Geographic and Functional.
Geographic and Functional.
Functional combatant commands are military organizations that focus on specific functional areas, such as transportation or cyber operations, rather than geographic regions. They are responsible for providing command and control of specific military capabilities and resources to support global operations as directed by the unified combatant commands. Examples include U.S. Strategic Command and U.S. Special Operations Command.
Joint commands are structured to integrate forces from multiple branches of the military, such as the Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marines, under a unified command authority. These commands are typically organized into two main types: geographic commands, which oversee operations in specific regions, and functional commands, which focus on specific areas of expertise like special operations or logistics. Each joint command is led by a commander, usually a senior officer from one of the service branches, who is responsible for joint operations and coordination among the different services. This structure facilitates cohesive planning and execution of military operations across diverse and complex scenarios.
Eggs and sperm
Two types of divergent plates are Eurasian and Nazca
military departments
Combatant commands is about survival. National objectives means nothing without survival.
Functional Combatant Commands
U.S. European Command
Secretary of defense and the president
STRATCOM
Geographic and Functional.
Functional combatant commands are military organizations that focus on specific functional areas, such as transportation or cyber operations, rather than geographic regions. They are responsible for providing command and control of specific military capabilities and resources to support global operations as directed by the unified combatant commands. Examples include U.S. Strategic Command and U.S. Special Operations Command.
Who is responsible for organizing training and equipping forces for assignment to unified combatant command
SOCOM
The ten commands are divided into two , one for god and one for men.
U.S. European Command (Germany) and U.S. Africa Command (Germany)