Algerian Land Forces

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Algerian Land Forces
القوات البرية الجزائرية (
Armée de Libération Nationale)
Country Algeria
BranchArmy
RoleLand warfare
Size110,000[1]
Part ofAlgerian People's National Army
HeadquartersAlgiers
WebsiteOfficial website
Commanders
Chief of StaffSaïd Chengriha
Commander, Land ForcesMajor General Ammar Atamnia

The Algerian Land Forces (

Arabic: القوات البرية الجزائرية, lit.'Algerian Land Forces', French: Forces Terrestres Algériennes) are the land forces of the Algerian People's National Army. The forces' equipment is mostly supplied by Russia and China
.

The forces include two armoured and two mechanised divisions,

IISS said in 2020 that the 38th Motorised Brigade was located at Tindouf.[5]

There have also been French reports of an airborne division formed in the early 1990s.

17th Parachute Division
, with five airborne regiments, seemingly similar to the French reporting, was listed in the IISS Military Balance for 2001-02 and 2006, but not listed in the 2007 edition. It was listed with four regiments and a special forces regiment in the 2017 edition (p. 368).

Creation and development

Humveess

After the end of the liberation war in June 1962, the first objective was to establish a logistics organization to meet the needs of the army - a structure to feed, clothe, care for and train. The directorates of Stewardship, Hardware, Engineering and Health, Transport and Supply were the first to emerge. These directorates, which came quickly join those of the staff of the Air Force, Navy and Education, at the Ministry, would form the backbone of the National People's Army. The bases of the general structure of the army were consolidated with the creation of the main directions, the establishment of an effective organization, the opening of schools and instruction centers and sending abroad trainees for different weapons and services.

Efforts to develop and modernize the ANP continued throughout the 1970s and 80s, at the organizational level with the formation of battalions and brigades. During the eighties, the army experienced considerable growth. Thus, in 1986, a restructuring began, based primarily on the implementation of large units combining firepower and gradual movement, i.e. combat divisions, equipped with sophisticated weapons systems and other equipment necessary for the use and maintenance of these systems. This modernization was not just about the hardware, but included all organizational areas and combat. Thus was created the General Inspection of the PNA.

The Algerian military provided young men, from disadvantaged backgrounds, the opportunity to move up in society. This opportunity played a strong role in southeast Algeria, the Aures and Nemencha mountains, where the Shawiyya Berbers lived.[7]

Military regions

Algerian military regions

Algeria is divided into seven numbered military regions, each with headquarters located in a principal city or town. This system of territorial organization, adopted shortly after independence, grew out of the wartime wilaya structure and the postwar necessity of subduing antigovernment insurgencies that were based in the various regions. Regional commanders control and administer bases, logistics, and housing, as well as conscript training. Commanders of army divisions and brigades, air force installations, and naval forces report directly to the Ministry of National Defense and service chiefs of staff on operational matters.[8]

During the 1980s, most of the army's combat units were concentrated in the 2nd Military Region (Oran) and to a lesser extent in the 3rd Military Region (Béchar).[9] Chadli Bendjedid became head of the 2nd Military Region in 1964. Adjacent to Morocco, the 3rd Military Region straddles the main access routes from that country. It is also near the troubled Western Sahara, embracing territory previously claimed by Morocco. Much of the internal disorder and violence associated with economic distress and the Islamist movement has occurred in the 1st Military Region (Blida), which includes the capital of Algiers, and the 5th Military Region (Constantine). Army units have been strengthened in and near the cities where attacks against the government and security forces have occurred. Although regional commanders were originally all colonels, the commanders of the 1st Military Region (Mohamed Djenouhat) and the 5th Military Region (Abdelhamid Djouadi) were both promoted to major general in 1992. The two southeastern regions — the 4th Military Region (Ouargla) and 6th Military Region (Tamanrasset) — were sparsely populated tracts of desert where a limited number of combat troops carried out patrols and occupied small outposts. The Ouargla region assumed a measure of strategic importance after relations with Libya soured, but the military's main activities there and in the 6th Military Region are the construction and planting projects undertaken by conscript forces. The 6th Military Region was created in 1975 to cover the south.[10]

On February 24, 2000, there was a large changeover of military region commanders: four of the six were changed. From this reshuffling, the previous French Army officers took power in the Algerian Armed Forces and the shift in power correlated with the change of a national service and a shift to greater professionalisation of the ANP.

President Bouteflika, as Minister of Defence, nominated new commanders for military regions in August 2004.[11] In 2010 there were a further series of changes. Bouteflika changed the commanders of three military regions, according to the presidential decrees published Wednesday 25 August in the Algerian Journal officiel (Official Journal [fr]). Général Mohand-Ameziane Si-Mohand was nominated to head the 3rd Military Region, Général Hassen Alaimia took command of the 4th Military Region and the 5th Military Region (Algeria) was placed under the command of Général Saïd Ziad.[12] These nominations took effect from 1 August, according to the same decrees. President Bouteflika also named new military region deputy commanders.

In 2013, a 7th Military Region was formed at Illizi in the south.[13] In 2016-17 Laurent Touchard said the land forces were 147,000 strong, with the Republican Guard (brigade, of nine regiments, two ceremonial); the 9th Commando Group; the 25th Special Forces Regiment; the 17th Parachute Division; two armoured divisions (1st, 8th); an armoured brigade, two mechanised infantry divisions, three mechanised and two motorised brigades, some 20ish independent infantry battalions, two artillery, seven anti-aircraft, and four engineer battalions (Touchard 2017, 17-18). Touchard lists three Military Police battalions including the 90eme Bataillon de police militaire (seemingly located at Béni Messous, in the suburbs of Algiers) and the 95eme Bataillon de police militaire (Constantine), but other sources give up to ten, with at least one per military region.

Equipment

The inventory of the Algerian Land Forces mainly includes equipment from the Soviet Union and its successor, Russia, and to a lower degree from China.

Ranks

Commissioned officer ranks

The rank insignia of

commissioned officers
.

Rank group General / flag officers Senior officers Junior officers Officer cadet
 Algerian Land Forces[14]
فريق أول‎‎
Farīq 'awwal
فريق
Farīq
لواء
Liwāʾ
عميد
'Amīd
عقيد
'Aqīd
مقدم
Muqaddam
رائد
Rā'id
نقيب
Naqīb
ملازم أول
Mulāzim 'awwal
ملازم
Mulāzim
Général d'armée Général de corps d'armée Général de division
Général
Colonel
Lieutenant-colonel
Commandant Capitaine Lieutenant Sous-lieutenant

Other ranks

The rank insignia of non-commissioned officers and enlisted personnel.

Rank group Senior NCOs Junior NCOs Enlisted
 Algerian Land Forces[14]
No insignia
مساعد أول
Mosa'id awwal
مساعد
Mosa'id
رقيب أول
Raqib awwal
رقيب
Raqib
عريف أول
Earif 'awal
عريف
Earif
جندي
Jundiun
Adjudant-chef
Adjudant
Sergent-chef Sergent Caporal-chef Caporal Djoundi

See also

References

  1. .
  2. IISS
    Military Balance 2020, p.340, down from two armoured and three mechanised divisions reported by IISS MB 2007
  3. ^ Le Soir Algerie, Voyage au cœur de la 8e Division blindée Archived 2015-10-03 at the Wayback Machine, 1997; also IISS Military Balance 2020, p.337
  4. Bechar
    .
  5. ^ IISS Military Balance 2020, p.337
  6. ^ Centre Francais de recherche sur la reseignement, Bulletin de documentation 5 Archived 2015-01-11 at the Wayback Machine, accessed January 2014.
  7. ^ Roberts, Hugh (2003). The Battlefield Algeria, 1988-2002: Studies in a Broken Polity. London: Verso. pp. 273–274.
  8. ^ Library of Congress Country Study, Algeria (PDF). 1993. pp. 258–260. Retrieved March 31, 2019.
  9. ^ U.S. Embassy, Algiers (December 2, 1974). "New Commander of Third Military District (1974ALGIER02666)" – via WikiLeaks.
  10. ^ "L'Algérie est-elle en situation de guerre ? | Analyse" [Is Algeria in a state of war?] (in French). Lematindz.net. Retrieved 2018-01-27.
  11. ^ Bonn International Centre for Conversion; https://carnegieendowment.org/files/cmec7_tlemcani_algeria_final.pdf, p.13
  12. ^ Vaste mouvement dans les structures des Régions Militaires Archived 2015-01-06 at the Wayback Machine, 26 August 2010
  13. ^ "L'Expression - Le Quotidien - L'Algérie prévoit une 7e Région militaire" [Algeria plans a 7th Military Region] (in French). Lexpressiondz.com. Archived from the original on 2018-01-29. Retrieved 2018-01-27.
  14. ^ a b "Ranks". mdn.dz. Ministry of National Defence (Algeria). Retrieved 30 May 2021.

Bibliography