Feldjägerdienstkommando
The Feldjäger service command (FJgDstKdo) , to 1963 Feldjäger wax command is a stationary guide means of the field Jägertruppe the armed forces and in a broader sense with a police station to compare. It coordinates incoming and outgoing information and the resulting operations or measures. The military police command is manned around the clock. As a rule, there is a military police command at the location of its parent company . As the application areas of the military police service commands are very large, if necessary, a "separated military police command", usually in tensile strength , dislocated from the home location work. This is ordered by the military police officer or the leader of the military police command.
Organization, structure, service flow
organization
The Feldjägerdienstkommando is headed by the "Führer Feldjägerdienstkommando", an officer with the rank of major is provided for this . The staffing is comparable to the head of a police station.
Operations of the operational shifts or operational duty groups are coordinated by the "Feldjägereinsatzoffizier" (FJgEinsOffz) . This is usually provided by platoon leader 1st platoon , in the rank of captain (also first lieutenant ). The duty service group is led by the military police officer (FJgvDst), this corresponds to a service group leader (DGL) of the police .
The shift periods and durations are regulated differently on the military police commandos and depend on the respective assignment. The minimum occupation is regularly three soldiers:
- Feldjäger from service (FJgvDst) as patrol / shift leader, from main sergeant
- Deputy military police officer (stvFJgvDst), at least a sergeant ( non-commissioned officer with porterage )
- Sergeant candidate or team soldier as a military driver (MKF) (as of 2008)
construction
The structure of the Feldjägerdienstkommando resembles a police station within a police building, but is usually much smaller. The room of the Feldjägerdienstkommando is the central point of contact. This is where the means of communication (telephone, radio, fax, IT system) and the situation map of the operational area with the drawn units / facilities of the Bundeswehr are located at their locations, which can, however, also be located in a room for the military police officer. There is a small kitchen and toilets for the shift on duty as well as resting and resting options, some of which can also be used for unauthorized soldiers who have been picked up . The weapon cabinet with ready-to-use ammunition is still located in the duty command and in some material storage rooms located close to the duty command , traffic safety sets, aircraft accident prevention equipment, telecommunications equipment , files, service regulations (ZDv) and other operational material are kept, provided these are not already in use or loaded onto emergency vehicles. Depending on the equipment of the duty command, there are one to two detention cells for temporarily arrested and arrested persons, which contain a couch, a porcelain or squat toilet , possibly a wash basin and camera surveillance as well as call signaling. The Feldjägerdienstkommando is appropriately secured and barred from the outside. Access authorizations are regulated differently in the companies.
Service flow
A shift begins with the takeover and ends with the handover of the military police command. The completeness of the material equipment is checked, the duty and activity book is closed by the transferring duty shift and reopened by the accepting shift and the handover talk is held. In the handover meeting, special events, situations and measures to be prepared are essentially passed on. The shift on duty carries out the normal military police service ( permanent assignment ). If shift work is performed, this is usually split up as night and day shift of different lengths. He is supported by the company's day / standby service. The Feldjägerdienstkommando remains constantly manned by the FJgvDst / stvFJgvDst (24 hours a day / 7 days a week / 365 days a year). He keeps the situation map, activity book, service book, property cards and research documents, coordinates incoming and outgoing messages (telephone calls, faxes, telex, radio messages and conversations), forwards them to the military police officer or FJgStrfFhr, triggers alarms (such as a flight accident with a military aircraft ) and measures (zoning, traffic accident recording, picking up someone who is absent without authorization by the unit). He consults with units of the German Armed Forces, the police and other BOS on projects and necessary or prepared measures. All important points in the operational area of the Feldjägerdienstkommando as well as the whereabouts and locations of the police patrols ( marching escort , security , traffic control) are marked on the situation map . The stripes are identified by an abbreviation of the use and the radio call name of the stiffener. All incoming reports and measures taken are documented in the activity book with a current activity book number (TBNr). The measures taken can be instructions (orders) for an activity, but also for legal measures.
Example of a measure:
- The Feldjägerdienstkommando received a call with the information about a traffic accident involving a vehicle of the Bundeswehr. The Feldjägerdienstkommando dispatches a police patrol to record traffic accidents.
- The police patrol of a military police detachment was able to pick up a soldier who was “unauthorized”. Now the Feldjägerdienstkommando contacts the soldier's disciplinary superior and orders him to be picked up.
In the event of war / defense , military police commands / detached military police commands (including police traffic control points) are potentially endangered by blows by the enemy and must be appropriately secured. It is secured by an infantry platoon (on request).
reachability
Telephone network
All German military police commands can be reached centrally via a free civilian telephone number (0800 1 90 9999) as well as from the telephone network of the Bundeswehr (FspNBw) (90–9999). The FJgDstKdo can also be called directly via the barracks telephone number through the on-site operator and via the extension number.
The Feldjägerdienstkommandos from Army Structure I.
- In Army Structure II (1965–1972) the Feldjägerdienstkommandos were led by the company's military platoons . Strength of the platoon: 25 soldiers, plus functional personnel (ZgFhr, ZgTrp)
- In Army Structure III (1972–1979) the military police commandos were led by the company's military police platoons, but with more personnel on the platoon: 42 soldiers (56 active FJgDstKdos)
- From Army Structure IV (1980–1990) , Army Structure V (1990–1992) , Army Structure V (N) (1993–1997) , New Army for New Tasks (1997–2001) , Transformation (2001–2011) , the Feldjägerdienstkommandos of led the battalion military police companies
- In the realignment of the Bundeswehr (since 2011) , from the end of 2013 / beginning of 2014 the military police commandos will be led by the regiments ' military police companies
The personnel and material scope of the military police command, platoons and companies is regulated by the StAN ( proof of strength and equipment F = peace structure and V = structure of defense case).
Feldjägerdienstkommandos (structure realignment of the Bundeswehr since 10/2013)
company | Location | Defense area |
---|---|---|
2./FJgRgt 1 | Berlin | Feldjägerregiment 1 |
3./FJgRgt 1 | Berlin | Feldjägerregiment 1 |
4./FJgRgt 1 | Kiel | Feldjägerregiment 1 |
5./FJgRgt 1 | Neubrandenburg | Feldjägerregiment 1 |
6./FJgRgt 1 | Hamburg | Feldjägerregiment 1 |
7./FJgRgt 1 | Storkow | Feldjägerregiment 1 |
8./FJgRgt 1 | Castle | Feldjägerregiment 1 |
9./FJgRgt 1 | Leipzig | Feldjägerregiment 1 |
2./FJgRgt 2 | Muenster | Feldjägerregiment 2 |
3./FJgRgt 2 | Hanover | Feldjägerregiment 2 |
4./FJgRgt 2 | Wilhelmshaven | Feldjägerregiment 2 |
5./FJgRgt 2 | Augustdorf | Feldjägerregiment 2 |
6./FJgRgt 2 | Bonn / Siegburg | Feldjägerregiment 2 |
7./FJgRgt 2 | Hilden | Feldjägerregiment 2 |
8./FJgRgt 2 | Mainz | Feldjägerregiment 2 |
9./FJgRgt 2 | Fritzlar | Feldjägerregiment 2 |
2./FJgRgt 3 | Stetten am kalten Markt | Feldjägerregiment 3 |
3./FJgRgt 3 | Munich | Feldjägerregiment 3 |
4./FJgRgt 3 | Erfurt | Feldjägerregiment 3 |
5./FJgRgt 3 | Veitshochheim | Feldjägerregiment 3 |
6./FJgRgt 3 | Bruchsal | Feldjägerregiment 3 |
7./FJgRgt 3 | Ulm | Feldjägerregiment 3 |
8./FJgRgt 3 | Roding | Feldjägerregiment 3 |
9./FJgRgt 3 | Roth | Feldjägerregiment 3 |
Military police commandos (structure until March 31, 2014)
company | Location | Defense area |
---|---|---|
2./FJgBtl 151 | Neubrandenburg | I NORTH |
3./FJgBtl 151 | Hagenow | I. |
4./FJgBtl 151 | Hamburg Reich President Ebert Barracks | I. |
5./FJgBtl 151 | Eckernförde | I. |
2./FJgBtl 152 | Hanover | I. |
3./FJgBtl 152 | Muenster | I. |
4./FJgBtl 152 | Wilhelmshaven | I. |
5./FJgBtl 152 | Bremen | I. |
2./FJgBtl 251 | Mainz | II WEST |
3./FJgBtl 251 | Koblenz | II |
4./FJgBtl 251 | Rotenburg an der Fulda (parts still in Neustadt (Hesse)) | II |
5./FJgBtl 251 | Zweibrücken | II |
2./FJgBtl 252 | Hilden | II |
3./FJgBtl 252 | Bonn | II |
4./FJgBtl 252 | Augustdorf Generalfeldmarschall Rommel barracks | II |
5./FJgBtl 252 | Muenster | II |
3. / FJgBtl 350 | Berlin | III EAST |
4. / FJgBtl 350 | Storkow | III |
2. / FJgBtl 351 | Leipzig | III |
3. / FJgBtl 351 | Erfurt | III |
4. / FJgBtl 351 | Potsdam | III |
5. / FJgBtl 351 | Castle | III |
2. / FJgBtl 451 | Munich | IV SOUTH |
3. / FJgBtl 451 | Roding | IV |
4. / FJgBtl 451 | On the mountain | IV |
5. / FJgBtl 451 | Murnau | IV |
2. / FJgBtl 452 | Sigmaringen | IV |
3. / FJgBtl 452 | Bruchsal General-Dr.-Speidel-Kaserne | IV |
4. / FJgBtl 452 | Ulm | IV |
5. / FJgBtl 452 | Veitshochheim | IV |
The companies and battalions listed above will be disbanded in the course of the conversion to the new Bundeswehr structure. After that, the companies are reorganized in military police regiments (FJgRgt 1 to 3). The subordination remains with the armed forces base.
Former military police commandos
Feldjägerdienstkommando | Set up | Dissolved | at the location | unit |
---|---|---|---|---|
Awls | - | - | - | 3./FJgBtl 190 |
Augustdorf | - | - | - | 4./FJgBtl 190 |
Berlin | - | - | - | 3./FJgBtl 900 (previously Feldjägerkompanie Berlin) |
Bonn | - | 4./FJgBtl 900 - 11/2005 merger with 3./FJgBtl 252 (reorganization of 4./FJgBtl 350, Storkow) | ||
Buxtehude | - | - | - | FJgKp 3 |
Braunschweig | - | - | - | FJgKp 1 |
Bremen | - | April 1, 2014 | - | 2./FJgBtl 720 |
Bruchsal | - | - | - | LLFJgKp 9, 2./FJgBtl 750, 3./FJgBtl 452 |
Budel (NL) | 1963 | March 25, 1993 | 1963 to 1993 | 1./FJgBt 981 I. Zug, I./2.FJgBtl 981, V./3.FJgBtl 730, 3./FJgBtl 730 III. Zug, later 8./FJgBtl 730 |
Diez | - | - | - | FJgKp 5 |
Dusseldorf | January 1, 1965 | September 9, 1993 | 1965 to 1993 | 1./FJgBtl 730 I u. II. Zug, 3./FJgBtl 730 |
Erfurt | - | April 1, 2014 | - | |
Eschbach | - | - | - | 6./FJgBtl 750 |
eat | July 1, 1980 | March 31, 1993 | 1980 to 1993 | 2./FJgBtl 730 |
Essen-Nord | - | June 30, 1980 | until 1980 | I. / II./2./FJgBtl 730 |
Essen-Süd | - | June 30, 1980 | until 1980 | III./2./FJgBtl 730 |
Flensburg | 1985 | 1986 | 1985 to 1986 | 5./FJgBtl 610 |
Frankenberg | - | - | - | 4./FJgBtl 701 |
Fritzlar | - | - | 1958 to 1972 | |
Feet | - | - | - | 4./FJgBtl 290 |
Handorf | - | - | - | 2./FJgBtl 190 |
Idar-Oberstein | October 22, 1964 | October 1, 2002 | 1964 to 1979 | 2./FJgBtl 740 2nd train |
Karlsruhe | - | - | 1968 to 1972 | 2./FJgBtl 750 KpFü, 1st train |
kassel | - | - | - | FJgKp 2 |
Kiel | 1985 | 1996 | 1985 to 1996 | FJgBtl 610 |
Koblenz | - | April 1, 2014 | - | 2./FJgBtl 390 |
Koblenz-Pfaffendorf | - | - | - | I./FJgKp 5, 2./FJgBtl 390 |
Cologne | May 2, 1965 | November 11, 2005 | 1965 to 2005 | 6./FJgBtl 730, 2./FJgBtl 730, 3./FJgBtl 252 (11/2005 relocated to Bonn) |
Landsberg | - | - | - | 7./FJgBtl 760 |
Landshut | - | - | - | 3./FJgBtl 290 |
Mainz | - | - | - | 3./FJgBtl 740 |
Mayen | - | - | - | Kp, FJgBtl 740 |
Marburg | - | - | - | 4./FJgBtl 390 |
Mittenwald | - | - | - | FJgKp 8 |
Murnau | - | April 1, 2014 | - | 5./FJgBtl 451 |
Muenster | - | April 1, 2014 | - | |
Neuburg (Danube) | - | - | 1968 to 1972 | |
Neuburg (Landshut) | - | - | 1972 to - | |
Neumunster | - | - | - | FJgKp 6 |
Niederlahnstein | - | - | - | I./3./FJgBtl 740 |
Nuremberg | - | - | - | 2./FJgBtl 760 |
Oldenburg | - | - | 1985 to 1986 | FJgKp 11.4. / FJgBtl 720 |
Paderborn | January 1, 1965 | July 9, 1993 | 1965 to 1993 | FJgKp 7 2nd train, 2./FJgBtl 730 I u. II. Zug, 4./FJgBtl 730 |
Potsdam | - | April 1, 2014 | - | |
regensburg | - | - | - | FJgKp 4, 4./FJgBtl 760 |
Sigmaringen | - | - | - | FJgKp 10, 5./FJgBtl 750 |
Schleswig | - | - | 1963 to 1975 | |
Sonthofen | - | - | - | until 1980 FJgLehrKp |
Stuttgart | - | - | - | 3./FJgBtl 750 |
Ulm | - | - | - | 2./FJgBtl 290, 4./FJgBtl 750 |
Tauberbischofsheim | - | - | - | |
Unna | January 1, 1965 | March 31, 1993 | 1965 to 1993 | FJgKp 7, 7./FJgBtl 730 |
Veitshochheim | - | - | - | FJgKp 12, 6./FJgBtl 760 |
Zweibrücken | - | April 1, 2014 | - |
Military police commandos abroad
Since Feldjäger must be wherever German soldiers are and were stationed, there were and are military police commandos abroad. There were military police commandos on the CFB Shilo (1974 to 2000, Manitoba Province, Canada ), in Budel ( Netherlands ) as well as on training areas in Sardinia / Teulada ( Italy ) and in Castlemartin ( Pembrokeshire , United Kingdom ). With the emerging foreign missions there were also military police units in the respective countries of operations. For example in the former Yugoslavia : in Prizren ( Prizren police station), Sarajevo , Rajlovac , Afghanistan: Kunduz field camp Kunduz , Mazar-E Sharif Camp Marmal but which then bore the name "Military Police Station".
See also
literature
- Karl-Helmut Schnell, Heinz-Peter Ebert: Disciplinary law, criminal law, right of appeal of the Bundeswehr issue 27, Walhalla Fachverlag, 2012, ISBN 3-802-90633-0
- Johannes Heinen: Legal basis military police service: With explanations of the UZwGBw; Application basics at home and abroad, issue 9, Walhalla Fachverlag, 2010, ISBN 3-802-96532-9 .
- Reinhard Scholzen : Feldjäger Germany's military police today. Motorbuch Verlag, 2010, 191 pages, ISBN 3-613-03152-3 .
- Karlheinz Böckle: Feldgendarmen Feldjäger Military Police - Your story to this day. Motorbuch Verlag, 1987, 224 pages, ISBN 3-613-01143-3 .
- New magazine for military law . Luchterhand-Verlag, frequency of publication: 6 times a year, ISSN 0028-3525 .
- The police officer. Comradeship of the Feldjäger e. V., Hanover, Frequency: 4 times a year.
- The military police force of the Bundeswehr 1955 - 2005. Kameradschaft der Feldjäger e. V., Hanover.
- Feldjäger: a troop in transition. from OTL i. G.Thieser.
- Military police in the Bundeswehr , CPM Forum, Sankt Augustin 2008
Web links
- Forum Feldjäger on militarypolice.de (explanations about the military police)
- Comradeship of the Feldjäger e. V. on feldjaeger.de
- Feldjäger - military police of the Bundeswehr. a portrait at streitkraeftebasis.de
- Feldjäger: a troop in transition. downloadable (PDF; 2.1 MB) at militarypolice.de
- Feldjäger in Rheinbach _ Collection of Rheinbach City Archives
Individual evidence
- ↑ The history of the police force. - Volume 3: The military police force of the Bundeswehr 1955-2005. Comradeship of the Feldjäger e. V., Hanover, p. 46.
- ↑ a b The military police command. Contribution: The Feldjägerdienstkommando of Colonel Bernhard Grigoleit (Head of the Group for the Development of the Military Police Department in the SKUKdo ), CPM Forum, St. Augustin 2008.
- ↑ Reinhard Scholzen: Feldjäger - Germany's military police today. Motorbuch Verlag, Stuttgart 2010, ISBN 978-3-613-03152-4 , p. 54.
- ↑ Die Feldjäger retrieved from streitkraeftebasis.de
- ↑ Realization planning for the armed forces base ( Memento from October 4, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) BMVg Staff InspSKB VII 2 Planning Department Organization Department Retrieved from: augengeradeaus.net, p. 29. (PDF; 109 kB)
- ↑ Information from the KdoFJgdBw on FJgRgt 1 at the Armed Forces Base
- ↑ Map to the emergency room with the FJgDstKdo's of FJgRgt 1
- ↑ Organigram FJgRgt 2
- ^ MGFA location database, Bruchsal
- ^ MGFA location database, Bruchsal
- ^ MGFA location database, Bruchsal
- ^ MGFA location database, Eschbach
- ^ MGFA location database, Karlsruhe
- ↑ Kameradschaft Feldjäger e. V. Kameradschaft Feldjäger e. V., local association Sigmaringen, October 27, 2017, accessed on March 4, 2020 .
- ^ Local association Sonthofen-Ulm. Comradeship of the Feldjäger e. V., Sonthofen-Ulm local association, accessed on March 4, 2020 .