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Federal Ministry of Defence (Germany)

The Federal Ministry of Defence (German: Bundesministerium der Verteidigung, pronounced [ˈbʊndəsminɪsˌteːʁiʊm deːɐ̯ fɛɐ̯ˈtaɪ̯dɪɡʊŋ] (listen)), abbreviated BMVg, is a top-level federal agency, headed by the Federal Minister of Defence as a member of the Cabinet of Germany. The ministry is headquartered at the Hardthöhe district in Bonn and has a second office in the Bendlerblock building in Berlin.

Federal Ministry of Defence
Bundesministerium der Verteidigung (BMVg)

Entrance to the Hardthöhe, Bonn
Agency overview
Formed19191/19552
JurisdictionCabinet of Germany
HeadquartersHardthöhe, Bonn, Germany
50°41′57″N 7°2′25″E / 50.69917°N 7.04028°E / 50.69917; 7.04028Coordinates: 50°41′57″N 7°2′25″E / 50.69917°N 7.04028°E / 50.69917; 7.04028
Annual budget53 billion (2021)[1]
Minister responsible
Agency executives
Websitehttp://www.bmvg.de
Footnotes
1: As the Ministry of the Reichswehr, succeeding the Ministry of War of Prussia, the Ministry of War of Saxony, the Ministry of War of Bavaria, the Ministry of War of Württemberg and the Imperial Naval Office
2: As the Ministry of Defence (Bundesministerium für Verteidigung) in West Germany[3]
German military expenditure
1
2
3
4
5
1953
1960
1970
1980
1990
2000
2010
2020
German military expenditure: as percent share of GDP (1953–2020)[4]

According to Article 65a of the German Constitution (Grundgesetz), the Federal Minister of Defence is Commander-in-chief of the Bundeswehr, the German armed forces, with around 265,019 active soldiers and civilians.[5] Article 115b decrees that in the state of defence, declared by the Bundestag with consent of the Bundesrat, the command in chief passes to the Chancellor.

The ministry currently has approximately 3,730 employees. Of these, 3,230 work in Bonn while around 500 work in the Bendlerblock building in Berlin.

Organization

On April 1, 2012, the Federal Ministry of Defence (DEU MOD) changes its organization to the following general structure:

Senior Management Level

  • Federal Minister of Defence (acts as High Commander of the German armed forces in peacetime)
    • 2 Parliamentary Secretaries of State
    • 2 Secretaries of State
  • subordinated to the Senior Management
    • Support Office
    • Press& Information Office
    • Politics Directorate

Directorates

  • Secretary of State #1
    • Equipment Directorate (lost the Cyber & IT branch in 2016)
    • Cyber & IT Directorate (founded 2016)
  • Secretary of State #2
    • Financial & Controlling Directorate
    • Personnel Directorate
    • Infrastructure, Antipollution & Administrative Services Directorate
    • Legal Directorate
  • Inspector General of the Bundeswehr
    • Plans & Policies Directorate
    • Strategy & Operations Directorate
    • Armed Forces Command & Control Directorate

Departments of the Federal armed forces

The Bundeswehr is divided into a military part (armed forces or Streitkräfte) and a civil part with the armed forces administration (Wehrverwaltung) and consists of 11 Departments/Services:

Directly subordinated Offices & Agencies

  • Armed Forces Operational Command (Einsatzführungskommando der Bundeswehr)
  • Office for Military Aviation (Luftfahrtamt der Bundeswehr)
  • Office for Plans & Policies (Planungsamt der Bundeswehr)
  • Command & Control Academy (Führungsakademie der Bundeswehr)
  • Training Centre for Morale & Welfare (Zentrum Innere Führung)
  • Military Counter-intelligence Service (Bundesamt für den Militärischen Abschirmdienst)

History

19th century

From the Unification of Germany in 1871 until the end of World War I, the German Empire did not have a national Ministry of War. Instead the larger German states (such as the kingdoms of Prussia, Bavaria, Saxony and Württemberg), insisting on their autonomy, each had an own war ministry. According to the military agreements the Prussian minister president Otto von Bismarck had forged with the South German states on the eve of the Franco-Prussian War of 1870/71, the major states were responsible also for the defence of the smaller states. However, the Imperial Navy from 1889 was overseen by a federal department, the Imperial Naval Office.

Weimar and Nazi Germany

 
Bendlerblock, Berlin-Tiergarten, secondary seat since 1993

After the war and the German Revolution of 1918–19, the Weimar Constitution provided for a unified, national ministry of defence, which was created largely from the Prussian Ministry of War and the Imperial Naval Office. The Ministry of the Reichswehr was established in October 1919, and had its seat in the Bendlerblock building.

In the context of the Treaty of Versailles and the "Law for the Creation of a provisional Reichswehr" of March 1919, the Reichspräsident became the Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces, whilst the Reich Minister of Defence exercised military authority. Only in the Free State of Prussia did military authority remain with the State Minister of War. After the Weimar Constitution came into force, the remaining war ministries in the states of Bavaria, Saxony, Württemberg and Prussia were abolished and military authority was concentrated in the Reich Minister of Defence. Command was exercised respectively by the Chief of the Heeresleitung (Army Command) and the Chief of the Marineleitung (Navy Command, see Reichsmarine). In 1929 a third office was established: the Ministerial Office, whose Chief functioned as the political representative of the Minister. The role of the General Staff was filled by the Truppenamt.

The Social Democratic politician Gustav Noske became the first Minister of Defence of Germany. After the Nazi Machtergreifung, when the Reichswehr was recreated as the Wehrmacht in 1935, the ministry was renamed Reichskriegsministerium (Reich Ministry of War); also, the Heeresleitung became the Oberkommando des Heeres (OKH), the Marineleitung became the Oberkommando der Marine (OKM) and the Oberkommando der Luftwaffe (OKL) was newly created. The Ministeramt (Ministerial Office) was renamed the Wehrmachtsamt.

In 1938, following the Blomberg-Fritsch Affair, Hitler himself exercised the functions of the Reich War Minister. The Wehrmachtsamt was turned into the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht (OKW; High Command of the Armed Forces), which formally existed until the end of World War II. The High Command was not a government ministry, but a military command, however.

Post-WW2

After World War II, West Germany started with preparations for rearmament (Wiederbewaffnung) in 1950, as ordered by Chancellor Konrad Adenauer. After the outbreak of the Korean War, the United States called for a West German contribution to the defence of Western Europe (against the Soviet Union). Initially Gerhard Graf von Schwerin, a former Wehrmacht General, advised the Chancellor on these issues and led the preparations, but after Count Schwerin had talked to the press about his work, he was replaced by Theodor Blank, who was appointed as "Special Representative" of the Chancellor. As the rearmament plans met with harsh opposition by a wide circle within the West German population and contradicted the occupation statute, the government office responsible for the rearmament acted secretly, unofficially known as Amt Blank. By 1955, the number of employees had surpassed 1,300. On 7 June 1955 the office became the Ministry of Defence, or Bundesministerium für Verteidigung in German. The Bundeswehr was established and Germany joined the NATO the same year. In 1956, Germany reintroduced conscription, and the German military force quickly became the largest conventional military force in Western Europe. To confirm the ministry's importance, it was renamed Bundesministerium der Verteidigung on 30 December 1961, similar to the German names of the "classic" ministries of Finance, the Interior and Justice — though the federal minister is still denoted as Bundesminister für Verteidigung in Article 65a of the German Constitution.

Until 1960, the ministry had its seat in the Ermekeil barracks in Bonn. From 1960 onwards, it was moved to a new building complex at Hardthöhe.

Post-reunification

After German reunification, the Bendlerblock, former seat of its Weimar Republic predecessor, became the secondary seat of the ministry in 1993. The German military has become increasingly engaged in international operations since the early 1990s, and saw combat in the 1999 Kosovo War.

21st century

 
Map of Resolute Support Mission that documents the partition of responsibilities between allies: TAAC – Capital, TAAC – North, TAAC – South, TAAC – East, TAAC – West

Until the Fall of Kabul in August 2021, Germany deployed for nearly 20 years its armed forces in Afghanistan as part of the International Security Assistance Force (2001-2015) and later the Resolute Support Mission (2015-2021). German forces withdrew on 29 June.[6]

List of Federal Ministers of Defence (since 1955)

Political Party:   CDU   CSU   SPD

Name
(Born-Died)
Portrait Party Term of Office Duration Chancellor
(Cabinet)
Federal Minister for Defence (1955–1961)
Federal Minister of Defence (1961–present)
1 Theodor Blank
(1905–1972)
  CDU 7 June 1955 16 October 1956 1 year, 131 days Adenauer
(II)
2 Franz Josef Strauß
(1915–1988)
  CSU 16 October 1956 9 January 1963 6 years, 85 days Adenauer
(IIIIIIV)
3 Kai-Uwe von Hassel
(1913–1997)
  CDU 9 January 1963 1 December 1966 3 years, 326 days Erhard
(III)
4 Gerhard Schröder
(1910–1989)
  CDU 1 December 1966 21 October 1969 2 years, 324 days Kiesinger
5 Helmut Schmidt
(1918-2015)
  SPD 22 October 1969 7 July 1972 2 years, 259 days Brandt
(I)
6 Georg Leber
(1920–2012)
  SPD 7 July 1972 16 February 1978 5 years, 224 days Brandt (III)
Schmidt (III)
7 Hans Apel
(1932–2011)
  SPD 17 February 1978 1 October 1982 4 years, 226 days Schmidt
(II • III)
8 Manfred Wörner
(1934–1994)
  CDU 4 October 1982 18 May 1988 5 years, 227 days Kohl
(IIIIII)
9 Rupert Scholz
(born 1937)
  CDU 18 May 1988 21 April 1989 338 days Kohl
(III)
10 Gerhard Stoltenberg
(1928–2001)
  CDU 21 April 1989 31 March 1992 2 years, 345 days Kohl
(IIIIV)
11 Volker Rühe
(born 1942)
  CDU 1 April 1992 26 October 1998 6 years, 208 days Kohl
(IVV)
12 Rudolf Scharping
(born 1947)
  SPD 27 October 1998 19 July 2002 3 years, 265 days Schröder
(I)
13 Peter Struck
(1943–2012)
  SPD 19 July 2002 22 November 2005 3 years, 126 days Schröder
(II)
14 Franz Josef Jung
(born 1949)
  CDU 22 November 2005 28 October 2009 3 years, 340 days Merkel
(I)
15 Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg
(born 1971)
  CSU 28 October 2009 3 March 2011 1 year, 126 days Merkel
(II)
16 Thomas de Maizière
(born 1954)
  CDU 3 March 2011 17 December 2013 2 years, 289 days
17 Ursula von der Leyen
(born 1958)
  CDU 17 December 2013 17 July 2019 5 years, 212 days Merkel
(IIIIV)
18 Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer
(born 1962)
  CDU 17 July 2019 8 December 2021 2 years, 144 days Merkel
(IV)
19 Christine Lambrecht
(born 1962)
  SPD 8 December 2021 Incumbent 1 year, 29 days Scholz
(I)

See also

References

  1. ^ "Bundeshaushalt". www.bundeshaushalt.de. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
  2. ^ a b "Bundesministerium der Verteidigung". www.bmvg.de.
  3. ^ "Bundesministerium der Verteidigung". www.bmvg.de.
  4. ^ "Military expenditure by country as percentage of gross domestic product, 1949-2020" (XLSX). Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. 26 April 2021. Retrieved 6 May 2021.
  5. ^ "Aktuelle Personalzahlen der Bundeswehr [Current personnel numbers of the Federal Defence]". July 2020. Retrieved 27 August 2020.
  6. ^ "Germany pulls last soldiers from Afghanistan". Deutsche Welle. 29 June 2021.

External links

  • Official website (in German and English)

federal, ministry, defence, germany, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, federal, ministry, defence, ger. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Federal Ministry of Defence Germany news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Federal Ministry of Defence German Bundesministerium der Verteidigung pronounced ˈbʊndesminɪsˌteːʁiʊm deːɐ fɛɐ ˈtaɪ dɪɡʊŋ listen abbreviated BMVg is a top level federal agency headed by the Federal Minister of Defence as a member of the Cabinet of Germany The ministry is headquartered at the Hardthohe district in Bonn and has a second office in the Bendlerblock building in Berlin Federal Ministry of DefenceBundesministerium der Verteidigung BMVg Entrance to the Hardthohe BonnAgency overviewFormed19191 19552JurisdictionCabinet of GermanyHeadquartersHardthohe Bonn Germany50 41 57 N 7 2 25 E 50 69917 N 7 04028 E 50 69917 7 04028 Coordinates 50 41 57 N 7 2 25 E 50 69917 N 7 04028 E 50 69917 7 04028Annual budget 53 billion 2021 1 Minister responsibleChristine Lambrecht Federal Minister of DefenceAgency executivesSiemtje Moller 2 Parliamentary Secretary of StateThomas Hitschler 2 Parliamentary Secretary of StateWebsitehttp www bmvg deFootnotes1 As the Ministry of the Reichswehr succeeding the Ministry of War of Prussia the Ministry of War of Saxony the Ministry of War of Bavaria the Ministry of War of Wurttemberg and the Imperial Naval Office2 As the Ministry of Defence Bundesministerium fur Verteidigung in West Germany 3 German military expenditure 1 2 3 4 5 1953 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020German military expenditure as percent share of GDP 1953 2020 4 According to Article 65a of the German Constitution Grundgesetz the Federal Minister of Defence is Commander in chief of the Bundeswehr the German armed forces with around 265 019 active soldiers and civilians 5 Article 115b decrees that in the state of defence declared by the Bundestag with consent of the Bundesrat the command in chief passes to the Chancellor The ministry currently has approximately 3 730 employees Of these 3 230 work in Bonn while around 500 work in the Bendlerblock building in Berlin Contents 1 Organization 1 1 Senior Management Level 1 2 Directorates 1 3 Departments of the Federal armed forces 1 4 Directly subordinated Offices amp Agencies 2 History 2 1 19th century 2 2 Weimar and Nazi Germany 2 3 Post WW2 2 4 Post reunification 2 5 21st century 3 List of Federal Ministers of Defence since 1955 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksOrganization EditOn April 1 2012 the Federal Ministry of Defence DEU MOD changes its organization to the following general structure Senior Management Level Edit Federal Minister of Defence acts as High Commander of the German armed forces in peacetime 2 Parliamentary Secretaries of State 2 Secretaries of State subordinated to the Senior Management Support Office Press amp Information Office Politics DirectorateDirectorates Edit Secretary of State 1 Equipment Directorate lost the Cyber amp IT branch in 2016 Cyber amp IT Directorate founded 2016 Secretary of State 2 Financial amp Controlling Directorate Personnel Directorate Infrastructure Antipollution amp Administrative Services Directorate Legal Directorate Inspector General of the Bundeswehr Plans amp Policies Directorate Strategy amp Operations Directorate Armed Forces Command amp Control DirectorateDepartments of the Federal armed forces Edit The Bundeswehr is divided into a military part armed forces or Streitkrafte and a civil part with the armed forces administration Wehrverwaltung and consists of 11 Departments Services Armed Forces German Army Heer German Navy Marine German Air Force Luftwaffe Bundeswehr Joint Medical Service Zentraler Sanitatsdienst Joint Support Service Streitkraftebasis including the Center for Military History and Social Sciences of the Bundeswehr Cyber and Information Domain Service Cyber und Informationsraum founded in 2017 from parts of the Joint Support Service Armed Forces Administration Personnel Management Personal Information Technology amp In Service Management Ausrustung Informationstechnologie und Nutzung Infrastructure Antipollution amp Administrative Services Infrastruktur Umweltschutz und Dienstleistungen Judicature Recht Military Chaplaincy Militarseelsorge Directly subordinated Offices amp Agencies Edit Armed Forces Operational Command Einsatzfuhrungskommando der Bundeswehr Office for Military Aviation Luftfahrtamt der Bundeswehr Office for Plans amp Policies Planungsamt der Bundeswehr Command amp Control Academy Fuhrungsakademie der Bundeswehr Training Centre for Morale amp Welfare Zentrum Innere Fuhrung Military Counter intelligence Service Bundesamt fur den Militarischen Abschirmdienst History EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message 19th century Edit From the Unification of Germany in 1871 until the end of World War I the German Empire did not have a national Ministry of War Instead the larger German states such as the kingdoms of Prussia Bavaria Saxony and Wurttemberg insisting on their autonomy each had an own war ministry According to the military agreements the Prussian minister president Otto von Bismarck had forged with the South German states on the eve of the Franco Prussian War of 1870 71 the major states were responsible also for the defence of the smaller states However the Imperial Navy from 1889 was overseen by a federal department the Imperial Naval Office Weimar and Nazi Germany Edit See also Ministry of the Reichswehr Bendlerblock Berlin Tiergarten secondary seat since 1993 After the war and the German Revolution of 1918 19 the Weimar Constitution provided for a unified national ministry of defence which was created largely from the Prussian Ministry of War and the Imperial Naval Office The Ministry of the Reichswehr was established in October 1919 and had its seat in the Bendlerblock building In the context of the Treaty of Versailles and the Law for the Creation of a provisional Reichswehr of March 1919 the Reichsprasident became the Commander in Chief of the armed forces whilst the Reich Minister of Defence exercised military authority Only in the Free State of Prussia did military authority remain with the State Minister of War After the Weimar Constitution came into force the remaining war ministries in the states of Bavaria Saxony Wurttemberg and Prussia were abolished and military authority was concentrated in the Reich Minister of Defence Command was exercised respectively by the Chief of the Heeresleitung Army Command and the Chief of the Marineleitung Navy Command see Reichsmarine In 1929 a third office was established the Ministerial Office whose Chief functioned as the political representative of the Minister The role of the General Staff was filled by the Truppenamt The Social Democratic politician Gustav Noske became the first Minister of Defence of Germany After the Nazi Machtergreifung when the Reichswehr was recreated as the Wehrmacht in 1935 the ministry was renamed Reichskriegsministerium Reich Ministry of War also the Heeresleitung became the Oberkommando des Heeres OKH the Marineleitung became the Oberkommando der Marine OKM and the Oberkommando der Luftwaffe OKL was newly created The Ministeramt Ministerial Office was renamed the Wehrmachtsamt In 1938 following the Blomberg Fritsch Affair Hitler himself exercised the functions of the Reich War Minister The Wehrmachtsamt was turned into the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht OKW High Command of the Armed Forces which formally existed until the end of World War II The High Command was not a government ministry but a military command however Post WW2 Edit After World War II West Germany started with preparations for rearmament Wiederbewaffnung in 1950 as ordered by Chancellor Konrad Adenauer After the outbreak of the Korean War the United States called for a West German contribution to the defence of Western Europe against the Soviet Union Initially Gerhard Graf von Schwerin a former Wehrmacht General advised the Chancellor on these issues and led the preparations but after Count Schwerin had talked to the press about his work he was replaced by Theodor Blank who was appointed as Special Representative of the Chancellor As the rearmament plans met with harsh opposition by a wide circle within the West German population and contradicted the occupation statute the government office responsible for the rearmament acted secretly unofficially known as Amt Blank By 1955 the number of employees had surpassed 1 300 On 7 June 1955 the office became the Ministry of Defence or Bundesministerium fur Verteidigung in German The Bundeswehr was established and Germany joined the NATO the same year In 1956 Germany reintroduced conscription and the German military force quickly became the largest conventional military force in Western Europe To confirm the ministry s importance it was renamed Bundesministerium der Verteidigung on 30 December 1961 similar to the German names of the classic ministries of Finance the Interior and Justice though the federal minister is still denoted as Bundesminister fur Verteidigung in Article 65a of the German Constitution Until 1960 the ministry had its seat in the Ermekeil barracks in Bonn From 1960 onwards it was moved to a new building complex at Hardthohe Post reunification Edit After German reunification the Bendlerblock former seat of its Weimar Republic predecessor became the secondary seat of the ministry in 1993 The German military has become increasingly engaged in international operations since the early 1990s and saw combat in the 1999 Kosovo War 21st century Edit Map of Resolute Support Mission that documents the partition of responsibilities between allies TAAC Capital TAAC North TAAC South TAAC East TAAC West Until the Fall of Kabul in August 2021 Germany deployed for nearly 20 years its armed forces in Afghanistan as part of the International Security Assistance Force 2001 2015 and later the Resolute Support Mission 2015 2021 German forces withdrew on 29 June 6 List of Federal Ministers of Defence since 1955 EditMain article List of German defence ministers Political Party CDU CSU SPD Name Born Died Portrait Party Term of Office Duration Chancellor Cabinet Federal Minister for Defence 1955 1961 Federal Minister of Defence 1961 present 1 Theodor Blank 1905 1972 CDU 7 June 1955 16 October 1956 1 year 131 days Adenauer II 2 Franz Josef Strauss 1915 1988 CSU 16 October 1956 9 January 1963 6 years 85 days Adenauer II III IV 3 Kai Uwe von Hassel 1913 1997 CDU 9 January 1963 1 December 1966 3 years 326 days Erhard I II 4 Gerhard Schroder 1910 1989 CDU 1 December 1966 21 October 1969 2 years 324 days Kiesinger5 Helmut Schmidt 1918 2015 SPD 22 October 1969 7 July 1972 2 years 259 days Brandt I 6 Georg Leber 1920 2012 SPD 7 July 1972 16 February 1978 5 years 224 days Brandt I II Schmidt I II 7 Hans Apel 1932 2011 SPD 17 February 1978 1 October 1982 4 years 226 days Schmidt II III 8 Manfred Worner 1934 1994 CDU 4 October 1982 18 May 1988 5 years 227 days Kohl I II III 9 Rupert Scholz born 1937 CDU 18 May 1988 21 April 1989 338 days Kohl III 10 Gerhard Stoltenberg 1928 2001 CDU 21 April 1989 31 March 1992 2 years 345 days Kohl III IV 11 Volker Ruhe born 1942 CDU 1 April 1992 26 October 1998 6 years 208 days Kohl IV V 12 Rudolf Scharping born 1947 SPD 27 October 1998 19 July 2002 3 years 265 days Schroder I 13 Peter Struck 1943 2012 SPD 19 July 2002 22 November 2005 3 years 126 days Schroder II 14 Franz Josef Jung born 1949 CDU 22 November 2005 28 October 2009 3 years 340 days Merkel I 15 Karl Theodor zu Guttenberg born 1971 CSU 28 October 2009 3 March 2011 1 year 126 days Merkel II 16 Thomas de Maiziere born 1954 CDU 3 March 2011 17 December 2013 2 years 289 days17 Ursula von der Leyen born 1958 CDU 17 December 2013 17 July 2019 5 years 212 days Merkel III IV 18 Annegret Kramp Karrenbauer born 1962 CDU 17 July 2019 8 December 2021 2 years 144 days Merkel IV 19 Christine Lambrecht born 1962 SPD 8 December 2021 Incumbent 1 year 29 days Scholz I See also EditList of German defence ministersReferences Edit Bundeshaushalt www bundeshaushalt de Retrieved 7 May 2021 a b Bundesministerium der Verteidigung www bmvg de Bundesministerium der Verteidigung www bmvg de Military expenditure by country as percentage of gross domestic product 1949 2020 XLSX Stockholm International Peace Research Institute 26 April 2021 Retrieved 6 May 2021 Aktuelle Personalzahlen der Bundeswehr Current personnel numbers of the Federal Defence July 2020 Retrieved 27 August 2020 Germany pulls last soldiers from Afghanistan Deutsche Welle 29 June 2021 External links EditOfficial website in German and English Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Federal Ministry of Defence Germany amp oldid 1127024668, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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