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Learn how the U.S. Army is organized into two components: the active component and the reserve components. See the command structure chart and the roles and missions of each Army command, service component, and direct reporting unit.
- ATEC
U.S. Army Test and Evaluation Command (ATEC) performs test...
- AMC
U.S. Army Materiel Command. Sections. News ; About ;...
- Futures
Army Futures Command (AFC) transforms the Army to ensure...
- Inscom
On January 1, 1977, the United States Army Intelligence and...
- CID
Department of the Army Criminal Investigation Division 27130...
- Arsouth
Passing the Torch: Command Sgt. Maj. Ronald Graves on...
- Usaasc
USAASC - United States Army Acquisition Support Center
- United States Army Reserve
The Official site of the U.S. Army Reserve, the federal...
- ATEC
Acting Secretary of the Army. GEN Randy A. George Army Chief of Staff. SMA Michael R. Weimer Sergeant Major of the Army. General Gary Brito Commanding General, TRADOC. CSM Daniel T. Hendrex. TRADOC Command Sergeant Major. MG Antonio "Andy" Munera. Commanding General, USACC. CSM Roy A. Young.
The Army Chain of Command is a line of authority and responsibility, in which orders are transmitted from one unit to another and one Soldier to another. Orders are transmitted down the chain of command from a higher ranking Soldier, such as a Commissioned Officer or NCO to a lower-ranking Soldier. Orders are either executed immediately or are ...
In a military context, the chain of command is the line of authority and responsibility along which orders are passed within a military unit and between different units. In simpler terms, the chain of command is the succession of leaders through which command is exercised and executed.
Learn about the Army's two components, operational and institutional, and their missions, functions, and commands. See the chart of the Army's major commands, service component commands, and subordinate commands.
Army Commands (ACOMs) and Army Service Component Commands (ASCCs) serve different purposes. The ACOMs are: Forces Command, Futures Command, Materiel Command, and Training and Doctrine Command. Map showing the six geographical commands of the U.S. Army.
Learn about the two components of the Army, the operational and the institutional, and their roles and missions. See the command structure chart of the Army's headquarters, commands, and direct reporting units.