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Norwegian Armed Forces Information

The Norwegian Armed Forces (Norwegian: Forsvaret ("The Defence")) numbers about 23,000 personnel, including civilian employees.[2] According to mobilisation plans as of 2009[update], the strength during full mobilisation would be approximately 83,000 combatant personnel.[2] Norway has mandatory military service for men (6–12 months of training) and voluntary service for women. Norway has the highest military expenditures per capita in Europe.

The Armed Forces sorts under the Norwegian Ministry of Defence. The formal Commander-in-Chief is H.M. King Harald V In reality the Commander of the armed forces (Norwegian "Forsvarssjefen") is Commander in chief.

Under Norwegian constitutional practice, the Minister of Defence is accountable to Parliament for all activities carried out by the agencies under his or her responsibility.

The Ministry of Defence (MoD) has been since 2003 an integrated structure with civilian and military personnel. Subordinate to the MoD are the "Armed Forces Military Organisation" as well as the three civilian agencies: the Norwegian Defence Research Establishment (FFI), the National Security Agency and the Defence Estate Agency.

The main annual national exercise is Cold Response, held yearly, with all NATO member states invited.

Contents

Organisation

The Chief of Defence (a four-star general or admiral) heads the armed forces, and is the principal military adviser to the Minister of Defence.

Military branches (in order of seniority):

Other main structures, include:

Structure

Joint

Norwegian Army

With August 1, 2009 the Norwegian Army changed its structure:[3][4]

Royal Norwegian Navy

Royal Norwegian Air Force

Small arms and handguns

References

  1. ^ Defence Expenditures of NATO Countries (1985-2009)
  2. ^ a b "NDF official numbers". NDF. http://www.mil.no/languages/english/start/facts/article.jhtml?articleID=32061. Retrieved 2007-07-16.
  3. ^ http://www.mil.no/multimedia/archive/00136/0560_H_R_Poster_592_136082a.pdf
  4. ^ http://www.mil.no/multimedia/archive/00136/0560_H_rbrosjyren_N_136081a.pdf
  5. ^ "Perfecting the Javelin simulator - the new anti-armor weapon is being phased in this year". Hærens Styrker. 17 March 2009. http://www.mil.no/haren/start/article.jhtml?articleID=175413. Retrieved 17 June 2009.

External links

· · Norwegian Armed Forces
Branches Army · Navy · Coast Guard · Air Force · Home Guard
Equipment Army equipment · Navy ships · Military aircraft
Organisation National Security Authority · Intelligence Service · Defence Research EstablishmentMinistry of Defence
Related NATO · Nordic Battlegroup · Scandinavian defence union
· · North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
History North Atlantic Treaty · Summit · Enlargement
Structure North Atlantic Council (Secretary General) · Chairman of the NATO Military Committee · Allied Command Operations (Supreme Allied Commander) · Allied Command Transformation
Members Albania · Belgium · Bulgaria · Canada · Croatia · Czech Republic · Denmark · Estonia · France · Germany · Greece · Hungary · Iceland · Italy · Latvia · Lithuania · Luxembourg · Netherlands · Norway · Poland · Portugal · Romania · Slovakia · Slovenia · Spain · Turkey · United Kingdom · United States
· · Military of Europe
Sovereign states

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States with limited recognition

Abkhazia · Kosovo · Nagorno-Karabakh Republic · Northern Cyprus · South Ossetia · Transnistria

Other entities European Union · Sovereign Military Order of Malta

Categories: Weapons of Norway | Military of Norway | Conscript militaries

 

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from: Wiktionary: norwegian armed forces,
Fri Mar 2 04:01:38 2012