1 / 33

Lesson 1 Dept of Defense Organization

NS 101 Introduction to Naval Science. Lesson 1 Dept of Defense Organization. Learning Objectives. Know the basic organization of the DOD Know the titles of the members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Know what a unified /combatant command is

morley
Télécharger la présentation

Lesson 1 Dept of Defense Organization

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. NS 101Introduction to Naval Science Lesson 1Dept of Defense Organization

  2. Learning Objectives • Know the basic organization of the DOD • Know the titles of the members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff • Know what a unified /combatant command is • Know the difference between the operational and the administrative chains of command

  3. The Department of Defense (DOD)

  4. Dept of Defense • The DOD was created by the National Security Act of 1947 • It was established as an executive department of the government by the National Security Act amendments of 1949 • Headed by the Secretary of Defense (SECDEF)

  5. DOD Origins • Intent of the National Security Act and its amendments: • Increase civilian control of the Armed Forces to be consistent with Constitutional requirements. • Eliminate unnecessary duplication. • Provide more efficient inter-service cooperation. • Provide a unified strategic direction of the Armed Forces.

  6. DOD Organization • Three primary provisions of the amendments: • Establishment of three military departments (Army, Navy, Air Force) under the SECDEF • Organized each military department under its own Secretary • Establishment of unified and specified commands.

  7. Dept of Defense SECDEF Dept of the Air Force Sec of the Air Force Dept of the Army Sec of the Army Dept of the Navy SECNAV Department of Defense

  8. Dept of Defense Mission • To support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies • Protect the United States, its possessions, and areas vital to its interests • Advance the policies and interests of the United States • Safeguard the internal security of the United States

  9. The Secretary of Defense • The Office of SECDEF was created by the National Security Act of 1947 as the successor to the Secretary of War. • SECDEF is the principal defense policy advisor to the President • Responsible for formulating general defense policy The Honorable Robert M. Gates

  10. Dept of Defense SECDEF Dept of the Air Force Sec of the Air Force Dept of the Army Sec of the Army Dept of the Navy SECNAV Department of Defense Army Chief Chief of Naval Operations Air Force Chief of Staff Commandant of the Marine of Staff Corps

  11. Chief of Naval Operations Commandant of the Marine Corps Army Chief of Staff Air Force Chief of Staff Adm. Michael G. Mullen Gen. George W. Casey Gen. James T. Conway Gen. T. Michael Museley Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS)

  12. Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) • Established informally in WWII and was modeled after the British Chiefs of Staff. • Created as a permanent agency under the National Security Act of 1947. • Provided President with direct access to the military. • Improved the coordination between the services.

  13. Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Peter Pace

  14. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs • Appointed by the President from any of the four services. • The principle military advisor to the President, NSC, and SECDEF. • Is the senior military advisor in the country but this person may not exercise military command over the JCS or any of the armed services.

  15. Vice Chairman, JCSGeneral James E. Cartwright • Member JCS Staff • Second highest ranking military officer • 8th Officer to hold the position

  16. Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) The Chairman, the Vice Chairman, and the four Service Chiefs: Chief of Naval Operations Commandant of the Marine Corps Air Force Chief of Staff Army Chief of Staff Adm. Michael G. Mullen Gen. George W. Casey Gen. James T. Conway Gen. T. Michael Museley

  17. Unified Commands • Composed of forces from two or more services and has a broad, continuing mission. Usually organized on a geographic basis. • Direct link to President & Secretary of Defense • Five Commanders have geographical responsibility. • Four Commanders have worldwide responsibility but own no territory.

  18. Unified Commands Central Command – Mideast Pacific Command – Pacific/Indian Oceans, Asia European Command – Europe, Africa, Asia Southern Command – South & Central America Northern Command – North America Strategic Command Transportation Command Special Operation Command Joint Forces Command

  19. Central Command Adm William J. Fallon, USN Geographical responsibility

  20. Pacific CommandAdm Timothy Keating, USN Geographical responsibility

  21. Southern CommandAdm James Stavridis, USN Geographical responsibility

  22. European CommandGen. Bantz J. Craddock, USA Geographical responsibility

  23. Northern CommandGen. Gene Renuart, USAF Geographical responsibility

  24. Africa Command AFRICOM is slated to be established as a separate unified command by Sept. 30, 2008

  25. Strategic CommandGen. C. Robert Kehler, USAF • Deter military attack on the United States and its allies, and should deterrence fail, employ forces so as to achieve national objectives • Deter/control nuclear forces • Control Space Operations Worldwide responsibility

  26. Transportation Command Gen. Norton Schwartz, USAF Provide air, land, and sea transportation for the Department of Defense in time of peace and war. Worldwide responsibility

  27. Special Operations Adm. Eric T. Olson, USN Provide counter-paramilitary, counter-narcotics, guerilla, psychological warfare, civil education, and insurgency capability in support of US national and international interests Worldwide responsibility

  28. Joint Forces CommandGen. Lance Smith, USAF • Responsible for all U.S. military activities, joint service concepts, development, experimentation, integration and interoperability. • Joint military training, and readiness of 1.1 million personnel for worldwide deployment. Worldwide responsibility

  29. The President - Commander in Chief Secretary of Defense Unified Commander Chain of Command

  30. Operational Command • Used for direction of actual combatant forces • Consists of task groups, task forces etc. Administrative Command • Support operational forces • Organize, Train and Equip forces • Normally located in CONUS (continental United States)

  31. Operational Chain of Command - President - Secretary of Defense (- Joint Chiefs of Staff) * - Commander, Combatant Command - Numbered Fleet or MEF Cmdr - Task Force Commander

  32. Administrative Chain of Command - President - Secretary of Defense - Secretary of the Navy - CNO or CMC - Fleet Cmdr or MarFor Cmdr - Type Cmdr (Navy only) - Group / Wing Cmdr

  33. QUESTIONS? For Wednesday: USN/USMC NOG Ch 13, 14, 15

More Related