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Encyclopedia > Structure of the Argentine Army
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Argentine Army
"Nació con la Patria en Mayo de 1810" (Born with the Motherland in May 1810)"
"Nació con la Patria en Mayo de 1810" (Born with the Motherland in May 1810)"

Components
Argentine Army
List of current regiments
Structure of the Argentine Army
History
History of the Argentine Army
Timeline of the Argentine Army
Personnel
List of senior officers
Officer rank insignia
Warrant officer rank insignia
Enlisted rank insignia

Army forces are distributed throughout the country and are geographically grouped into three Army Corps (roughly equivalent in terms of nominal organization to an U.S. Army division). Each Army Corps has an area of responsibility over a determined region of the country; Second Army Corps covers the northeast of the country, Third Army Corps covers the center and northwest of Argentina and Fifth Army Corps covers the south and Patagonia. Both First and Fourth Army Corps were dissolved in 1984 and 1991 respectively, as part of the country's military reorganization; their dependent units were reassigned to the remaining three Army Corps. The Argentine Army (Spanish Ejército Argentino) is the land armed force branch of the Argentine military and the senior military service of the country. ... Image File history File links Downloaded from Argentine Army website http://www. ... The Argentine Army (Spanish Ejército Argentino) is the land armed force branch of the Argentine military and the senior military service of the country. ... The following is a list of Argentine Army regiments and other elements, organized by corps and brigades to which they are attached. ... Commanders-in-Chief of the Army Lieutenant General Juan Carlos Onganía (1962-1965) Lieutenant General Pascual Pistarini (1965-1966) Lieutenant General Julio Alsogaray (1966-1968) Lieutenant General Alejandro Agustín Lanusse (1968-1973) General Commanders of the Army Lieutenant General Leandro Anaya (1973-1975) Lieutenant General Arturo Numa Laplane... Jump to: navigation, search The following table displays the rank insignia worn by officers of the Argentine Army. ... Patagonia is that portion of South America which, to the east of the Andes, lies south of the Neuquén and Río Colorado rivers, and, to the west of the Andes, south of (42°S). ...


There are no intermediate division level units; each Army Corps is composed by a variable number of Brigades. To date (2005), the Argentine Army has ten brigades: two armored brigades (1st and 2nd), four mechanized brigades (5th, 9th, 10th and 11th), two mountain brigades (6th and 8th), one paratroopers brigade (4th) and one jungle brigade (12th). The 7th Infantry Brigade was dissolved in early 1985, while the 3rd Infantry Brigade was transformed into the 3rd Motorized Brigade (Training), and existed until late 2002, when it was finally dissolved.


Depending on its type, each brigade includes two to five Cavalry or Infantry Regiments, one or two Artillery Groups, a scout cavalry squadron, one battalion or company-sized engineer unit, one intelligence company, one communications company, one command company and a battalion-sized logistical support unit. The terms "regiment" and "group", found in the official designations of cavalry, infantry and artillery units, are used due to historical reasons, these units being more accurately described as light battalions; similar-sized units that do not belong to the above-mentioned services are referred to as "battalions". In addition to their service, Regiments and Groups are also specialized according to their area of operations (Mountain Infantry, Jungle Infantry, Mountain Cavalry), their equipment (Tank Cavalry, Light Cavalry, Mechanized Infantry) or their special training (Paratroopers, "cazadores" -elite mountain or jungle troops- or Air Assault)


Regiments are made up by three maneuver sub-units (companies in infantry regiments and squadrons in cavalry regiments) and one command and support sub-unit for a total of 250 to 400 troops. This low number of troops per unit is due to the dwindling manpower available to the Army (and the Argentine military in general) since the abolition of conscription in 1995; budgetary concerns force the Army to turn down many volunteers. The Army's future plans contemplate a reorganization of the Table of Organization and Equipment and increasing the number of active-duty troops to allow at least the combat units to be fully-manned.


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