For organisation of the executive offices, see
Senior posts below. The EEAS manages general foreign relations, security and defence policies and controls the
Situation Centre (see intelligence below). However, although the
HR and the EEAS can prepare initiatives, member states make the final policy decisions and the commission also plays a part in technical implementation. The HR must report to the
European Parliament. The EEAS would have desks dedicated to all the countries and regional organisations in the world, and specialised units for democracy, human rights and defence. The EEAS has six geographical departments headed by a managing director. The departments divide the world into: 1) Africa, 2) Asia, 3) Americas, 4) the Middle East and Southern Neighbourhood, 5) Russia, the Eastern Neighbourhood and the Western Balkans and 6) Global and Multilateral Affairs. Geographic desks are not duplicated in the commission. The EEAS also includes departments for security, strategic policy planning, legal affairs, inter-institutional relations, information and public diplomacy, internal audit and inspections, and personal data protection. the Policy Unit (Council), Directorate-General E (Council), Officials of the General Secretariat of the council on secondment to
European Union Special Representatives and
ESDP missions Directorate-General for External Relations (Commission), External Service (CommissionDelegations),
Directorate-General for Development (Commission).
Staff Staff is drawn from the Commission and Council and from the
member states' diplomatic services, seconded temporarily. The
HR appoints his or her own staff directly. On 1 January 2011 the first staff were permanently transferred to the EEAS: 585 from the Commissions External Relations DG (which ceased to exist), 93 from the Commissions Development DG (the remainder of which merged into Development Cooperation DG), 436 from the Commission delegations and 411 from the Council of the European Union. These joined with 118 new posts to create a staff of 1,643 on the day of transfer.
Senior posts The day-to-day administration of the EEAS is handled by an Executive Secretary-General. On 28 July 2015 it was announced that as from mid-September 2015, the Secretary General will be assisted by a third Deputy Secretary-General, in charge of Economic and Global Issues. However under the final agreed plans the HR would be deputised by a relevant
European Commissioner or the foreign minister holding the rotating council presidency. ==Delegations==