im american, multiple brigades can equal a division, while multiple regiments can also make up a division. however regiments are usually the highest structure until command
CORP is far larger than 45,000. CORP may have 3-5 Divisions but also CORP base with many supporting Brigades, Signal, Engineer, MP, Chemical, Artillery, COSCOM, Civil Affairs, etc.
@@BIGJATPSU Having served on the I CORP staff, I have direct knowledge. There are currently four CORPS in the US Army. Even four times 80k would only total 320k. I left out several supporting brigades in my previous post. Military Intelligence, Civil Affairs and a few more. On I CORP exercises, we often used the figure of 160k troops (notional). These were joint exercises with allied nations and focus was wargaming and staff development. Therefore (notional). I would like to know your DoD source? CORPS are identified with roman numerals.
Fair point. If you hadn't mentioned it, I'd said it was correct. In WW2 it was often closer to the 3-Division-plus-support type, so 50.000 men was common. I am a hobby WW2-nerd and often it was like that on the Eastern Front with the Germans. My impression is that support units are waaay more numerous and bigger today than in WW2. As said I am a hobbyist so I might still be wrong. Maybe the author picks up on this?
*My Concept For The Foundation Army* One Man Army: 1 Personnel Fire Team: At Least 2-4 Personnels Squad: At Least 7-10 Personnels Company: At Least 15-35 Personnels Platoon: At Least 100-250 Personnels Squadron: At Least 400-650 Personnels Battalion: At Least 1K Personnels Regiment: At Least 3K Personnels Brigade: At Least 5K Personnels Legion: At Least 6-8K Personnels Division: At Least 15K Personnels Corps: At Least 45K Personnels Field Army: At Least 90K Personnels and Above Army Group: At Least 400-500K Personnels and Above Army Region: More than 1M Personnels
In Brazil, the "fire team" is named "squad". And the "squad" is named "combat group". A "fire team"/Brazilian "squad" has 6 men - five privates led by one Corporal (there was a rank of Squad Corporal in the past). Two "fire teams"/Brazilian "squad" made a "Squad"/Brazilian "Combat Group" of 13 men - ten privates and two corporals led by a sergeant. Brazilian Army structure is based on the French Army.
Good effort! When I started getting interested in military matters in the 90's it took me YEARS to get a solid grasp on the typical sizes of military units. It is much easier to research today, but still I explained it to my niese just recently.
You're forgetting the Regiment! Regiments, depending on whether they're west European or Soviet/Russian or American, are either battalion sized (west European) or are larger than a battalion but smaller than a brigade (Soviet/Russian or American) but whatever the case may be, it's commanded by a Colonel.
depends on what you mean by west European, if you don't include Germany in weste European yes. German regiments aren't that tiny, that's a british/dutch/etc. thing.
This was based on US Army formations. US Army doesn't use regiments anymore as tactical units. The few regiments that are still intact as tactical units are essentially brigade equivalent.
In the British Army, 'regiment' can mean two things. An infantry regiment traditionally contains two or more battalions which are each organised within a brigade, however the regiment itself isn't part of the Army's organisational structure, but maintains all the traditions, colours etc. Regiments in other corps (e.g. Army Air Corps, Royal Signals etc.) are battalion-sized units and typically contain squadrons which are equivalent to infantry companies.
From a german perspective this is a little weird. A colonel commands usually a regiment (regiment = more companies than a battailon, up to 2500 Soldiers) not a brigade. Thats the job of a brigadier general. Three brigades make up a division with a major general in charge. Three or more divisions make one corps with a lieutanant general. Multiple corps make up an army (thats what I learned) and multiple armies make up a armygroup. Like the NATOs CentAG and NorthAG. The term "Army Region" is completely new to me.
A Major can be billeted to command a battalion, but that is very rare. Same as how a Ssgt can be company Gysgt, or a Gysgt can be a company 1stsgt. But it's not gonna happen unless it needs to.
@TATTOSANDWHISKEY usually either temporary (Bn commander was lost and/or there is a gap in the arrival of the replacement) or the Major is promotable and VERY well thought of. As you said it's VERY rare.
Regiment is two Battalions. One in field, one training/reserve. Brigade 3 Regiments. Division, 3 Brigades. U.S. and British are different. British based on Regiments, U.S. on Divisions.
I'm the marines regiments are 4 battalion typically because theirs 3 infantry battalions and a combat engineer battalion. Some have more because the 4th regiment broke up in Korea, and the battalions had to be put with other regiments. 5th regiment has 1/5, 2/5, 3/5, 1stCEB, and 2/4, I don't remember regiments the other bastard battalions went to, tho. V2/4 is however the only one of the bastard battalions to keep the moniker. V2/4 Magnificent Bastards, Second to None.
Good video, and now to add a few things for folks trying to grasp this.... Units are formed according to their Military Table of Organization and Equipment (MTOE). Their MTOE states numbers of personnel, size of subunits, ranks required in those units, what specialty they are (Infantry, Engineer, Fueler, Driver, etc.) and what equipment the unit should have. If you're playing a video game its pretty straight forward. If you're reading about real life or military history, its NOT straight forward.... NO ONE has what their MTOE says and MTOEs across armies don't match either. Good luck with that.
Yep. A division will vary in number of personnel depending on if it's mechanized or not. A tank division will be smaller than infantry. Smaller still in the Air Force.
@@williamclayton9566 I saved this vid, might come in handy when trying to understrength, undertrained, underequipped Soviet divisions at the beginning of Operation Barbarossa in 1941. "Revisionists" always claim; Bro, the Soviets had 300 divisions on the German border, they were going to attack. 🙄
Yes in a squad there can be 2 Fire team. Fire team lead (FTL) leads the fire team. Team 1 where the squad leader is, is called Alpha. The others teams are called Bravo and Charlie teams.
A Fireteam is commander by a Cpl or senior Lcpl, sometimes A PFC, but preferably a senior Lcpl at the minimum. Never a commissioned officer, they have bigger billets to fill.
Most Brigades I've known including IBCT have been led by Brigadier Generals. Pretty much in the name on that one. SSG. U.S. Army (Medically Retired) Infantry / Sniper / SOF Intel (SOT-A), multiple tours
You can tell which one they chose from the clothes from the soldiers(yes i know some might be similar)if it's inaccurate let him have a pillow with both sides warm
While its no hard rule of course, from doing research, it seems that a unit of its closest one is generally made up of 3 or so of the previous unit type, plus various commaand and support elements. This may look odd on here with the units going straight from battalion to brigade. Regiment is actually the next unit scale up from battalion, but the US no longer uses the regiment formation. Instead the next up is now brigade, which is generally 2 or so regiments, while 3 or 4 regiments would normally be a division.
In most armies, the senior NCO in a platoon is a sergeant, with corporals leading the sections - each section splits into two fireteams with the corporal leading one and a lance-corporal the other. The US Army used to be the same, but rank inflation has led to sergeants leading fireteams, staff sergeants leading squads and sergeants first class as platoon sergeants. Despite this, NATO rank codes have US Army sergeants equivalent to sergeants in other armies (OR-5), even though they're essentially lance-corporals.
In the army, very often the transition to a more significant combination of troops occurs after counting up to two, three or four. If there are 3 or 4 squads and platoons in a platoon or company, then there are usually 2 or 3 divisions and brigades in a corps and division. Junior officers command platoons and companies, there is a squad of the commander. The intermediate officers command battalions, regiments, brigades, and there is already a command headquarters there. Divisions, corps, field armies, and army groups are commanded by highest officers. If the groups of field armies are in the north of France, it is called army group north, if the groups of field armies are in the south of France, it is called army group south. Army group north, army group west, western front, southern front. In addition, armies can be on different continents, in Australia, Africa, Europe, and America. This is called the army of one or another theater of operations, the army of one or another region. And at the end, this is the commander of the entire land army, the commander of the entire fleet, the commander of the entire aviation. Then there may be a commander of all branches of the armed forces, one person. You can't walk alone at a battlefield, so the smallest compound is 2 or 3 people, you can name it in different ways, for example, units of soldiers, or a group of soldiers. It's simple here. The biggest controversy is the number of soldiers in the squad. Because 6 or 7 is not enough. Then you'll understand why.
En México Fire team = Escuadra Squad = Peloton Pelotón = Seccion Compañia = Compañía Regimiento y batallon son lo mismo aca Brigada es mas pequeño que una division
Strong .... up to 3,000,000 men (also women ...including)...in the last picture windmills are shown, what is the meaning or intention behind it to represent a military unit like that place ?
Imagine having a million army and yet no electricity. I mean with that huge army it is reasonable to have a huge military base with research facilities and radars which consumes energy and to power the barracks or mini town inside it
Depending on the battle order of the country usually around 1000 men of that 600 to 700 are the combat section or 1st echelon then you have the support and HQ - Support is electrical and mechanical, signals and victuals( Feeding, clothing and housing ) of the men
When I was in the US Army (1981-84) my company was commanded by a major. When I was shipped off to Korea and assigned to a cavalry unit our 'Troop' was also commanded by a major. Matter of fact in both units we had a change of command and both times the in incoming commander was promoted from captain to major just prior to taking command. So take this video with two grains of salt...
And Legion?? (My name is Legion...), and mechanized army; and why during WWII, the red army and Wermach uses the 2nd army, the 6th army, XVI army, IX army??
Squad two or more fire teams, platoon three or more squads, company three or more platoons, battalion three or more companies, regiment three or more battalions, brigade two or more regiments, division two or more brigades,crop two or more divisions
Contubernium: 10, led by a Decanus Century: 80-120, led by a Centurion Cohort: 500, led by a senior Centurion Legion: 4200-5200, led by a Legate That's a real army 😝
Captains, majors and colonels seem to be needless. Captains lead companies. (100-150 soldiers. ) First number is a nominal value, last is a full, war ready number) Battallions (2-3 companies) (200-450 sold. ) are led by majors. Colonels are leading regiments, (3-4 battl.s.) (1000-1500). Brigades consist of 2-3 regiments (2000-4500 sold ), led by a ONE-STAR, brigadier general. 2-3 brigades, 10000-15000 soldiers make up a division, led by TWO-star, major general. The next level is CORPS, made up of 2 or 3 divisions, like the US Marine Corps, led by a lieutenant general. 2-3 Corps make up an ARMY, roughly 100.000. men/women, led by a FIELD MARSHAL. Historically, in war, if more armies are bunched up, they are called FRONTS.
It depends on countries, but the video fails to discriminate between administrative or organizational units in peace time, and operational or manoeuver units in war time. A colonel would not command a full administrative brigade, there are brigadiers for that, as the name implies (brigade generals). A colonel would command a regiment and a lieutenant-colonel would assist. But in war time, or during operations abroad, companies and regiments inflate, battalions are organized from one or more regiments, and then battalion tactical groups or brigade combat teams (1-2 battalions plus brigade-level or division-level support units, for a total of 2-3 battalion-worth of troops), an operational brigade is made of. In modern days, a BCT or a BTG virtually means a half-brigade of old. The apparent disappearance of regiments behind the scene comes from the necessary combination of all arms at the lower possible operational level, whereas regiments used to be rather thematic, as in infantry, cavalry, artillery, etc, therefore having a strong primary focus, and too feeble secondaries.
I always thought it was 10 men a section - 3 sections to a platoon - 3 platoons to a corp 3 corps to regiment - 3 regiments to a company and 3 companies to a battalion By this stage you should have 1000 men in battalion 3 battalions become a division 3 divisions become a brigade and three brigades an army
This should probably be renamed and made more specific, different countries set up their armies differently and composition for an artillery/anti-air unit is completely different
Какие-то непонятные формирования с непонятными званиями (только по численности состава можно примерно догадаться о чём идёт речь, хотя после корпуса какие-то фантастические цифры, это армии из "звёздных войн"?)
"What is your military rank?"
"i am O F I *C C* E R"
Command Private Major
@@DANIEL557 it would be an NCO. Probably a corporal
@@abraxas2563Could also be PFC if they’re that undermanned.
@@DANIEL557 from the Oficce
i think its far to say that this is highly unaccurate
Did you mean inaccurate lol
@@globalautobahn1132 crap this video's inaccuracy is contagious
For the US Army, it's very accurate
@@globalautobahn1132 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Nah, this disaccurate
Where is a regiment?
Yeah, Sparky missed the Regiment there. And since when does a fire team have 4 marines and an officer? 3 and a Lance Corporal sounds about right.
regiment is a military unit betwen a batalion and a brigade
multiple battalions make up a regiment, multiple regiments make up a brigade
@@zansusar75 well a brigade is a regiment depending where you from
im american, multiple brigades can equal a division, while multiple regiments can also make up a division. however regiments are usually the highest structure until command
CORP is far larger than 45,000. CORP may have 3-5 Divisions but also CORP base with many supporting Brigades, Signal, Engineer, MP, Chemical, Artillery, COSCOM, Civil Affairs, etc.
While a Corps CAN BE far larger than 45,000, it depends on the circumstances. DOD stated range is from 40-80k soldiers, so it can vary quite a lot.
@@BIGJATPSU Having served on the I CORP staff, I have direct knowledge. There are currently four CORPS in the US Army. Even four times 80k would only total 320k. I left out several supporting brigades in my previous post. Military Intelligence, Civil Affairs and a few more.
On I CORP exercises, we often used the figure of 160k troops (notional). These were joint exercises with allied nations and focus was wargaming and staff development. Therefore (notional).
I would like to know your DoD source? CORPS are identified with roman numerals.
Fair point.
If you hadn't mentioned it, I'd said it was correct. In WW2 it was often closer to the 3-Division-plus-support type, so 50.000 men was common. I am a hobby WW2-nerd and often it was like that on the Eastern Front with the Germans. My impression is that support units are waaay more numerous and bigger today than in WW2. As said I am a hobbyist so I might still be wrong.
Maybe the author picks up on this?
Exactly X Corps in the Korean War had 110,000 men at its height.
CORPS Artillery for I CORP alone consisted of six Artillery Brigades.
I served with one of them.
an oficcer with a fire team?
A corporal or a lance corporal.
@@BraydenSabo-qs5yy arent officers
@@ZachHatfield-d5pik there NCO’s
E5
@@ZachHatfield-d5p aren't they ? i mean, Non-Commissioned OFFICERS ? im confused
*My Concept For The Foundation Army*
One Man Army: 1 Personnel
Fire Team: At Least 2-4 Personnels
Squad: At Least 7-10 Personnels
Company: At Least 15-35 Personnels
Platoon: At Least 100-250 Personnels
Squadron: At Least 400-650 Personnels
Battalion: At Least 1K Personnels
Regiment: At Least 3K Personnels
Brigade: At Least 5K Personnels
Legion: At Least 6-8K Personnels
Division: At Least 15K Personnels
Corps: At Least 45K Personnels
Field Army: At Least 90K Personnels and Above
Army Group: At Least 400-500K Personnels and Above
Army Region: More than 1M Personnels
You got company and platoon mixed up. Typically 3 platoons make a company
And what rank commands each in your concept?
In Brazil, the "fire team" is named "squad". And the "squad" is named "combat group".
A "fire team"/Brazilian "squad" has 6 men - five privates led by one Corporal (there was a rank of Squad Corporal in the past). Two "fire teams"/Brazilian "squad" made a "Squad"/Brazilian "Combat Group" of 13 men - ten privates and two corporals led by a sergeant.
Brazilian Army structure is based on the French Army.
@@kingzyjhiepelongco3593 infantry and marines only. Tank unit sizes differ
@@kingzyjhiepelongco3593 in Australia a squad is a section (8 men)
Good effort!
When I started getting interested in military matters in the 90's it took me YEARS to get a solid grasp on the typical sizes of military units.
It is much easier to research today, but still I explained it to my niese just recently.
Should be a big "YOUR EXPERIENCE MAY DIFFER" banner 😂
You're forgetting the Regiment! Regiments, depending on whether they're west European or Soviet/Russian or American, are either battalion sized (west European) or are larger than a battalion but smaller than a brigade (Soviet/Russian or American) but whatever the case may be, it's commanded by a Colonel.
depends on what you mean by west European, if you don't include Germany in weste European yes.
German regiments aren't that tiny, that's a british/dutch/etc. thing.
@@Emanuel-t5e Vielen Danke, Mein Herr!
This was based on US Army formations. US Army doesn't use regiments anymore as tactical units. The few regiments that are still intact as tactical units are essentially brigade equivalent.
@@armynurseboy You're right. The US Army now use brigades instead of regiments but the US Marines still use regiments.
In the British Army, 'regiment' can mean two things. An infantry regiment traditionally contains two or more battalions which are each organised within a brigade, however the regiment itself isn't part of the Army's organisational structure, but maintains all the traditions, colours etc. Regiments in other corps (e.g. Army Air Corps, Royal Signals etc.) are battalion-sized units and typically contain squadrons which are equivalent to infantry companies.
Each field army has a windmill?
Where do you think they get their electricity.
Squad, Platoon. Company, Battalion, Regiment, Brigade, Division, Corp = Army
You tell ‘em.
Thank you for getting it right.
@@joyamador5992 Thank you.
From a german perspective this is a little weird. A colonel commands usually a regiment (regiment = more companies than a battailon, up to 2500 Soldiers) not a brigade. Thats the job of a brigadier general. Three brigades make up a division with a major general in charge. Three or more divisions make one corps with a lieutanant general. Multiple corps make up an army (thats what I learned) and multiple armies make up a armygroup. Like the NATOs CentAG and NorthAG. The term "Army Region" is completely new to me.
... weird*
Cheer~~an organized military force equipped for fighting on land.😊
Where’s major? A major commands battalion also! And also, brigadier General also commands brigade.
major is just the battalion xo to the lt col
Majors are typically on battalion staff.
At battalion, typically the only positions for a Major are XO and S3 Operations Officer
A Major can be billeted to command a battalion, but that is very rare. Same as how a Ssgt can be company Gysgt, or a Gysgt can be a company 1stsgt. But it's not gonna happen unless it needs to.
@TATTOSANDWHISKEY usually either temporary (Bn commander was lost and/or there is a gap in the arrival of the replacement) or the Major is promotable and VERY well thought of. As you said it's VERY rare.
Regiment is two Battalions. One in field, one training/reserve. Brigade 3 Regiments. Division, 3 Brigades. U.S. and British are different. British based on Regiments, U.S. on Divisions.
I'm the marines regiments are 4 battalion typically because theirs 3 infantry battalions and a combat engineer battalion. Some have more because the 4th regiment broke up in Korea, and the battalions had to be put with other regiments. 5th regiment has 1/5, 2/5, 3/5, 1stCEB, and 2/4, I don't remember regiments the other bastard battalions went to, tho.
V2/4 is however the only one of the bastard battalions to keep the moniker. V2/4 Magnificent Bastards, Second to None.
Good video, and now to add a few things for folks trying to grasp this.... Units are formed according to their Military Table of Organization and Equipment (MTOE). Their MTOE states numbers of personnel, size of subunits, ranks required in those units, what specialty they are (Infantry, Engineer, Fueler, Driver, etc.) and what equipment the unit should have.
If you're playing a video game its pretty straight forward. If you're reading about real life or military history, its NOT straight forward.... NO ONE has what their MTOE says and MTOEs across armies don't match either. Good luck with that.
Yep. A division will vary in number of personnel depending on if it's mechanized or not. A tank division will be smaller than infantry. Smaller still in the Air Force.
@@williamclayton9566 I saved this vid, might come in handy when trying to understrength, undertrained, underequipped Soviet divisions at the beginning of Operation Barbarossa in 1941.
"Revisionists" always claim; Bro, the Soviets had 300 divisions on the German border, they were going to attack. 🙄
That Soldier is a SPY!!!
Fire team leader is not an officer.
If you want to be technical they are. Just usually a non-commissioned officer
LOL! Yeah, that would be a Corporal or a senior Lance Corporal depending on who's available.
Yes in a squad there can be 2 Fire team. Fire team lead (FTL) leads the fire team. Team 1 where the squad leader is, is called Alpha. The others teams are called Bravo and Charlie teams.
No, it's an Oficcer. You forget that this was done by somebody who had no idea what they were doing and probably used a book.
A Fireteam is commander by a Cpl or senior Lcpl, sometimes A PFC, but preferably a senior Lcpl at the minimum. Never a commissioned officer, they have bigger billets to fill.
I always wondered about that, now I know what they are talking about in all those war movies I've seen.
Most Brigades I've known including IBCT have been led by Brigadier Generals. Pretty much in the name on that one.
SSG. U.S. Army (Medically Retired) Infantry / Sniper / SOF Intel (SOT-A), multiple tours
Each country divides their armies in different types…wonder which one was chosen for the video.
You can tell which one they chose from the clothes from the soldiers(yes i know some might be similar)if it's inaccurate let him have a pillow with both sides warm
While its no hard rule of course, from doing research, it seems that a unit of its closest one is generally made up of 3 or so of the previous unit type, plus various commaand and support elements.
This may look odd on here with the units going straight from battalion to brigade. Regiment is actually the next unit scale up from battalion, but the US no longer uses the regiment formation. Instead the next up is now brigade, which is generally 2 or so regiments, while 3 or 4 regiments would normally be a division.
Nice visuals. Do the Roman legion next please
Is this the 40k version?
In most armies, the senior NCO in a platoon is a sergeant, with corporals leading the sections - each section splits into two fireteams with the corporal leading one and a lance-corporal the other.
The US Army used to be the same, but rank inflation has led to sergeants leading fireteams, staff sergeants leading squads and sergeants first class as platoon sergeants. Despite this, NATO rank codes have US Army sergeants equivalent to sergeants in other armies (OR-5), even though they're essentially lance-corporals.
you mean theater instead of "army region"?
division
Field marshal?
What about Marshall, field marshall, warlord and lord militant?
Did they skip the rank major?
How many windmills in a Battalion?
What happened to rank of major
Usually a Battalion XO the same way a 1LT is a Company XO.
Are windmills taken into battle?
Yes. They are the key to victory.
In the army, very often the transition to a more significant combination of troops occurs after counting up to two, three or four. If there are 3 or 4 squads and platoons in a platoon or company, then there are usually 2 or 3 divisions and brigades in a corps and division. Junior officers command platoons and companies, there is a squad of the commander. The intermediate officers command battalions, regiments, brigades, and there is already a command headquarters there. Divisions, corps, field armies, and army groups are commanded by highest officers. If the groups of field armies are in the north of France, it is called army group north, if the groups of field armies are in the south of France, it is called army group south. Army group north, army group west, western front, southern front. In addition, armies can be on different continents, in Australia, Africa, Europe, and America. This is called the army of one or another theater of operations, the army of one or another region. And at the end, this is the commander of the entire land army, the commander of the entire fleet, the commander of the entire aviation. Then there may be a commander of all branches of the armed forces, one person. You can't walk alone at a battlefield, so the smallest compound is 2 or 3 people, you can name it in different ways, for example, units of soldiers, or a group of soldiers. It's simple here. The biggest controversy is the number of soldiers in the squad. Because 6 or 7 is not enough. Then you'll understand why.
Very fascinant
En México
Fire team = Escuadra
Squad = Peloton
Pelotón = Seccion
Compañia = Compañía
Regimiento y batallon son lo mismo aca
Brigada es mas pequeño que una division
Hey guys, don't correct these people, let them dream😎
Strong .... up to 3,000,000 men (also women ...including)...in the last picture windmills are shown, what is the meaning or intention behind it to represent a military unit like that place ?
Imagine having a million army and yet no electricity. I mean with that huge army it is reasonable to have a huge military base with research facilities and radars which consumes energy and to power the barracks or mini town inside it
It's so great
In 8 years I was never in a squad with more than 7 men. And that included me as the squad leader.
I’ve been out for a while but when I was in the Army we were structured different
In the movie Rambo 3, Rambo managed to obliterate a Spetsnaz brigade by himself LOL :-)
I remember when I was an oficcer. We called them NCOs tho.
*officer
@@ennardthefuntimepuppet6456 Tell me you didn't watch the video without saying you didn't watch the video.
Isn't there something between a company and battalion while the one in charge would be a major?
Nope
Shouldnt the fire team lead by a corporal?
Why you are not added Regiment ?
What is "Battialion"?
a battalion is a group of 3 to 5 companies ( military companies)
@@FlorianBulboaca he asked about the spelling
It’s far superior than a battalion. Usually led by high ranking “oficcers”
Depending on the battle order of the country usually around 1000 men of that 600 to 700 are the combat section or 1st echelon then you have the support and HQ - Support is electrical and mechanical, signals and victuals( Feeding, clothing and housing ) of the men
What about captain, major?
What about their command limit??
So basically in 2002, a field army of clone troopers were combat ready with an army region of them well on the way
I thought the final one with Army Region should be Commander in Chief?
what country? my country only has 25.000 soldiers on active service
where?
What size unit does a Major command?
When I was in the US Army (1981-84) my company was commanded by a major. When I was shipped off to Korea and assigned to a cavalry unit our 'Troop' was also commanded by a major. Matter of fact in both units we had a change of command and both times the in incoming commander was promoted from captain to major just prior to taking command. So take this video with two grains of salt...
General Asim munner🪖🎖️💲
And Legion?? (My name is Legion...), and mechanized army; and why during WWII, the red army and Wermach uses the 2nd army, the 6th army, XVI army, IX army??
Squad two or more fire teams, platoon three or more squads, company three or more platoons, battalion three or more companies, regiment three or more battalions, brigade two or more regiments, division two or more brigades,crop two or more divisions
I'm a B A T T I A L I O N Commander
Why did include eagle killing wind turbines?
This has been educative info
A brigade usually headed by a brigadier general@1 star general
Thank you for this information
Contubernium: 10, led by a Decanus Century: 80-120, led by a Centurion
Cohort: 500, led by a senior Centurion
Legion: 4200-5200, led by a Legate
That's a real army 😝
What is an Oficcer?
THIS GUYS HAS HIS "GENERAL" AND "MAYOR GENERAL" MIXED UP.... and the last one is called a FIELD MARSHALL!!!
Officers don’t lead fire teams or squads sgt do. Platoons are the smallest units headed by a officer
Unless we're talking about Staff Officers, then it is basically a team. Or pilots, in which case they might just have a crew or be by themselves.
Armed forces up to more than 20,000,000 soldiers
leaders
1. President,
2. 5 star general
3. sec of defense 😮
Where is the brigadier general? Also the Army Region is called Army Group
200,000 troops are ready with a million more well on the way.
The fire team is led by a sergeant not an officer.
A squad is led by a staff sergeant.
Captains, majors and colonels seem to be needless. Captains lead companies. (100-150 soldiers. ) First number is a nominal value, last is a full, war ready number) Battallions (2-3 companies) (200-450 sold. ) are led by majors. Colonels are leading regiments, (3-4 battl.s.) (1000-1500). Brigades consist of 2-3 regiments (2000-4500 sold ), led by a ONE-STAR, brigadier general. 2-3 brigades, 10000-15000 soldiers make up a division, led by TWO-star, major general. The next level is CORPS, made up of 2 or 3 divisions, like the US Marine Corps, led by a lieutenant general. 2-3 Corps make up an ARMY, roughly 100.000. men/women, led by a FIELD MARSHAL. Historically, in war, if more armies are bunched up, they are called FRONTS.
Which army are you talking about in the U.S. Army Captain command companies Lieutenant Colonel command battalions, Colonel command Brigades.
1st Katag-Katag Di Mahanap Div.
Master Sardine Sardinas Makaril.💪
Battalion doesn't consist of from 300 men.. it has to be 1000 men is call battalion
It depends on countries, but the video fails to discriminate between administrative or organizational units in peace time, and operational or manoeuver units in war time.
A colonel would not command a full administrative brigade, there are brigadiers for that, as the name implies (brigade generals). A colonel would command a regiment and a lieutenant-colonel would assist.
But in war time, or during operations abroad, companies and regiments inflate, battalions are organized from one or more regiments, and then battalion tactical groups or brigade combat teams (1-2 battalions plus brigade-level or division-level support units, for a total of 2-3 battalion-worth of troops), an operational brigade is made of. In modern days, a BCT or a BTG virtually means a half-brigade of old.
The apparent disappearance of regiments behind the scene comes from the necessary combination of all arms at the lower possible operational level, whereas regiments used to be rather thematic, as in infantry, cavalry, artillery, etc, therefore having a strong primary focus, and too feeble secondaries.
How about a legion unit ?
I also served under Audie Murphy back in '47
Sure buddy
@@oce4nistheman316 Ray is that you?
@@kingpen3254 nah dude its Sgt Gilbert Manson from omaha
I always thought it was 10 men a section - 3 sections to a platoon - 3 platoons to a corp 3 corps to regiment - 3 regiments to a company and 3 companies to a battalion
By this stage you should have 1000 men in battalion
3 battalions become a division
3 divisions become a brigade and three brigades an army
What about Field Marshall.
Someone needs to be aware they're dyslexic and maybe ADD as well, it could change your life.
Wind powered army regions are the way of the future.
This should probably be renamed and made more specific, different countries set up their armies differently and composition for an artillery/anti-air unit is completely different
What about regiment ?
Do army groups still exist today?
Yeah
CEO of America
Awesome job creating a visual of the number and size of each unit been looking for something like this for a long time
General is the highest rank of all generals.higher than liutenant general.
Missed a chance to put as sound track 'red alert'
Brigades ?
E-4 most likely is a Fire Team leader not an officer.
Какие-то непонятные формирования с непонятными званиями (только по численности состава можно примерно догадаться о чём идёт речь, хотя после корпуса какие-то фантастические цифры, это армии из "звёздных войн"?)
Where is Field Marshall aka Five Star General 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟 like Erwin Rommel , Erich Von Manstein ?
Why do I have the sudden urge to give a motivational bad guy speech?
Major?
good reference.
Is this accurate?
This music is a hit.
Qué son procesadores, núcleos de procesadores o patitas de procesadores 😮😮😮
I guess command teams just don't exist right
Every one gangsta untill ains owl goan
Our Bharatiya military have almost 13-14 akshauhinee sainik.
learn how to spell?
Comprehending concepts are of importance, not necessarily spelling, for example the term arrogant narcissist that belittles others.
Tis how we know the non natural speakers
@@kw9694 Spelling correctly is a sign of professionalism and respect to those who are supposed to read it.
Why the fuck are windmills there? 😂
Where are the boys???