GOC Army Headquarters
This article needs additional citations for verification. (February 2013) |
General Officer Commanding Army Headquarters | |
---|---|
Founded | 1998 |
Country | Israel |
Allegiance | Israel Defense Forces |
Branch | Israeli Ground Forces |
Size | 126,000 active[1] 400,000 reserve[1] |
Nickname(s) | Mazi |
Engagements | South Lebanon conflict (1985–2000) First Intifada (1987–1993) Second Intifada (2000–2005) Second Lebanon War (2006) Operation Cast Lead (2008–2009) Pillar of Defense (2012) Protective Edge (2014) |
Commanders | |
Major General | Tamir Yadai[2] |
The GOC Army Headquarters (Hebrew: מפקדת זרוע היבשה, Mifkedet Zro'a HaYabasha, abbreviated Mazi), is a multi-corps command headquarters of the Ground Forces of the Israel Defense Forces. The current size of the Israeli Ground Forces is estimated at 126,000 active soldiers and 400,000 soldiers in reserve.[1]
Name
The GOC Army Headquarters is known unofficially as Mazi, the Hebrew pronunciation for an acronym for "Ground Arm Command" (מז"י, (מפקדת זרוע היבשה, Mifkedet Zro'a ha-Yabasha), which was the GOC Army Headquarters' previous name before being renamed to the current "Ground Arm" (זרוע היבשה). After this renaming, the acronym MAZI officially refers nowadays to "Commander of the Ground Arm" (מפקד זרוע היבשה, Mefaked Zro'a Ha-Yabasha). However the old acronym MAZI still remains the popular name for the GOC Army Headquarters.
Units and structure
The Headquarters of the Ground Forces commands the following five corps:
- Maneuvering Corps (Established in 2020) :
- Infantry Corps (חיל הרגלים)
- Armor Corps (חיל השריון)
- Combat Engineering Corps (חיל ההנדסה הקרבית)
- 99th "HaBazaq" Paratroopers Division (He)
- Combat support corps:
- Artillery Corps (חיל התותחנים)
- Combat Intelligence Corps (חיל האיסוף הקרבי)
In addition, the Headquarters includes four "staff divisions":
- Planning Division (Budget and Organization Planning) (חטיבת התכנון)
- "Ground" Division (Training and Doctrine) (חטיבת יבשה)
- Personnel Division (חטיבת כוח-אדם)
- Technological Division (Materiel R&D and Acquisition) (חטיבת הטכנולוגיה)
The IDF's third arm
Under the IDF 2000 reforms, MAZI was set to become the IDF's third Arm, alongside the Air and Space Force and the Navy. Until the creation of MAZI, IDF ground forces were directly subordinated to the Chief of Staff through the Regional Commands (North, South, and Central). The intention of the reform was to subordinate the ground forces to one ground commander, who is a part of the Joint Staff, by the example of the Israeli Air and Space Force and Navy; and unlike most of the other armed forces, where operational Army, Air Force, and Navy plus other auxiliary support units, are all subordinated to unified commands.
The proposed reform for the Ground Arm was rejected and the ground forces remain subordinated to the three regional commands. Likewise with combat support and rear-line corps, which are partly subordinated to the respective Directorates. In times of war, the Ground Arm Commander acts as an advisor to the IDF Chief of Staff on ground warfare.
As an IDF arm, the Ground Arm is meant to build of the ground forces' strength and working toward balance, combination, and coordination between the ground corps. It does so by instruction and training of individual units, planning and publishing the relevant doctrine, organizing the forces respectively for their missions, and R&D and acquisition of materiel. Its authority ranges up to the corps level. Above it, meaning the regional commands themselves, the authority is of the IDF Joint Staff.
Commanders
No. | Picture | Name | Took office | Left office | Time in office | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Dan Shomron (1937–2008) | AlufSeptember 1983 | January 1985 | 1 year, 4 months | – | |
2 | Amir Drori (1937–2005) | AlufJanuary 1985 | August 1986 | 1 year, 8 months | – | |
3 | Uri Sagi (born 1943) | AlufAugust 1986 | March 1991 | 4 years, 6 months | – | |
4 | Emanuel Sakel (born 1940) | AlufMarch 1991 | August 1994 | 3 years, 6 months | – | |
5 | Zeev Livne (1945–2013) | AlufAugust 1994 | June 1996 | 1 year, 9 months | [3] | |
6 | Amos Malka (born 1953) | AlufJune 1996 | July 1998 | 2 years, 1 month | – | |
7 | Moshe Soknik (born 1949) | AlufJuly 1998 | June 2001 | 1 year, 11 months | – | |
8 | Yiftah Ron-Tal (born 1956) | AlufJune 2001 | November 2005 | 5 years, 5 months | – | |
9 | Benny Gantz (born 1959) | AlufNovember 2005 | 20 December 2007 | 2 years, 1 month | – | |
10 | Avi Mizrahi (born 1957) | Aluf20 December 2007 | September 2009 | 1 year, 8 months | – | |
11 | Sami Turgeman (born 1964) | AlufSeptember 2009 | February 2013 | 3 years, 5 months | [4] | |
12 | Guy Tzur (born 1962) | AlufFebruary 2013 | August 2016 | 3 years, 6 months | – | |
13 | Kobi Barak (born 1964) | AlufAugust 2016 | May 2019 | 2 years, 9 months | – | |
14 | Yoel Strick (born 1966) | AlufMay 2019 | October 2022 | 3 years, 5 months | – | |
15 | Tamir Yadai (born 1969) | AlufOctober 2022 | Incumbent | 2 years, 1 month | – |
See also
References
- ^ a b c International Institute for Strategic Studies (25 February 2021). The Military Balance 2021. London: Routledge. p. 344. ISBN 978-1-032-01227-8.
- ^ "General Staff". Israel Defense Forces.
- ^ "Major-General Zeev Livne". presidentialholdings.com. Presidential Holdings, Inc. Retrieved 6 December 2020.
- ^ "IDF chief Ashkenazi announces new hires in General Staff - Haaretz - Israel News". www.haaretz.com. Archived from the original on 10 August 2009. Retrieved 13 January 2022.