No. Commander is a job title (e.g., Company Commander, Battalion Commander, Brigade Commander, Division Commander, Corps Commander, etc.), but not a rank. Lieutenant Commander and Commander exist as ranks only in the Navy. Lieutenant Commander is equivalent to a Major in the Army, Air Force, and Marines, and Commander is equivalent is Lieutenant Colonel in the Army, Air Force, and Marines.
The President of the United States. His ranking is commander in chief. But if I think what you're thinking of: the answers colonel for marines or general for the army. I have no clue about them navy boys. However they all still report to the commander in chief.
The Commander In Chief of the Union army during the Civil War was President Abraham Lincoln; the ranking general in the field was Ulysses S. Grant.
The army commander commanded the army. This was nominally the Pharoah. Sometimes he appointed an army commander to take to the field in his place.
No, there is no rank of commander in the Army. In the Army commander is a title, not a rank. In the Navy, there is a rank of Commander, it is the equivalent of Lt Colonel or O-5.
The highest ranking officer in the Army is the Army Chief of Staff. The current Army Chief of Staff is General Martin Dempsey.
General George Washington was commander of the Continental Army.
Commander Morgan
ChinaU.S.AGermanyUKJapanFranceRussia
The Army Chief of Staff is the highest ranking officer in the peacetime Army. The highest raning NCO is the Sergeant Major of the Army.
There were hundreds of them - remembering that Brigadiers were of General rank. General-in-Chief of the Union armies in the final year of the war was Ulysses Grant. General-in-Chief of the Confederate armies in the final weeks of the war (a newly-created post) was Robert E. Lee.
Gorge Washington was selected to be the commander in chief (the leader) of the continital army.
The commander in chief is also the commander of the army.