Multinational Corps Northeast

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Multinational Corps North East
150px
Active 18 September 1999–present
Country  NATO
  •  HRV (since 2012)
  •  CZE (since 2005)
  •  DNK
  •  EST (since 2004)
  •  FRA (since 2015)
  •  DEU
  •  HUN (since 2013)
  •  LVA (since 2004)
  •  LTU (since 2004)
  •  NLD (since 2015)
  •  POL
  •  ROU (since 2008)
  •  SVK (since 2005)
  •  SVN (since 2009)
  •  SWE (since 2014)
  •  TUR (since 2015)
  •  GBR (since 2015)
  •  USA (since 2006)
Allegiance NATO North Atlantic Treaty Organization
HQ Szczecin, Poland
Commanders
Corps Commander Lieutenant General Manfred Hoffman (DE)[1]
Deputy Corps Commander Major General Agner Rokos (DK)
Chief of Staff Brigadier General Lutz Niemann (DE)

Multinational Corps Northeast was formed on 18 September 1999 at Szczecin, Poland, which became its headquarters. It evolved from what was for many years the only multinational corps in NATO, Allied Land Forces Schleswig-Holstein and Jutland (LANDJUT) (in its turn, a part of Allied Forces Northern Europe). From 1962 LANDJUT had been responsible for the defence of the Baltic Approaches from a headquarters at Rendsburg, Germany. It comprised the 6th Panzergrenadier Division and the Danish Jutland Division.

History

A tri-national working group was established following the July 1997 decision that Poland was to be admitted to NATO with the aim of establishing the corps as part of NATO’s Main Defence Forces. Its missions are three-fold: to participate in the collective defence of NATO territory, under Article 5 of the North Atlantic Treaty, to contribute to multinational crisis management including peace support operations, and to provide command and control for humanitarian, rescue, and disaster relief operations.

In July 1997, Ministers of Defence of Denmark, Germany and Poland decided to establish a Danish-German-Polish Corps. This Corps was to be named Multinational Corps Northeast with its Headquarters located in Szczecin, Poland. The Headquarters Allied Land Forces Schleswig-Holstein and Jutland (LANDJUT) from Rendsburg in Germany was to form the nucleus of this new command. Ministers of Defence of Denmark, Germany and Poland signed the Corps Convention in 1998, when Poland was not a member of NATO yet, but the date of the country’s accession (12 March 1999) had already been set. On 18 September 1999, the three Framework Nations – Denmark, Germany, Poland – could hoist their flags in the Baltic Barracks, the seat of the Corps in Szczecin. The Corps has significantly developed decisively since that time.

Though it is a NATO-affiliated formation, the Corps Convention is a trilateral agreement between the three nations. The positions of commander, deputy commander, and chief of staff rotate between the three nations. For common purposes of practice and training the corps was assigned to Joint Sub-Regional Command Northeast (JSRC NE), at Karup, Denmark. For Article 5 common defence purposes, the Corps was to have been assigned either to JSRC NE or the JSRC Centre at Heidelberg, Germany. Following the latest reorganisation, it might report if designated for operations in Central Europe to Allied Force Command Heidelberg. The 14th Panzergrenadier Division of the German Army used to be part of the Corps, but disbanded at the end of 2008.

Due to its geographical location, the only NATO HQ East of the former Iron Curtain, Multinational Corps North East has a key function in the integration of new NATO member states. This is reflected in the structure of its personnel. Officers and NCO's from the Czech Republic, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Slovakia are serving at Multinational Corps North East. Since April 2004, the flags of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania have been fluttering at the Headquarters. In January 2005, Slovakia joined Multinational Corps Northeast, whereas the Czech Republic - in October 2005. The US flag was hoisted in November 2006 indicating the US membership in the Corps. In July 2008, first Romanian officers arrived to serve at the HQ. In August 2009, Slovenia entered the MNC NE family. In January 2012, Croatia officially became the twelfth nation of the Corps. In July 2013, the flag of Hungary was hoisted in Baltic Barracks. Sweden, a non-NATO member, sent its representative to the Baltic Barracks in autumn 2014. In 2015 Turkish, British, French and Dutch officers started their tours of duty in Szczecin.

In 2005, during the Compact Eagle exercise, the Headquarters achieved Full Operational Capability.

From January to August 2007 a considerable number of personnel from Multinational Corps Northeast were put at the disposal of ISAF's headquarters in Kabul, Afghanistan.[2]

On 5 February 2015, a trilateral statement by the Corps Convention countries stated, in part, that

  • At the NATO Summit in September 2014 the Ministers of Defence from Germany, Poland and Denmark informed their colleagues and signed a statement that they had decided to raise the level of readiness of the Headquarters MNC NE from a Forces of Lower Readiness Headquarters to a High Readiness Force Headquarters and to enhance its capability to address future threats and challenges.
  • '..the level of readiness [of the corps will be raised] and fulfil a joint and regional role within the framework of NATO’s Readiness Action Plan, for both Assurance and Adaptation Measures in order to exercise command and control in the full range of Alliance missions in the north-eastern region (Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland) of the Alliance with the emphasis on Article 5 operations including command and control over the Very High Readiness Joint Task Force (VJTF). Additionally, MNC NE will execute command and control over the NATO Force Integration Units (NFIUs) in Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland.'[3]

Mission in Afghanistan

The MNC NE staff was assigned to the ISAF mission and officially took over their duties for the first time on 4 February 2007. Nearly 160 officers and non-commissioned officers spent over 6 month in Kabul. The majority of the MNC NE staff filled the posts in a newly established composite ISAF Headquarters in Kabul, where they proved their excellent level of preparedness and dedication to work. From February to August 2010, the personnel of the Corps participated in the ISAF mission for the second time. The majority of approximately 130 officers and non-commissioned officers filled the posts at the ISAF Joint Command, a tactical level headquarters. Serving at different branches, they were gaining valuable mission experience and improving their skills. The third deployment with the participation of more than 120 soldiers from the Corps and partnering formations started in January 2014 and ended in January 2015. As soon as the ISAF mandate expired, the Resolute Support mission commenced in January 2015, based on the successes and commitments of the international community in Afghanistan.

Mission: ISAF, Afghanistan

  • February - August 2007
  • February - August 2010
  • January 2014 - January 2015

Affiliated Forces

Danish Division (HQ Haderslev) The organisation from 1997-2005 Mechanised Division

  • 3d Signal Battalion (support and run Division HQ)
  • Three Mechanised Brigades
    • 1st Jyske Bde
    • 3d Jyske Bde
    • 1st Sjællandske Bde
  • Armor Battalion
  • Reconnaissance Battalion
  • Anti-tank helicopter Company
  • Patrol Coy (Long range/light recce)
  • Division Artillery
    • HQ&Target-Acquisition Battery
    • Three Artillery Battalions
    • Rocket-launch Battery
  • 14th Anti-aircraft missile battalion
  • 3d Engineering Battalion
  • 3d Electronic Warfare Company
  • 3d Logistic Support battalion
  • Transport Company
  • 3d Military Police Company

12th Infantry Division (Poland) (HQ Szczecin)

  • 12th Command Battalion (Szczecin)
  • 6th Armoured Cavalry Brigade (Stargard Szczecinski)
  • 12th Mechanised Brigade, (Szczecin)
  • 36th Mechanised Brigade (Trzebiatow)
  • 2d Diverse Artillery Regiment, (Szczecin)
  • 2d Sapper Battalion (Stargard Szczecinski)
  • 3d Anti-aircraft Regiment, (Szczecin)
  • 12th Reconnaissance Battalion, (Szczecin)
  • 610th Signal Battalion "Holstein" (German) in Prenzlau 20px

Commanders

  • 1999-2001 – Denmark LTG Henrik Ekmann
    • Deputy Corps Commander – Poland MG Edward Pietrzyk (since 2000 BG Zdzisław Goral)
    • Chief of Staff – Germany BG Joachim Sachau
  • 2001-2003 – Poland LTG Zygmunt Sadowski
  • Deputy Corps Commander – Germany MG Rolf Schneider
  • Chief of Staff – Denmark BG Karl Nielsen
  • 2004-2006 – Germany LTG Egon Ramms
    • Deputy Corps Commander – Germany MG Rolf Schneider (since 2004 MG Jan Andersen)
    • Chief of Staff – Denmark BG Karl Nielsen (since 2004 BG Henryk Skarżyński)
  • 2006-2009 – Poland LTG Zdzisław Goral
    • Deputy Corps Commander – Denmark MG Jan Andersen (since 2008 MG Ole Køppen)
    • Chief of Staff – Germany BG Josef Heinrichs (since 2008 BG Josef Heinrichs)
  • 2009-2012 – Germany LTG Rainer Korff
    • Deputy Corps Commander – Poland MG Ryszard Sorokosz (since 2012 MG Bogusław Samol)
    • Chief of Staff – Denmark BG Morten Danielsson
  • 2013-2015 – Poland LTG Bogusław Samol[4] (since December 2012)
    • Deputy Corps Commander – DenmarkBG Morten Danielsson (since May 2013 MG Agner Rokos)
    • Chief of Staff – Germany BG Lutz Niemann[5]
  • 2015–present – Germany LTG Manfred Hofmann[6]
    • Deputy Corps Commander – Denmark MG Agner Rokos
    • Chief of Staff – Germany BG Lutz Niemann

See also

Notes

  1. [1]
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  3. BMVG statement, 5 February 2015
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External links

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