Land Command was initially divided into eight formations, each one commanded by a
Major General, and several smaller units including the training units and training support units in Belize, Brunei, Canada (
Suffield for armoured battlegroups and
Wainwright for infantry units) and Kenya.
Divisions and Districts Land Command was later divided in 2003, under the LAND
mark reorganisation, into two suborganisations, Field Army and Regional Forces, that paralleled the Cold War structure of UKLF.
Commander Field Army had two deployable divisions (1st Armoured Division, 3rd Mechanised Division),
Theatre Troops,
Joint Helicopter Command, and Training Support under him, while
Commander Regional Forces was responsible for three regenerative Divisions (
2nd Division,
4th Division,
5th Division), London District, and
United Kingdom Support Command (Germany). In 2007 it was announced that a new deployable divisional headquarters (HQ) would be established until at least 2011, as a means of meeting the UK's commitments to provide divisional HQs on a rotational basis to
Regional Command South in
Afghanistan and as the lead nation of
Multi-National Division (South-East) in
Iraq. This headquarters was based in
York, the re-established HQ
6th Division. HQs 2, 4, and 5 Divisions (originally referred to as Regenerative Divisions) effectively used to act as
military districts in the UK itself. They would only have been able to generate field formations in the event of a general war. These three divisions were disbanded in Spring 2012 and the component units were transferred to Support Command. After 2012,
British Forces Germany formed the district HQ for personnel based in Germany that were not attached to military formations. London District's most public concern was the administration of ceremonial units and provision of garrisons for such installations as the Tower of London. However, its primary responsibility was to maintain units directly for the defence of the capital.
Brigades By 1999–2000, five years after the command was established, the British Army had only seven genuinely operational, deployable brigade groups – the six incorporated in 1st Armoured Division and 3rd Mechanised Division, plus
16 Air Assault Brigade. 16 Air Assault Brigade was formed as part of the 1999
Strategic Defence Review force reductions. On 1 September 1999, the brigade was formed by merging of
24 Airmobile Brigade and elements of
5th Airborne Brigade. In November 2007, the Ministry of Defence announced the temporary creation of another deployable brigade, designated as
11 Light Brigade, which commanded the
Operation Herrick rotation between October 2009 and April 2010.
3 Commando Brigade, formed predominantly by units of the
Royal Marines but with significant army support, was under the direct command of the
Commander-in-Chief Fleet (CINCFLEET). The numerous other ‘brigades’ within the new Support Command were better described as regional districts whose function is to administer all
Territorial Army units within their area, and to coordinate the provision of support to the civil authority if necessary, as well as home defence tasks. An example was the coordination of military support the regional brigades did during the
foot and mouth disease outbreak in 2001. The fourteen new
Civil Contingency Response Forces (CCRFs), each parented by a TA infantry battalion, were also linked into this structure. They form force elements which may be called on, alongside regular units, by the established chain of command (
Ministry of Defence, Army Headquarters, HQ Land Forces, Support Command and Regional Brigades) in the event of a request for military assistance by the civil authorities. There were a number of specialist brigades which bring together under a single administrative apparatus several units performing similar functions. There were two
logistic brigades 102 Logistic Brigade in Germany and
101 Logistic Brigade which contained logistic units to support the two deployable divisions directly. They were formed from the original Combat Service Support Groups (Germany) (CSSG (G)) and CSSG (United Kingdom) (CSSG (UK)). Additionally
104th Logistic Support Brigade operated the specialist units needed to deploy a force overseas such as pioneers, movements and port units. These brigades came under the authority of the GOC, Theatre Troops. ==General Officer Commanding-in-Chief, Army Strategic Command==