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ODP's article on french army h
| French Army |
|
| Active |
- present |
| Country |
France |
| Allegiance |
Republic of France |
| Type |
Army |
| Size |
Active; 123,100 Regulars and 18,350 Part-time Reservists Personnel[1] |
| Nickname |
La grande muette
"The great mute one" |
| Commanders |
Current
commander |
General Elrick Irastorza |
The French Army, officially the Armée de Terre (English: Land Army), is the land-based component of the French Armed Forces and its largest. As of 2010, the army employs 123,100 regulars and 18,350 part-time reservists [2], making the French army the 2nd largest in the European Union after the British Army and the 4th largest in NATO after the Armies of the USA, Turkey and UK. All soldiers are now considered professionals, following the suspension of conscription voted in parliament in 1997 and effective as of 2001. Just like the Armée de l'Air, the Marine Nationale and the Gendarmerie Nationale it is placed under the responsibility of the French government. The current Chief of Staff of the French Army (CEMAT) is general Elrick Irastorza.
The French Army switched from multi-brigade divisions to smaller divisions of about four to five battalions/regiments each in 1977. During the late 1990s, during the professionalisation process, numbers dropped from the 1996 236,000 (132,000 conscripts) to around 140,000.[3] By June 1999, the Army's strength had dropped to 186,000, including around 70,000 conscripts. 38 of 129 regiments were planned to be stood down from 1997-99. The previous structure's nine 'small' divisions and sundry separate combat and combat support brigades were replaced by nine combat and four combat support brigades. The Rapid Action Force, a corps of five small rapid-intervention divisions formed in 1983, was also disbanded, though several of its divisions were re-subordinated.
During the Cold War, the French Army, though not part of NATO's military command structure, actively planned for the defence of Western Europe.[4] II Corps (France) was stationed in South Germany, and effectively formed a reserve for NATO's Central Army Group. In the 1980s, III Corps headquarters was moved to Lille and planning started for its use in support of NATO's Northern Army Group. The Rapid Action Force of five light divisions was also intended as a NATO reinforcement force.
Organisation
The army is divided into different Corps or armes. These units retain both symbolic and non symbolic and administrative values.
The operational organisation of the Army combines units from various Corps in 17 Brigades.
Equipment
Infantry armour and combat system
| Name |
Origin |
Type |
Notes |
| SPECTRA helmet |
France |
Protection helmet |
Using SPECTRA fiber from Honeywell[5], built by CGF GALLET. |
| FÉLIN |
France |
Infantry combat system |
Fantassin à Équipement et Liaisons Intégrés, designed by Safran, 31,455 units to be delivered.[6] |
| SCORPION |
France |
Program similar to the FCS |
Synergie du COntact Renforcé par la Polyvalence et l’InfovalorisatiON, project to be designed by Thales Group in association to Safran and Nexter.[7] |
Standard issue weapons
| Standard Issue Weapons |
Origin |
Type |
Diameter |
Notes |
| Pistols |
| PAMAS |
Italy/ France |
Standard service pistol |
9mm |
Modified version of the Beretta 92, also called Beretta 92F. |
| Rifles |
| FAMAS |
France |
Standard service rifle |
5.56mm |
Standard French rifle. The FAMAS can also fire rifle grenades such as the AC58 or the APAV40. |
| PAPOP |
France |
Future rifle |
5.56mm |
To be deployed along with FELIN infantry, combines a rifle and a 35mm grenade launcher. |
| Sniper rifles |
| FR F2 |
France |
Standard sniper rifle |
7.62mm |
Most used sniper rifle by the French Army. |
| PGM Hecate II |
France |
Heavy sniper rifle |
12.7mm |
Largest sniper rifle of the French Army. |
| Infantry mortars |
| LGI Mle F1 |
France |
Mortar grenade launcher |
See note |
Can fire either 51mm explosive grenades, 51mm smoke grenades or 47mm flash grenades. |
| LLR 81mm |
France |
Mortar |
81mm |
Exists in different versions. |
| Infantry machine guns |
| FN Minimi |
Belgium |
Machine gun |
5.56mm |
Light machine gun. |
| Browning M2 |
United States |
Machine gun |
12.7mm |
Heavy machine gun. |
| Vehicle machine guns |
| AA-52 machine gun |
France |
Machine gun |
7.62mm |
Vehicle mounted machine gun. |
| FN MAG |
Belgium |
Machine gun |
7.62mm |
Helicopter mounted machine gun. |
Portable missiles
| Name |
Origin |
Type |
Notes |
| Antitank missiles |
| FGM-148 Javelin |
United States |
Heavy antitank missile |
France ordered 76 launchers and 380 missiles to complement its antitank missiles. |
| MILAN |
France/ Germany |
Standard antitank missile |
Exists in different versions, can also be mounted on vehicles. |
| ERYX |
France |
Short range antitank missile |
Has limited anti-helicopter capabilities. |
| AT4 |
Sweden |
Light antitank rocket |
Light 84mm rocket, named "Anti Blindé Léger" in France. |
| Surface to air missiles |
| Mistral missile |
France |
Surface to air missile |
Can be mounted on vehicles too. |
Tracked armoured vehicles
| Name |
Origin |
Type |
Number |
Notes |
| Main battle tanks |
| AMX-56 Leclerc |
France |
Main Battle Tank |
406 |
Different batches presently used, 82 early models could be retired. |
| Recovery vehicles |
| Leclerc MARS |
France |
Recovery vehicle |
20 |
Recovery vehicle variant of the Leclerc MBT. |
| Infantry fighting vehicles |
| AMX-10P |
France |
Infantry fighting vehicle |
1,050 |
Tracked infantry fighting vehicle, to be replaced by the VBCI. |
| BvS 10 |
Sweden/ United Kingdom |
Tracked articulated all-terrain carrier |
150 |
Include a 12.7mm machine gun. |
Wheeled armoured vehicles
| Name |
Origin |
Type |
Number |
Notes |
| Tank destroyers |
| Engin Blindé Médian |
France |
Wheeled tank destroyer |
??? |
To replace the AMX-10RC and the ERC-90 from 2015 onward.[8] Formerly known as EBRC. |
| AMX 10 RC |
France |
Wheeled tank destroyer |
256 |
Replacement by the EBRC expected to start in 2015. |
| ERC 90 Sagaie |
France |
Mobile wheeled armoured vehicle |
192 |
Replacement by the EBRC expected to start in 2015. |
| Infantry fighting vehicles |
| Véhicule blindé de combat d'infanterie |
France |
Wheeled infantry fighting vehicle |
200 |
Also known as VBCI, will replace the AMX-10P. 600 have been ordered out of a requirement of 700 vehicles. |
| Transport vehicles |
| Véhicule de l'Avant Blindé |
France |
Armoured personnal carrier |
4,000 |
Most used personnal carrier of the French army. To be replaced by another vehicle to be determined from 2015 onward. |
| Petit Véhicule Protégé |
France |
Light personnal carrier |
1,500 by 2015 |
Light 4 wheeled carrier. |
| Véhicule Blindé Léger |
France |
4x4 all terrain vehicle. |
1,100 |
4x4 vehicle, will be replaced by the PVP. |
| Aravis |
France |
Armoured carrier. |
15 |
Armoured personnal carrier for engineering forces. |
| Sherpa 3 |
France |
Light tactical military truck |
33 |
Successor to the Sherpa 2. |
| Mine protected vehicles |
| Buffalo (MPCV) |
United States/ South Africa |
Mine protected vehicle |
5 |
Bought for operations in Afghanistan. |
Wheeled vehicles
| Name |
Origin |
Type |
Number |
Notes |
| Trucks |
| ACMAT |
France |
multipurpose truck |
??? |
|
| EFA |
France |
mobile bridge |
??? |
|
| Infantry vehicles |
| Peugeot P4 |
France |
All-terrain vehicle |
13,500 |
To be replaced by the PVP |
| Motorcycles |
| Cagiva 350 T4E |
Italy |
Light reconnaissance motorcycle |
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Artillery
| Name |
Origin |
Type |
Number |
Notes |
| Self propelled howitzers |
| AMX 30 AuF1 |
France |
Tracked self-propelled artillery |
174 |
Based on the AMX-30 chassis. |
| CAESAR |
France |
Wheeled self propelled artillery |
72 ordered |
Wheeled artillery. |
| Towed artillery |
| TRF1 |
France |
Towed artillery |
84 |
Towed 155mm cannon. |
| RTF1 |
France |
Towed mortar |
361 |
Towed 120mm mortar. |
| Multiple rocket launchers |
| M270 MLRS |
United States |
Multiple rocket launcher |
41 |
Some have been retired but 41 units are still operational. |
Helicopters
Planes
Principles and values
The principles and values of the French Army are formulated in the Code of the French Soldier:
| “ |
(...) Mastering his own strength, he respects his opponent and is careful to spare civilians. He obeys orders while respecting laws, customs of war and international conventions.(...) He is aware of global societies and respects their differences. (...) [11] |
” |
See also
References
External links
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