Allied Command Atlantic 1952 to 2003 Allied Command Transformation was preceded by Allied Command Atlantic (ACLANT) established in 1952 under the overall command of
Supreme Allied Commander Atlantic (SACLANT), with its headquarters at
Norfolk, Virginia. ACLANT's purpose was to guard the
sea lines of communication between North America and Europe in order to reinforce the European countries of NATO with U.S. troops and supplies in the event of a Soviet/
Warsaw Pact invasion of Western Europe. Following the end of the
Cold War, the Command was reduced, with many of its subordinate headquarters spread across the Atlantic area losing their NATO status and funding. However, the basic structure remained in place until the Prague Summit in the
Czech Republic in 2002. This led to ACLANT being decommissioned effective 19 June 2003, and a new Allied Command Transformation being established as its successor. Admiral
Edmund P. Giambastiani Jr. US Navy became the last SACLANT on 2 October 2002. He served as ACLANT commander until 19 Jun 2003. He then served as Supreme Allied Commander, Transformation, until 1 Aug 2005. Admiral Sir
Mark Stanhope RN, the Deputy Supreme Allied Commander, then served as Acting Supreme Allied Commander until the arrival of General
Lance L. Smith USAF in November 2005.
After the Cold War At the 2002 Prague Summit, it was decided that
NATO should change its military structures and concepts, and acquire new types of equipment to face the operational challenges of coalition warfare against the threats of the new century. Thus NATO's military command structure was reorganized. One strategic command, Allied Command Transformation, was focused on transforming NATO, while the other strategic command focused on NATO's operations,
Allied Command Operations. Initial reports about a NATO transformation command began to appear in July 2002. ACT was formally established on June 19, 2003. A suite of "Baseline for Rapid Iterative Transformational Experimentation" (BRITE) software was designed in response to the Maritime Situational Awareness request. This request, a product of a U.S. international and inter-agency initiatives termed "
Maritime Domain Awareness", serves to counter threats to the maritime commons including terrorism, human/drug smuggling, piracy, and espionage. Since Allied Command Atlantic became Allied Command Transformation, commanders have included non-naval officers. Gen.
Lance L. Smith USAF commanded ACT from 10 Nov 2005 until 9 Nov 2007. He was succeeded by Gen.
James N. Mattis USMC, who served from 9 Nov 2007 - 08 Sep 2009. A significant change was the assumption of command by a
French officer, after France rejoined the NATO Command Structure in mid-2009. General
Stéphane Abrial, former chief of the
French Air Force assumed command in 2009. French Air Force General
Jean-Paul Paloméros replaced Abrial at the end of September 2012. On 30 September 2015 French Air Force General
Denis Mercier succeeded General Paloméros, in September 2018 General
André Lanata succeeded General Mercier, and in 2021 General
Philippe Lavigne succeeded General Lanata. The Deputy
Supreme Allied Commander Transformation position is filled by General Chris Badia of the German Air Force. He succeeded General Paolo Ruggiero, Italian Army, who succeeded Admiral Manfred Nielson, German Navy, who succeeded General Mirco Zuliani of the Italian Air Force,
General Mieczysław Bieniek of the
Polish Land Forces, Admiral
Luciano Zappata (
Italian Navy) and Admiral Stanhope. For several years, in a carryover from SACLANT, the Deputy's position was filled by a
Royal Navy admiral. Stanhope's succession by Zappata meant an end to this practice.
Responsibilities Allied Command Transformation's current mission is to: • provide the conceptual framework for the conduct of future combined joint operations; • define how future operations will be conducted and what capabilities they will need; • take new operational concepts, from others or self-generated, assess their viability and value, and bring them to maturity through doctrine development, scientific research, experimentation and technological development; • implement both by persuading nations, individually and collectively, to acquire the capability, and provide the education and training, enabling concepts to be implemented by NATO forces. A large number of conferences and seminars have been organised by the command in fulfilment of its conceptual development mission. These have included CD&E, a national Chiefs of Transformation conference, an examination of the Global Commons,
Law of Armed Conflict, and a Multiple Futures project. == Structure ==