Commissariat de l'armée de terre
The Commissariat de l'armée de terre is the commissariat branch of the French Army. Its equivalent for the French Navy is the Commissariat de la Marine and for the French Air Force the Service de l'administration générale et des finances de l'armée de l'air - a member of any of these three is known as a commissaire aux armées. It now carries out the general administration and finances of France's land forces. It is led by commissaires or commissioners, officers recruited by competition among university graduates.
It has existed since at least the 14th century when King John II created posts for commissioners to prepare for war. Its direct predecessor was the corps des inspecteurs aux revues et des commissaires des Guerres or intendance militaire set up by an ordinance of Louis XVIII on 29 July 1817.
It was renamed the Commissariat de l'armée de terre in 1984 and existed under that name as the Direction centrale for the army until 1 January 2010. At that date, with the other two branches' commissariats, it was put under the Direction centrale du service du commissariat des armées.
Organisation
There was formerly a central management of the office of the Army, based in Rambouillet, headed by a Commissioner Major General.It was incorporated into the commissariat of the armed forces, which also included regional offices, one in each region de terre and the central or decentralized. Without exception, each regiment or administrative training unit of the Army, in its administrative and financial management, has a Commissioner . These functions have since 2009 gradually devolved to the directorates administrative and support rights of the GSBdD will be generalized, numbering 51, from 1 January 2011.There are five decentralized regional directorates:
- The regional office of the Commissariat de l'armée de terre in Northwest Region