staff, G–4LT. GEN. CHARLES S. MAHAN, JR. Deputy Chief of Staff, G–8LT. GEN. BENJAMIN S. GRIFFIN Deputy Chief of Staff, G–3LT. GEN. DAVID D. MCKIERNAN Deputy Chief of Staff, G–1LT. GEN. JOHN L. LEMOYNE Chief of Engineers LT. GEN. ROBERT B. FLOWERS The Surgeon General LT. GEN. JAMES B. PEAKE Chief, Army Reserve LT. GEN. THOMAS J. PLEWES Director, Army National Guard Bureau LT. GEN. RUSSELL C. DAVIS Judge Advocate General MAJ. GEN. THOMAS J. ROMIG Chief of Chaplains MAJ. GEN. GAYLORD T. GUNHUS Major Army Commands: 173 VerDate 11-MAY-2000 02:17 Aug 24, 2002 Jkt 010199 PO 00000 Frm 00173 Fmt 6995 Sfmt 6995 W:\DISC\189864TX.XXX txed01 PsN: txed01 174 U.S. GOVERNMENT MANUAL Commanding General, U.S. Army Materiel GEN. PAUL J. KERN Command Commanding General, U.S. Army Corps of LT. GEN. ROBERT B. FLOWERS Engineers Commanding General, U.S. Army Criminal BRIG. GEN. DONALD J. RYDER Investigation Command Commanding General, U.S. Army Forces GEN. LARRY R. ELLIS Command Commanding General, U.S. Army Intelligence MAJ. GEN. KEITH B. ALEXANDER and Security Command Commanding General, U.S. Army Medical LT. GEN. JAMES B. PEAKE Command Commanding General, U.S. Army Military MAJ. GEN. JAMES T. JACKSON District of Washington Commanding General, U.S. Army Military MAJ. GEN. KENNETH L. PRIVRATSKY Traffic Management Command Commanding General, U.S. Army Space and LT. GEN. JOSEPH M. CUSOMANO, Missile Defense Command JR. Commanding General, U.S. Army Special LT. GEN. BRYAN D. BROWN Operations Command Commanding General, U.S. Army Training and GEN. JOHN N. ABRAMS Doctrine Command Commanding General, 8th U.S. Army LT. GEN. DANIEL R. ZANINI Commanding General, U.S. Army South MAJ. GEN. ALFRED A. VALENZUELA Commanding General, U.S. Army Pacific LT. GEN. EDWIN P. SMITH Commanding General, U.S. Army Europe and GEN. MONTGOMERY C. MEIGS 7th Army The mission of the Department of the Army is to organize, train, and equip active duty and reserve forces for the preservation of peace, security, and the defense of our Nation. As part of our national military team, the Army focuses on land operations; its soldiers must be trained with modern arms and equipment and be ready to respond quickly. The Army also administers programs aimed at protecting the environment, improving waterway navigation, flood and beach erosion control, and water resource development. It provides military assistance to Federal, State, and local government agencies, including natural disaster relief assistance. The American Continental Army, now provided that the Department of the called the United States Army, was Army be a military department within established by the Continental Congress the Department of Defense. on June 14, 1775, more than a year Secretary The Secretary of the Army is before the Declaration of Independence. the senior official of the Department of The Department of War was established the Army. Subject to the direction, as an executive department at the seat of authority, and control of the President as government by act approved August 7, Commander in Chief and of the 1789 (1 Stat. 49). The Secretary of War Secretary of Defense, the Secretary of the was established as its head. The National Army is responsible for and has the Security Act of 1947 (50 U.S.C. 401) created the National Military authority to conduct all affairs of the Establishment, and the Department of Department of the Army, including its War was designated the Department of organization, administration, operation, the Army. The title of its Secretary efficiency, and such other activities as became Secretary of the Army (5 U.S.C. may be prescribed by the President or 171). The National Security Act Amendments of 1949 (63 Stat. 578) VerDate 11-MAY-2000 02:17 Aug 24, 2002 Jkt 010199 PO 00000 Frm 00174 Fmt 6995 Sfmt 6995 W:\DISC\189864TX.XXX txed01 PsN: txed01 VerDate 11-MAY-2000 02:17Aug 24,2002 Jkt010199 PO00000 Frm00175 Fmt6995 Sfmt6995 W:\DISC\189864TX.XXX txed01 PsN:txed01 DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE HEADQUARTERS OF THE DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY LEGISLATIVE LIAISON ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT GENERAL COUNSEL SECRETARY OF THE ARMY PUBLIC AFFAIRS ASSISTANT ASSISTANT ASSISTANT ASSISTANT ASSISTANT CHIEF INFORMATION AUDITOR SECRETARY SECRETARY SECRETARY SECRETARY SECRETARY OFFICER/G6 UNDER SECRETARY GENERAL OF THE ARMY OF THE ARMY OF THE ARMY OF THE ARMY OF THE ARMY (MANPOWER AND (INSTALLATIONS AND (CIVIL WORKS) (ACQUISITION, (FINANCIAL OF THE ARMY RESERVE AFFAIRS) ENVIRONMENT) LOGISTICS, MANAGEMENT AND INSPECTOR AND TECHNOLOGY) COMPTROLLER) GENERAL DIRECTOR OF THE ARMY STAFF CHAPLAINS CHIEF OF STAFF **SURGEON DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE OF THE ARMY GENERAL CHIEF, ARMY RESERVE VICE CHIEF OF STAFF OF THE ARMY DIRECTOR, ARMY NATIONAL GUARD *DEPUTY CHIEF *ASSISTANT CHIEF **CORPS OF *DEPUTY CHIEF *DEPUTY CHIEF *DEPUTY CHIEF DEPUTY CHIEF OF STAFF, G-1 OF STAFF FOR ENGINEERS OF STAFF, G-4 OF STAFF, G-8 OF STAFF, G-3 OF STAFF, G-2 (PERSONNEL) INSTALLATION (LOGISTICS) (PROGRAMS) (OPERATIONS) (INTELLIGENCE) JUDGE ADVOCATE MANAGEMENT GENERAL [GENERAL COUNSEL OVERSIGHT] SMALL AND DISADVANTAGED BUSINESS CLEARLY DEFINED RESPONSIBILITIES TO ASSISTANT SECRETARIES UTILIZATION . OVERSIGHT * RESPONSIBLE TO ASSISTANT SECRETARIES FOR ADVICE AND ASSISTANCE IN FUNCTIONAL AREA. 175 ** MACOM COMMANDERS 176 U.S. GOVERNMENT MANUAL the Secretary of Defense as authorized power, duty, or function of the Secretary by law. or the Chief of Staff; For further information, call 703–695–7922. —investigate and report upon the efficiency of the Army and its Army Staff Presided over by the Chief preparation for military operations; of Staff, the Army Staff is the military —act as the agent of the Secretary of staff of the Secretary of the Army. It is the Army and the Chief of Staff in the duty of the Army Staff to: coordinating the action of all —prepare for deployment of the Army organizations of the Department of the and for such recruiting, organizing, Army; and supplying, equipping, training, —perform such other duties not mobilizing, and demobilizing of the otherwise assigned by law as may be Army as will assist the execution of any prescribed by the Secretary of the Army. Program Areas Civil Functions Civil functions of the planning, programming, budgeting, Department of the Army include the evaluation, and oversight of intelligence Civil Works Program, the Nation’s major activities. The Army staff is responsible Federal water resources development for monitoring relevant foreign activity involving engineering works intelligence developments and foreign such as major dams, reservoirs, levees, disclosure; imagery, signals, human, harbors, waterways, locks, and many open-source, measurement, and other types of structures; the signatures intelligence; administration of Arlington and Soldiers’ counterintelligence; threat models and Home National Cemeteries; and other simulations; and security related matters. countermeasures. History This area includes advisory and Medical This area includes coordination service provided on management of health services for the historical matters, including historical Army and, as directed for other services, properties; formulation and execution of agencies, and organizations; health the Army Historical Program; and standards for Army personnel; health preparation and publication of histories professional education and training; required by the Army. career management authority over Installations This area consists of commissioned and warrant officer policies, procedures, and resources for personnel of the Army Medical management of installations to ensure Department; medical research, materiel the availability of efficient and affordable development, testing and evaluation; base services and infrastructure in policies concerning health aspects of support of military missions. It includes Army environmental programs and the review of facilities requirements and prevention of disease; and planning, stationing, identification and validation programming, and budgeting for Army- of resource requirements,