United States Marine Corps Forces Europe and Africa
U.S. Marine Corps Forces Europe and Africa | |
---|---|
Active | February 1980 – present (as Fleet Marine Force Europe) |
Country | United States |
Branch | U.S. Marine Corps |
Type | Service component |
Role | Headquarters element |
Size | 1,500+ |
Part of | United States European Command |
Garrison/HQ | Panzer Kaserne, Böblingen, Germany |
Commanders | |
Current commander | MajGen Robert Sofge |
Notable commanders | Stephen M. Neary Russell A. Sanborn John M. Paxton Jr. Paul W. Brier |
Insignia | |
Seal of Marine Corps Forces Africa |
The Marine Corps Forces Europe and Africa (abbreviated as MARFOREUR/AF), headquartered in Panzer Kaserne-Barracks in Böblingen, Germany, is the U.S. Marine Corps component of the U.S. European Command and U.S. Africa Command.
History
[edit]In February 1980 the Commandant of the Marine Corps and the Chief of Naval Operations revised the operational task sharing between the two branches in a memorandum. Hitherto the USMC had a supporting role within United States Naval Forces Europe (NAVEUR). When that agreement came into effect on July 1, 1980, Headquarters, Fleet Marine Force Europe, the predecessor of the present unit, was founded in London including an independent 40-person staff as a Designed Component Command, to act as a Command Unit for further formations to be put under EUCOM-Command in case of a crisis situation. That staff immediately began preparing operation plans for optimal replenishment and deployment when required. FMF Europe arranged Marine support for Operation Provide Comfort, Operation Provide Promise, and Operation Deny Flight. To meet increasing challenges better, headquarters were transferred to Böblingen near Stuttgart on November 8, 1993. In February 1994 the headquarters was renamed MARFOREUR.
MARFOREUR is now dual-hatted with Marine Corps Forces Africa as Marine Corps Forces Europe / Africa, since November 2008.[1]
Organization
[edit]Currently, MARFOREUR/AF has a manning level of more than 1,500 Marines, of which about 100 serve at headquarters in Böblingen.[2]
MARFOREUR/AF serves as a headquarters and liaison organization for USMC efforts in the EUCOM area of responsibility. In normal circumstances Marine elements in the theater are few – routinely, the Marine Expeditionary Unit attached to United States Sixth Fleet, and possibly other small units and detachments. Yet the HQ makes it possible to call upon forces from II Marine Expeditionary Force (II MEF), based at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina. This force comprises the 2nd Marine Division, the 2nd Marine Aircraft Wing, and the 2nd Marine Logistics Group, formerly known as the 2nd Force Service Support Group.
II MEF would also supply forces for the Norway Air-Landed Marine Expeditionary Brigade (NALMEB).[3] NALMEB is a remnant NATO Cold War reinforcement organization, and would have come under command of Allied Forces Northern Europe. Significant equipment storage for a MEB is located in northern Norway under the Marine Corps Prepositioning Program-Norway,[4] and administered in the contiguous United States by Blount Island Command. The Norwegian Government has integrated the presence of a MEB into its defense planning.
Yet the tasking is now more theoretical than real, as the last confirmed deployment was Exercise Battle Griffin in 1991, in which the 2nd Marine Expeditionary Brigade, made up from USMCR reserve units due to Operation Desert Storm, made the first test of the concept. The exercise was conducted in February and March 1991 and the Brigade was made up of the 25th Marines regimental headquarters, 3rd Battalion, 25th Marines (infantry), Company E, 4th Reconnaissance Battalion, and 1st Battalion, 14th Marines (artillery).[5]
In 2014 the USMC added heavy armored vehicles to NALMEB for the first time.[6]
As of January 2017, a rotational force of about 330 (infantry) U.S. Marines from Camp Lejeune, NC, are stationed in Trondheim, Norway on two six-month deployments. [7] Official MARFOREUR writings say that the Marine Rotational Force, Europe (MRF-E) comprises "an infantry company reinforced by enablers and a Marine Coordination Element. [Their] presence in Norway facilitates military exercises that support NATO and USEUCOM operational plans; increases interoperability with Allies and Partners; advances efforts for more naval integration; and enables recuperation of the Marine Corps' cold weather and mountain proficiencies."
List of commanders
[edit]No. | Commander | Term | Ref | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Portrait | Name | Took office | Left office | Term length | ||
Commanding General FMFEUR / II MEF / FMFLANT | ||||||
1 | Adolph G. Schwenk (1922–2004) | Lieutenant General1 October 1980 | 1 July 1982 | 1 year, 273 days | [8] | |
2 | John H. Miller (born 1925) | Lieutenant General1 July 1982 | 1 September 1984 | 2 years, 62 days | [9] | |
3 | Alfred M. Gray Jr. (born 1928) | Lieutenant General1 September 1984 | 1 July 1987 | 2 years, 303 days | [10] | |
- | Clayton L. Comfort (1930–2004) Acting | Major General1 July 1987 | 1 September 1987 | 62 days | [9] | |
4 | Ernest T. Cook Jr. (1935–2000) | Lieutenant General1 July 1987 | 1 July 1990 | 3 years, 0 days | [11][12] | |
5 | Lieutenant General Carl E. Mundy Jr. (1935–2014) | 1 July 1990 | 25 June 1991 | 359 days | [9] | |
Commander MARFOREUR / MARFORSOUTH / MARFORLANT / Commanding General FMFLANT / II MEF | ||||||
6 | William M. Keys (born 1937) | Lieutenant General25 June 1991 | 1 September 1994 | 3 years, 68 days | [13] | |
7 | Robert B. Johnston (1937–2023) | Lieutenant General1 September 1994 | August 1995 | 334 days | [14] | |
8 | Charles E. Wilhelm (born 1941) | Lieutenant GeneralAugust 1995 | 23 November 1997 | 2 years, 114 days | [15] | |
Commander MARFOREUR / MARFORSOUTH / MARFORLANT / Commanding General FMFLANT | ||||||
9 | Peter Pace (born 1945) | Lieutenant General23 November 1997 | 8 September 2000 | 2 years, 290 days | [16] | |
10 | Raymond P. Ayres (born 1944) | Lieutenant General8 September 2000 | 15 August 2002 | 1 year, 341 days | [9] | |
11 | Martin R. Berndt (born 1941) | Lieutenant General15 August 2002 | 15 August 2005 | 3 years, 0 days | [17] | |
Commander MARFOREUR / MARFORSOUTH / MARFORCOM / Commanding General FMFLANT | ||||||
12 | Robert R. Blackman Jr. (born 1948) | Lieutenant General15 August 2005 | 18 July 2007 | 1 year, 337 days | [18] | |
Commander MARFOREUR/AF | ||||||
13 | Cornell A. Wilson Jr. | Major General18 July 2007 | 30 September 2008 | 1 year, 74 days | [19] | |
14 | Tracy L. Garrett | Brigadier General30 September 2008 | 10 September 2009 | 345 days | [20] | |
15 | Paul W. Brier | Brigadier General10 September 2009 | 17 August 2010 | 341 days | [21] | |
Commander MARFOREUR/AF / MARFORSOUTH / MARFORCOM / Commanding General FMFLANT | ||||||
16 | Dennis Hejlik | Lieutenant General17 August 2010 | 20 July 2012 | 1 year, 338 days | [22] | |
17 | John M. Paxton Jr. (born 1951) | Lieutenant General20 July 2012 | 13 December 2012 | 146 days | [23] | |
- | W. Blake Crowe (born 1967) Acting | Brigadier General13 December 2012 | 28 June 2013 | 197 days | ||
18 | Richard T. Tryon (born c. 1954) | Lieutenant General28 June 2013 | 1 July 2014 | 1 year, 3 days | [24] | |
19 | Robert B. Neller (born 1953) | Lieutenant General1 July 2014 | 23 September 2015 | 1 year, 84 days | [25] | |
Commander MARFOREUR/AF | ||||||
20 | Niel E. Nelson | Major General23 September 2015 | July 2017 | 1 year, 281 days | [25] | |
21 | Russell A. Sanborn | Major GeneralJuly 2017 | 7 July 2019 | 2 years, 6 days | [26] | |
22 | Patrick Hermesmann | Major General7 July 2019 | July 2020 | 360 days | [26] |
See also
[edit]- Black Sea Rotational Force
- Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force – Crisis Response – Africa
- Cornell A. Wilson Jr.
- Operation Odyssey Dawn
References
[edit]- ^ "U.S. Africa Command Home". Archived from the original on 2011-07-20. Retrieved 2008-11-21.
- ^ History of United States Marine Corps Forces, Europe
- ^ NALMEB on globalsecurity.org
- ^ Marine Corps Prepositioning Program-Norway
- ^ Thomas D. Dinackus, Order of Battle: Allied Ground Forces of Operation Desert Storm, Hellgate Press, Central Point, Oregon, 2000, Chart 22-3, ISBN 1-55571-493-5
- ^ Trevithick, Joseph (16 August 2014). "The Pentagon Is Stuffing Caves in Norway Full of Tanks". medium.com. war-is-boring. Retrieved 16 August 2014.
- ^ "New Marine Rotation Arrives In Norway". Retrieved 6 September 2017.
- ^ Lieutenant General Adolph G. Schwenk. Marine Corps University. Retrieved 4 October 2023.
- ^ a b c d Former Commanders (archived). U.S. Marine Corps Forces, Atlantic. Published 25 June 2001. Retrieved 2 October 2023.
- ^ Alfred M. Gray, Jr. (archived). Marine Corps History Division. Retrieved 4 October 2023.
- ^ Marine General Nominated. New York Times. Published 15 August 1987. Retrieved 4 October 2023.
- ^ LtGen Ernest T. Cook, Jr.. Military Hall of Honor. Retrieved 4 October 2023.
- ^ Lieutenant General William M. Keys. Marine Corps University. Retrieved 4 October 2023.
- ^ Lieutenant General Robert B. Johnston. U.S. Marines. Retrieved 5 October 2023.
- ^ General Charles E. Wilhelm. U.S. Marines. Retrieved 5 October 2023.
- ^ General Peter Pace. U.S. Marines. Retrieved 5 October 2023.
- ^ Finarelli, Linda (17 August 2011). Martin Berndt, Marine general and Springfield grad, dies at 63. The Reporter Online. Retrieved 5 October 2023.
- ^ Col. R.R. Blackman (archived). U.S. Marines. Retrieved 4 October 2023.
- ^ Official Biography for Cornell A. Wilson, Jr., Major General USMC Reserve (archived). U.S. Marines. Retrieved 9 October 2023.
- ^ MFE welcomes new Commander. Marine Corps Forces Europe. Retrieved 9 October 2023.
- ^ MARFOREUR, MARFORAF Welcome New Commander. Marine Corps Forces Europe. Retrieved 9 October 2023.
- ^ Commander of II MEF relinquishes command. U.S. Marines. Retrieved 9 October 2023.
- ^ McAdam, Scott (13 December 2012). "Paxton Relinquishes Command, MARFORCOM". DVIDS. Retrieved 26 January 2022.
- ^ "MARFORCOM change of command".
- ^ a b Beardsley, Steven (18 August 2015). Marines to place Europe-Africa command under 2-star in Germany. Stars and Stripes. Retrieved 9 October 2023.
- ^ a b New Commander Takes the Reins at U.S. Marine Corps Forces, Europe and Africa. Defense Visual Information Distribution Service. Published 7 July 2019.