Cincu Training Center Explained

Cincu Training Center
Native Name:Romanian; Moldavian; Moldovan: Centrul național de instruire întrunită "Getica"
Location:Cincu, Brașov County
Nearest Town:Făgăraș
Country:Romania
Image2 Size:200px
Site Area:104km2
Built:1919
Used:1919–present
Controlledby:
NATO
Garrison:Multinational Battlegroup Romania

The Cincu Training Center, officially the National Joint Training Center "Getica" (Romanian; Moldavian; Moldovan: Centrul Național de Instruire Întrunită "Getica") is a training center and shooting range for military personnel and units up to brigade level. It is located in the commune Cincu, Brașov County in the center of Romania. The center is subordinated to the General Staff of the Land Forces.[1]

History

The first training ground in the Cincu area was established in 1913 by the Austro-Hungarian XII. Army Corps.[1] The current training center was established on 2 July 1919 by the Romanian Army as the Cincu Mare Regional Camp, which was part of the 7th Army Corps. The camp was moved under the Făgăraș Infantry Training Center in 1940. During World War II, it was used as a joint Romanian-German training base for exercises with infantry weaponry and anti-tank guns.[2]

In 1953, the camp was reorganized with the current boundaries being set and the Central Artillery Range (Military Unit 04785) being formed from the previous camp. The range was reorganized in 1959, receiving the present-day designation of Military Unit 01495. In 2007, the Combat Training Center of the Land Forces was established from the previous Central Artillery Range, and the honorary name "Getica" was received a year later.[2] The total area of the training center is 104km2, spanning to both the Brașov and Sibiu County.[3]

In 2017, the center was redesignated as the National Joint Training Center following the example of the Hohenfels Training Area.[1] The Cincu Training Center also has several structures subordinated to it: the Smârdan and Babadag training areas, the Plenița MOUT Training Center, and the Lerești CBRN Training Center. Around 330 modernization projects are expected to be completed by 2026.[4]

Multinational Battlegroup

In response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022, a Multinational Battlegroup was created in Romania. With France as the lead nation, the initial Battle Group Forward Presence (BGFP) formed from NATO Response Force elements was deployed to Cincu starting in May 2022 under the code-named Mission Aigle. Since then, the French and Belgian engineers built a military base for the newly deployed forces. Other elements of the Battlegroup are kept at the Mihail Kogălniceanu Air Base in Constanța.[5]

The headquarters of the French military forces in Cincu received the name "Camp Général Berthelot" in June 2024, in honor of the French General Henri Mathias Berthelot.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 105 de ani de existență a Centrului Național de Instruire Întrunită "Getica" de la Cincu. mitropolia-ardealului.ro. Costin Chesnoiu. 3 July 2024.
  2. Web site: Centrul de instruire pentru luptă al Forțelor Terestre "Getica". ro. cnij.ro.
  3. Web site: Poligoane de mii de hectare pentru bazele SUA. ro. România liberă. 12 August 2005.
  4. Web site: Asalt în Cincu. ro. Bogdan Oproiu. presamil.ro. 2024-07-04.
  5. Web site: Forțele NATO de la Cincu: Lucrări de amenajare și exerciții militare. ro. europalibera.org. 23 September 2022.
  6. Web site: Tabăra militară franceză de la Cincu devine "Camp Général Berthelot". ro. uzpr.ro. 26 June 2024.