Army of the Czech Republic explained

Czech Armed Forces
Native Name:Czech: Armáda České republiky
Current Form:1 January 1993
Branches:
Headquarters:Prague, Czech Republic
Commander-In-Chief: Petr Pavel
Commander-In-Chief Title:President
Chief Minister: Petr Fiala
Chief Minister Title:Prime Minister
Minister: Jana Černochová
Minister Title:Minister of Defence
Commander: Karel Řehka
Age:18
Conscription:Abolished in 2004[1]
Active:28 000 professional[2]
4,191 active reserve
Deployed:1,200 NATO EFP (Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia, Poland, Slovakia, Hungary)
20 Ukraine (diplomatic protection)
8 NATO KFOR
8 EU Operation Althea
5 EU Operation Irini
15 UN MINUSMA
5 UNDOF
20 MFO
[3]
Amount:CZK 151,2 billion ($6.7 billion) (2024)[4]
Percent Gdp:2% (2024)[5]
Ranks:Czech military ranks

The Czech Armed Forces (Czech: Armáda České republiky|lit=the Army of the Czech Republic), also known as the Czech Army, is the military service responsible for the defence of the Czech Republic as part of the Armed Forces of the Czech Republic (Czech: ozbrojené síly České republiky)[6] alongside the Military Office of the President of the Republic and the Castle Guard.[7] The army consists of the General Staff, the Land Forces, the Air Force and support units.[8]

Czech Army's main historical legacy and inspiration stems from the 15th century Hussite militia, which is credited with numerous warfare advancements, including introduction of firearms to field battles as well as the wagon fort strategy, called vozová hradba in Czech. Modern history precedes the 1918 Czechoslovak declaration of independence with formal establishment of the Czechoslovak Legion fighting on the side of the Entente powers during the WW1. Following the Munich Agreement, the country was occupied by Nazi Germany and the Army was reconstituted in exile, fighting on the side of Allies of World War II in the European as well as Mediterranean and Middle East theatre. After the 1948 Communist Coup, the Czechoslovak People's Army with over 200,000 active personnel and some 4,500 tanks[9] formed one of the pillars of the Warsaw Pact military alliance.

Following the Velvet Revolution and dissolution of Czechoslovakia, the Czech Republic joined NATO in 1999. The conscription was abolished in 2004, leading to transformation into a modern professional army inspired mostly by the British Armed Forces and USMC example. Today, the Czech Army has 28.000 professional personnel and 4.200 members of active reserves. Additionally, any citizen can voluntarily join a five week basic training without becoming a soldier[10] or join advanced shooting training with their privately owned firearms and become civilian reservist.[11]

A law adopted in June 2023 stipulates that the military expenditures shall not be lower than 2% of country's GDP, starting from 2024.[12]

History

Czech lands

The military history of the Czech people dates back to the Middle Ages and the creation of the Duchy of Bohemia and the Kingdom of Bohemia. During the Hussite Wars, Jan Žižka became a military leader of such skill and eminence that the Hussite legacy became an important and lasting part of the Czech military traditions.[13] [14]

Official military names since 1918:

Czechoslovakia

See main article: Czechoslovak Army and Czechoslovak People's Army. The Czechoslovak Armed Forces were originally formed on 30 June 1918 when 6,000 members of the Czechoslovak Legion in France, which had been established in 1914, took oath and received a battle banner in Darney, France, thus preceding the official declaration of Czechoslovak independence by four months. There were also 50 000 legion soldiers in Russia at that time. The military achievements of the Czechoslovak legions on the French, Italian and especially Russian front became one of the main arguments that the Czechoslovak pro-independence leaders, especially for T. G. Masaryk in America,[15] could use to gain the support for the country's independence by the Allies of World War I.

In 1938, servicemen of the Czechoslovak Army and the State Defense Guard fought in an undeclared border war against the German-backed Sudetendeutsches Freikorps as well as Polish and Hungarian paramilitary forces. As a result of the Munich Agreement, areas heavily populated by ethnic German speaking people were incorporated into the Third Reich and military-aged men living there were subject to being drafted into the Wehrmacht. In 1939, after the Slovak State proclaimed its independence and the remainder of Carpathian Ruthenia was occupied and annexed by Hungary, the German occupation of the Czech Lands followed and the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia was proclaimed after the negotiations with Emil Hácha. The Protectorate's government possessed its own armed force, the Government Army (6,500 men), tasked with public security and rearguard duties. On the other side of the conflict, a number of Czechoslovak units and formations served with the Polish Army (Czechoslovak Legion), the French Army, the Royal Air Force, the British Army (the 1st Czechoslovak Armoured Brigade), and the Red Army (I Corps). Four Czech and Slovak-manned RAF squadrons were transferred to Czechoslovak control in late 1945.

From 1954[16] until 1989, the Army was known as the Czechoslovak People's Army (ČSLA).[17] Although the ČSLA, as formed in 1945, included both Soviet- and British-equipped/trained expatriate troops, the "Western" soldiers had been purged from the ČSLA after 1948 when the communists took power. The ČSLA offered no resistance to the invasion mounted by the Soviets in 1968 in reaction to the "Prague Spring", and was extensively reorganized by the Soviets following the re-imposition of communist rule in Prague.

Of the approximately 201,000 personnel on active duty in the ČSLA in 1987, about 145,000, or about 72 percent, served in the ground forces (commonly referred to as the army). About 100,000 of these were conscripts.[18] There were two military districts, Western and Eastern. A 1989 listing of forces shows two Czechoslovak armies in the west, the 1st Army at Příbram with one tank division and three motor rifle divisions, the 4th Army at Písek with two tank divisions and two motor rifle divisions. In the Eastern Military District, there were two tank divisions, the 13th and 14th, with a supervisory headquarters at Trenčín in the Slovak part of the country.[19]

During the Cold War, the ČSLA was equipped primarily with Soviet arms, although certain arms like the OT-64 SKOT armored personnel carrier, the L-29 Delfín and L-39 Albatros aircraft, the P-27 Pancéřovka antitank rocket launcher, the vz. 58 assault rifle or the Uk vz. 59 machine gun were of Czechoslovak design.

After the fall of communism during the Velvet Revolution in 1989, the Czechoslovak People's Army was renamed back to the Czechoslovak Army and was completely transformed as well.

After 1992 (dissolution of Czechoslovakia)

The Army of the Czech Republic was formed after the Czechoslovak Armed Forces split after the 31 December 1992 peaceful dissolution of Czechoslovakia. Czech forces stood at 90,000 in 1993. They were reduced to around 65,000 in 11 combat brigades and the Air Force in 1997, to 63,601 in 1999,[20] and to 35,000 in 2005. At the same time, the forces were modernized and reoriented towards a defensive posture. In 2004, the army transformed itself into a fully professional organization and compulsory military service was abolished. The Army maintains an active reserve.

The Czech Republic is a member of the United Nations and the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe. In March 1999, the Czech Republic joined NATO. Since 1990, the ACR and the Czech Armed Forces have contributed to numerous peacekeeping and humanitarian operations, including IFOR, SFOR, and EUFOR Althea in Bosnia, Desert Shield/Desert Storm, Afghanistan, Kosovo, Albania, Turkey, Pakistan and with the Coalition forces in Iraq.

Current deployments (2019):

NATO Operation (NATO Enhanced Forward Presence) - 230 soldiers

NATO Operation (NATO Enhanced Forward Presence) - 60 soldiers

NATO Operation (Resolute Support Mission) - 390 soldiers

NATO Operation (KFOR) - 9 soldiers

EU military training mission (EUTM Mali) - 120 soldiers

UN peacekeeping mission (MINUSMA) - 5 soldiers

EU Operation Atalanta (NAVFOR) - 3 soldiers

International peacekeeping force (MFO) - 18 soldiers

Military intervention against the Islamic State (OIR) - 31 soldiers (air advisory team), 12 soldiers (chemical unit)

EU military operation (EU Navfor Med) - 5 soldiers

Military deployment to oversee the military implementation of the Dayton Agreement (European Union Force Althea) - 2 soldiers

UN peacekeeping mission (UNDOF) - 3 soldiers

UN peacekeeping mission (MONUC) - 2 military observers

UN peacekeeping mission (MINUSMA) - 2 military observers

UN peacekeeping mission (UNMIK) - 2 military observers

UN peacekeeping mission (MINUSCA) - 3 military observers

Structure

Many of the duties of the President of the Czech Republic can be said to be ceremonial to one degree or another, especially since the President has relatively few powers independent of the will of the Prime Minister. One of those is the status as commander in chief of the military; no part of these duties can take place but through the assent of the Prime Minister. In matters of war, he is in every sense merely a figurehead, since the Constitution gives all substantive constitutional authority over the use of the armed forces to the Parliament.[21] [22] In fact, the only specific thing the constitution allows the President to do with respect to the military is to appoint its generalsbut even this must be done with the signature of the Prime Minister.[23] Structure of the Czech Armed Forces consists of two main parts and other commands:[24]

Active reserves

Active Reserve (in Czech Aktivní záloha) is a part of the otherwise professional Army of the Czech Republic. This service was created to allow the participation of citizens with a positive attitude to the military.

A volunteer needs either to have completed the compulsory military service (which ended in 2004) or to attend 6 week training. Then the reservists have to serve up to three weeks a year and can be called up to serve two weeks during a non-military crisis. They are not intended to serve abroad, but individuals may volunteer to do so. The Reserve presents itself on events like BAHNA, a military show.

Each of the active duty brigades or regiments have their own active reserve subordinate units that train with the same equipment as the professional soldiers and is part of the organisational structure usually as a 4th company in a battalion.The Territorial Command is responsible for the active reserves and have direct control of the 14 infantry companies that belong to regional military commands in each of the 13 regions and capital city Prague.

Equipment

See main article: List of military equipment of the Czech Army.

The Army of the Czech Republic, to a large extent, currently uses equipment dating back to the times of the Warsaw Pact. During the Cold War, Czechoslovakia was a major supplier of tanks, armoured personnel carriers, military trucks and trainer aircraft – the bulk of military exports went to its Comecon partners.[26] Replacement of aging or obsolete equipment, or making it at least compliant with NATO standards, is urgently required. Modernization plans include acquisition of new multi-role helicopters, transport aircraft, infantry fighting vehicles, air defence radars and missiles. If possible, the Czech Ministry of Defence selects products that are manufactured or co-produced in the Czech Republic.[27] This includes firearms of the Česká zbrojovka Uherský Brod, namely the CZ 75 pistol, CZ Scorpion Evo 3 submachine gun, and CZ 805 BREN and BREN 2 assault rifles. Moreover, the Czech Army is equipped with about 3,000 T810 and T815 vehicles of various modifications produced by the Czech Tatra Trucks company.[28] Tatra Defence Vehicle factory ensures licensed production of Pandur II and Titus armoured vehicles. Aircraft such as the Aero L-39 Albatros, Aero L-159 Alca and Let L-410 Turbolet have been produced domestically as well.

At the beginning of 2019, the Czech Ministry of Defence announced its modernization program, consisting of acquiring 210 new modern IFVs as a replacement for the aging BVP-2. MoD approached four manufacturers: BAE Systems (CV90), GDELS (ASCOD), Rheinmetall (Lynx) and PSM (Puma). The cost of the program is expected to exceed 50 billion CZK.[29]

In May 2022 the Czech Ministry of Defence announced it will get 15 Leopards 2A4 from Germany as an exchange for Czech tanks that will be given to Ukraine to help defend against Russian invasion and will purchase up to 50 modern 2A7+ variants later.[30] [31]

Uniforms

Different types of Czech Army uniforms:

Commanding officers

Current and historic military ranks

See main article: Ranks of the Czechoslovak Armed Forces and Czech military ranks.

See also

References

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: 2006. Česká republika a její profesionální armáda. Jaroslav Roušar. https://web.archive.org/web/20061103004133/http://www.army.cz/images/id_7001_8000/7420/crapa-cz.pdf . 2006-11-03 . live. 80-7278-312-2. Ministry of Defence of the Czech Republic.
  2. Web site: Vývoj skutečných počtů osob v resortu MO ČR v letech 1992 - 2022 | Ministerstvo obrany .
  3. https://mise.army.cz/assets/informacni-servis/mandat/usneseni-poslanecke-snemovny-c--349-k-nasazeni-sap-acr-2023-2024.pdf Usneseni poslanecke snemovn
  4. Web site: Jasně o rozpočtu: Podívejte se, na co půjde v roce 2024 v resortu obrany nejvíc peněz. 3 November 2023.
  5. Web site: Poslanci v prvním čtení schválili státní rozpočet pro rok 2024. 27 September 2023.
  6. Book: The Czech Armed Forces Development Concept 2030 . 2020 . Ministry of Defence of the Czech Republic – MHI Prague . Prague . 978-80-7278-803-3 . 7 . 1 . 23 March 2024.
  7. Web site: Armed Forces » Professional Army. Ministry of Defence & Armed Forces of the Czech Republic. Ministry of Defence. 25 May 2016.
  8. Web site: Organisational Structure of the General Staff of ACR. Ministry of Defence & Armed Forces of the Czech Republic. Ministry of Defence. 10 January 2018.
  9. Web site: Polovina českých tanků stojí "na špalcích", varuje vojenský analytik . 4 June 2022 .
  10. Web site: Typy kurzů základní přípravy | Velitelství výcviku - Vojenská akademie .
  11. Web site: Ozbrojení civilisté a budoucí bezpečnostní krize .
  12. Web site: Na obranu půjdou ze zákona dvě procenta HDP, normu podepsal Pavel - Novinky . 7 June 2023 .
  13. Book: Gawdiak. Ihor. Czechoslovakia: a country study. 1989. Federal Research Division, Library of Congress. 218–219. 3rd.
  14. Book: Matuška. Matěj. Syka. Jan. Husitský válečník: Kdo byli boží bojovníci.... 2015. Grada Publishing. 978-80-247-5156-6. 162.
  15. PRECLÍK, Vratislav. Masaryk a legie (Masaryk and legions), váz. kniha, 219 pages, first issue - vydalo nakladatelství Paris Karviná, Žižkova 2379 (734 01 Karviná, CZ) ve spolupráci s Masarykovým demokratickým hnutím (Masaryk Democratic Movement, Prague), 2019,, pp.17 - 25, 33 - 45, 70 – 96, 100- 140, 159 – 184, 187 - 199
  16. Book: Burian. Michal. Rýc. Jiří. 2007. Historie spojovacího vojska. History of [Czechoslovak] Signal Corps. cs. Prague. Ministerstvo obrany – Agentura vojenských informací a služeb. 978-80-7278-414-1. 148.
  17. For more information on the Czechoslovak Army during the Cold War, see Gordon L. Rottman, Warsaw Pact Ground Forces, Osprey Publishing, 1987
  18. Library of Congress Country Study: Czechoslovakia, Ground Forces, 1987
  19. Orbat.com, Warsaw Pact Order of Battle 1989, accessed 2 June 2010
  20. Web site: Starting points for professionalization of the armed forces. cs. 2000. 2008-06-27.
  21. Constitution of the Czech Republic, Art. 43
  22. Constitution of the Czech Republic, Art. 39
  23. Constitution of the Czech Republic, Art. 63
  24. Web site: New management and command structure of Armed Forces of the Czech Republic as of 1 July 2013. www.army.cz. Ministerstvo obrany. 6 July 2013.
  25. Web site: Cyber Forces Command . army.cz . 22 February 2023.
  26. Book: Kiss. Yudit. The Defence Industry in East-Central Europe: Restructuring and Conversion. 1997. Oxford University Press. New York. 978-0-19-829280-7. 15.
  27. Web site: Sabak. Juliusz. Czech Republic Doubles Its Defence Expenditure. "Modernization, More Troops, New Units". Defence24. 29 January 2016 . 29 December 2017.
  28. Web site: Casey. Nuala. Holeček. Oldřich. Minister of Defence receives shipment of Tatra trucks. Ministry of Defence. Ministerstvo obrany. 29 December 2017.
  29. Web site: Ministerstvo obrany podepsalo s VOP CZ memorandum o spolupráci v projektu největší armádní zakázky v . armadninoviny.cz . 1 February 2019 . cs.
  30. Web site: Česko dostane od Německa 15 starších tanků Leopard, dalších až 50 nových si koupí - Novinky.cz . 2022-05-18 . www.novinky.cz. 18 May 2022 .
  31. News: Leopard 2 Ringtausch mit Tschechien Deutschland stellt 15 Panzer zur Verfuegung. 2022-05-18. Die Welt. 18 May 2022 .
  32. Web site: Chief of the General Staff of the Czech Armed Forces Ministry of Defence & Armed Forces of the Czech Republic . 2022-08-31 . www.army.cz.
  33. Web site: První zástupce náčelníka Generálního štábu Armáda ČR . 2022-08-31 . acr.army.cz.
  34. Web site: Zástupce náčelníka Generálního štábu - náčelník štábu Armáda ČR . 2022-08-31 . acr.army.cz.
  35. Web site: Zástupce náčelníka Generálního štábu - inspektor AČR Armáda ČR . 2022-08-31 . acr.army.cz . 2019-02-28 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190228112416/http://www.acr.army.cz/struktura/generalni/ngs/zastupce-ngs--58176/ . dead .