Federal Ministry of Defence (Germany)
The Federal Ministry of Defence is a top-level federal agency, headed by the Federal Minister of Defence as a member of the Cabinet of Germany. The ministry is headquartered at the Hardthöhe barracks itself located at the Hardthöhe district in Bonn and has a second office in the Bendlerblock building in Berlin, which is occasionally used as a metonym to denote the entire Ministry.
According to Article 65a of the German Constitution '', the Federal Minister of Defence is Commander-in-chief of the Bundeswehr, the German armed forces, with around 260,953 active soldiers and civilians. Article 115b decrees that in the state of defence, declared by the Bundestag with consent of the Bundesrat, the command in chief passes to the Chancellor. The ministry currently has approximately 2,000 employees.
Organization
On April 1, 2012, the Federal Ministry of Defence changes its organization to the following general structure:Senior Management Level
- Federal Minister of Defence
- *2 Parliamentary Secretaries of State
- *2 Secretaries of State
- subordinated to the Senior Management
- * Support Office
- * Press & Information Office
- * Politics Directorate
Directorates
- Secretary of State #1
- *Equipment Directorate
- *Cyber & IT Directorate
- Secretary of State #2
- * Financial & Controlling Directorate
- * Personnel Directorate
- * Infrastructure, Antipollution & Administrative Services Directorate
- * Legal Directorate
- Inspector General of the Bundeswehr
- *Plans & Policies Directorate
- *Strategy & Operations Directorate
- *Armed Forces Command & Control Directorate
Departments of the Federal armed forces
- Armed Forces
- *German Army
- *German Navy
- *German Air Force
- *Bundeswehr Joint Medical Service
- *Joint Support Service including the Center for Military History and Social Sciences of the Bundeswehr
- *Cyber- and Information Domain Service
- Armed Forces Administration
- *Personnel Management
- *Information Technology & In-Service Management
- *Infrastructure, Antipollution & Administrative Services
- *Judicature
- *Military Chaplaincy
Directly subordinated Offices & Agencies
- Armed Forces Operational Command
- Office for Military Aviation
- Office for Plans & Policies
- Command & Control Academy
- Center of Leadership Culture
- Military Counter-intelligence Service
History
19th century
From the Unification of Germany in 1871 until the end of World War I, the German Empire did not have a national Ministry of War. Rather, the larger German states, insisting on their autonomy, each had their own war ministry. According to the military agreements the Prussian minister-president Otto von Bismarck had forged with the South German states on the eve of the Franco-Prussian War, the major states were also responsible for the defence of the smaller states. However, the Imperial Navy from 1889 was overseen by a federal department, the Imperial Naval Office.Weimar and Nazi Germany
After the war and the German Revolution of 1918–19, the Weimar Constitution provided for a unified, national ministry of defence, which was created largely from the Prussian Ministry of War and the Imperial Naval Office. The Ministry of the Reichswehr was established in October 1919, and had its seat in the Bendlerblock building.In the context of the Treaty of Versailles and the "Law for the Creation of a provisional Reichswehr" of March 1919, the Reichspräsident became the Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces, whilst the Reich Minister of Defence exercised military authority. Only in the Free State of Prussia did military authority remain with the State Minister of War. After the Weimar Constitution came into force, the remaining war ministries in the states of Bavaria, Saxony, Württemberg and Prussia were abolished and military authority was concentrated in the Reich Minister of Defence. Command was exercised respectively by the Chief of the Heeresleitung and the Chief of the Marineleitung. In 1929 a third office was established: the Ministerial Office, whose Chief functioned as the political representative of the Minister. The role of the General Staff was filled by the Truppenamt.
The Social Democratic politician Gustav Noske became the first Minister of Defence of Germany. After the Nazi Machtergreifung, when the Reichswehr was recreated as the Wehrmacht in 1935, the ministry was renamed Reichskriegsministerium ; also, the Heeresleitung became the Oberkommando des Heeres, the Marineleitung became the Oberkommando der Marine and the Oberkommando der Luftwaffe was newly created. The Ministeramt was renamed the Wehrmachtsamt.
In 1938, following the Blomberg-Fritsch Affair, Hitler himself exercised the functions of the Reich War Minister. The Wehrmachtsamt was turned into the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht, which formally existed until the end of World War II. The High Command was not a government ministry, but a military command, however.
Post-WW2
After World War II, West Germany started with preparations for rearmament in 1950, as ordered by Chancellor Konrad Adenauer. After the outbreak of the Korean War, the United States called for a West German contribution to the defence of Western Europe. Initially Gerhard Graf von Schwerin, a former Wehrmacht General, advised the Chancellor on these issues and led the preparations, but after Count Schwerin had talked to the press about his work, he was replaced by Theodor Blank, who was appointed as "Special Representative" of the Chancellor. As the rearmament plans met with harsh opposition by a wide circle within the West German population and contradicted the occupation statute, the government office responsible for the rearmament acted secretly, unofficially known as Amt Blank. By 1955, the number of employees had surpassed 1,300. On 7 June 1955 the office became the Ministry of Defence, or Bundesministerium für Verteidigung in German. The Bundeswehr was established and Germany joined the NATO the same year. In 1956, Germany reintroduced conscription, and the German military force quickly became the largest conventional military force in Western Europe. To confirm the ministry's importance, it was renamed Bundesministerium der Verteidigung on 30 December 1961, similar to the German names of the "classic" ministries of Finance, the Interior and Justice — though the federal minister is still denoted as Bundesminister für Verteidigung in Article 65a of the German Constitution.Until 1960, the ministry had its seat in the Ermekeil barracks in Bonn. From 1960 onwards, it was moved to a new building complex at Hardthöhe.