Telecommunications Command Army
Telecommunications |
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---|---|
( did not have an association badge ) |
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active | decommissioned around 1994 |
Country | Germany |
Armed forces | armed forces |
Armed forces | army |
Type | Telecommunications command |
Insinuation | Army Office |
Staff seat | Down |
The Telecommunications Command Heer was the telecommunications command of the Territorial Army in the Army of the Bundeswehr . It was stationed in the Heinrich Hertz barracks in Daun .
assignments
In the event of a defense, the telecommunications command should bundle the units of the telecommunications force and the EloKa telecommunications force at the level of the highest command of the Bundeswehr . Telecommunication Command 900 , which was subordinate to a defense case, ensured the communication skills of the Bundeswehr command and the constitutional organs of the Federal Republic. Telecommunication staff 94, subordinate to defense, operated and / or provided the personnel for the reconnaissance towers of the Army and most of the reconnaissance towers of the Air Force along the zone border near Barwedel , near Thurau , on the Stöberhai , on the Hoher Meissner , in the Hoher Bogen and on the Great Kornberg for telecommunications and electronic reconnaissance of the Warsaw Pact .
Organization and structure
The telecommunications command was planned as a device unit in peace, subordinated to the Army Office and did not lead any troops. Like many units of the Territorial Army, the telecommunications command would only have been mobilized in the event of a defense . The personnel of Department IV of the Army Office was to serve as a cadre for the growth of the telecommunications command. The Army Telecommunications Command should then be placed under the command of the Army and take over command of Telecommunications Command 900 (subordinate to Army Office in peacetime) and Telecommunications Staff 94 (also under Army Office in peacetime). When fully mobilized, the size of the telecommunications command would have been about the size of a brigade of the field army.
Around 1989 was for the Telecommunications Operations Command roughly following the war outline provided:
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Staff / Staff Company Telecommunications Command Heer (GerEinh), Daun
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Staff / Headquarters Company telecommunications command 900 , Rheinbach
- Telecommunications Battalion 910, Rheinbach
- Telecommunications Battalion 920 , Kastellaun
- Telecommunications Battalion 930 , Gerolstein
- Telecommunications Battalion 960 (partially active), Mayen
- Telecommunications Battalion 970 (partly active), Mannheim
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Staff / Headquarters Company telecommunications command 900 , Rheinbach
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Headquarters / headquarters company telecommunications staff 94, Daun
- Telecommunications Battalion 940, Daun
- Telecommunications company 945 (telecommunications reconnaissance company), Ehra-Lessien
- Telecommunications company 946 (telecommunications reconnaissance company), Hof an der Saale
- Fernmeldekompanie 947 (telecommunications reconnaissance company), Hessisch Lichtenau
- Telecommunications training company 941, Daun (in peacetime to Telecommunications Battalion 940, from spring 1989 to Clausthal-Zellerfeld )
- Telecommunications training company 942, Daun (in peace to telecommunications battalion 940)
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Headquarters / headquarters company telecommunications staff 94, Daun
history
Lineup
The Army Telecommunications Command was in the war organization of Army Structure IV from around the beginning of the 1980s.
resolution
After the end of the cold war , the relaxation of the NATO command structure , the de facto abandonment of the separation of field and Territorial Army , the reclassification of about leading troops and the establishment of new operational management commands such as Command Operations Command with its own telecommunications was the Telecommunications Operations Command Army decommissioned by the mid-1990s at the latest. After its dissolution, the Telecommunications and Electronic Reconnaissance Brigade 94 and the Command Support Brigade 900 emerged from the two pillars of the telecommunications command .
Association badge
The telecommunications command did not have its own association badge due to its planning as a device unit and as a dependent unit of the top Bundeswehr command . In peacetime, the soldiers designated for the Army Telecommunications Command therefore wore the Army Office's badge.
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b O.W. Dragoons: The Bundeswehr 1989 . Army Office. I. Corps. II Corps. III. Corps. 4th edition. 2.1 - Army, February 2012 ( religte.com [PDF; accessed July 3, 2018]).
Coordinates: 50 ° 13 ' N , 6 ° 49' E