Structure of the New Zealand Army explained

This article describes the current structure of the New Zealand Army. It includes the army's order of battle and the headquarters locations of major units.

History

From the 1880s, the structure of the army has evolved with changing defence needs and financial constraints. New Zealand deployed a division jointly with Australia at the beginning of the First World War, eventually despatching personnel to fill out a full division. Five divisions (three attenuated at home in NZ, the 1st, 4th, and 5th) were raised during the Second World War. A division was initially raised through Compulsory Military Training from 1949.

Damien Marc Fenton's A False Sense of Security? outlines parts of the army's structural evolution since the Second World War. The Army had had three military districts, Northern Military District at Auckland, Central Military District at Palmerston North, and Southern Military District at Christchurch in 1946.[1] The New Zealand Division was disestablished in 1961. In 1963, a Combat Brigade Group (1st Brigade), Combat Reserve Brigade Group (3rd Brigade), and Logistic Support Force (formed from the former 2nd Infantry Brigade Group) were established, each to be based on a district HQ.[2] On 1 September 1970, two formations, Home Command and Field Force Command, were established to administer the home base and deployable forces respectively.[3]

In 1978, Land Forces Command (New Zealand) emerged, replacing Home Command and Field Force Command, and the two operational brigades at the time, 1 and 3 Brigades, were disbanded and replaced by Task Force Regions, at Papakura, Palmerston North, and Christchurch.[4] Still later on after the 1983 Defence Review Land Forces Command was split into Land Force Command at Takapuna and Support Command at Palmerston North. Support Command later moved to Trentham.

A skeleton listing of New Zealand Army units, grouped under Land Force Command and Support Command and seemingly circa 1984, can be seen at Desmond Ball's The Anzac Connection.[5] Land Force Command included two Task Force headquarters at Papakura and Christchurch; 16th Field Regiment, Royal New Zealand Artillery at Papakura; 3rd Field Regiment Royal New Zealand Artillery at Burnham, a Territorial Force unit; a Territorial Force medium battery at Hamilton with BL 5.5-inch medium guns; an artillery locating troop at Waiouru; two squadrons with Scorpion Combat Vehicle Reconnaissance (Tracked) vehicles at Waiouru and Hamilton; an APC squadron (both RF and TF) at Burnham; a TF anti-armour squadron in Dunedin; two field engineer squadrons; four signals squadrons; the Special Air Service Group; and eight infantry battalions of the Royal New Zealand Infantry Regiment, the 1st Battalion, a regular unit at Dieppe Barracks, Sembawang, Singapore; the 2/1 Battalion, a regular unit at Burnham Camp; and six territorial battalions, four in the North Island and two in the South Island. There were also a number of Royal New Zealand Corps of Transport (a total of three regiments, split between Land Force Command and Support Command),[6] a terminal squadron, two field ambulances, a field hospital, two supply companies, and workshops units, a Mobile Dental Unit, and an intelligence centre at Papakura.

Units assigned to 1 Task Force Region in Auckland circa 1982 appear to have included 16 Field Regiment; 3 and 6 Battalions RNZIR; 4 Medium Battery in Hamilton; 1 Transport Regiment; 1 Signal Squadron; 1 Field Workshops; 1 Field Ambulance; 1 TFR Light Aid Detachment RNZEME (vehicle mechanics); 1 Mobile Dental Unit; 1 Field Hospital; 1 Support Company; 1 MP Platoon; the TFR HQ Company; the Auckland University Medical Corps, and the Papakura and Ngaruawahia camp headquarters.[7]

Support Command and Army Training Group had a large number of other units and corps schools.

The two commands were joined once again at Trentham as Land Command after 1998, which in 2001 was amalgamated with the other services' operational headquarters to form Headquarters Joint Forces New Zealand.

Order of battle 2022

According to a structure chart published on the New Zealand Army's website the Army's order of battle is as follows:[8]

The 1st Brigade was formed on 13 December 2011 by amalgamating the units of the 2nd Land Force Group and 3rd Land Force Group.[9] It is effectively a 'shopping basket' of units which can be raised in readiness preparatory to an operational deployment, and does not have any operational deployment role.

Headquarters Deployable Joint Task Force-Land (HQ DJTF-L) was formed by redesignating the headquarters of the 3rd Land Force Group in late 2011.[10] It was expected that the headquarters would move to Linton Military Camp in the Manawatū after December 2012. As of 1 January 2013, it was announced that the headquarters was to be redesignated HQ Deployable Joint Interagency Task Force (DJIATF) and be moved under the command of Headquarters Joint Forces New Zealand.[11] In late 2014 Colonel John Howard handed over command to Colonel Glenn King; by August 2018 Navy Captain Garin Golding was in command, though promised the command of the new .[12]

The Special Operations Component Command contains Army units, but is responsive to Commander Joint Forces New Zealand and the Chief of Defence Force.

Commander Joint Forces New Zealand

Land Component Command

1st (New Zealand) Brigade
Training and Doctrine Command
Joint Support Group
Regional Support (Army)

Special Operations Component Command

In addition, Logistics Command (Land), which is headquartered at Trentham Military Camp, reports to the Defence Logistics Command. Logistics Command (Land)'s sub units are the Wellington Regional Support Centre (located at Trentham Military Camp) and the Southern Regional Support Centre (located at Burnham Military Camp).

References

Citations

External links

Notes and References

  1. Fenton, 1998, 12.
  2. Fenton, 1998, 113-117.
  3. http://www.archway.archives.govt.nz/ViewEntity.do?code=BAIO, and Fenton, 1998, 154-5.
  4. Fenton, 1998, 165.
  5. Book: Desmond Ball. Desmond Ball. The Anzac Connection. Sydney . Allen & Unwin. 1985. 086861503X. 155–157.
  6. Book: Julia Millen. Salute to Service: A History of the Royal New Zealand Corps of Transport and Its Predecessors, 1860-1996. Victoria University Press. 1997. 440.
  7. Annex G to 1 TFR 1370 dated 27 July 1982, on file, General Administration, Organisation and Management - Command Reports - 1 TFR, 1982 - 1982, National Archives, Wellington.
  8. Web site: Our structure . New Zealand Army . 22 September 2022.
  9. Web site: Army Plan Takes Shape. Media releases. New Zealand Army. 18 June 2012.
  10. http://www.nzdf.mil.nz/media-centre/news/2011/20111215-coawtoc.htm, December 15, 2011.
  11. http://www.army.mil.nz/downloads/pdf/public-docs/2012/2102-new-zealand-army-order-of-battle.pdf New Zealand Army Order of Battle
  12. https://www.maritime-executive.com/article/keel-laid-for-new-zealand-navy-s-aotearoa, 15 August 2018; Nov 2016 - Feb 2019.
  13. News: Lawrence. Kirsty. Whiskey Coy Bounces Back. 22 February 2022. Army News. February 2022. 12–13.
  14. News: Broadley. Jon. Territorials Become More Joined Up. 14 December 2012. Army News. December 2012. 8–9.
  15. Web site: New Zealand's Special Operations Forces Command and Control Diagram. New Zealand Defence Force. 6 June 2015. 7 July 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150707191218/http://nzdf.mil.nz/about-us/nzsof/nzsof-command-and-control.htm. dead.