According to the Delegation Law of 21 December 1867, the Minister of War, together with the Minister of Finance and the Minister of the Imperial and Royal House and of the Exterior formed the Council of Ministers for Common Affairs under the direction of the
Foreign Minister. The three Imperial and Royal ministers were appointed and relieved from office by the
Emperor of Austria and
King of Hungary himself. Until 1911, the ministers were called Reich Ministers of War. Upon the accession of
Moritz von Auffenberg, following Hungarian requests not to be summarized under an Austrian realm that did not consist of the Hungarian lands at that time, the ministers were called Imperial and Royal () Ministers of War. List: The influence of the Austro-Hungarian War Minister was limited, due to the rivalry between the Austrian
Minister-President and the
Prime Minister of Hungary. Moreover, it was the Emperor who acted as
commander-in-chief of the Imperial and Royal Armed Might, served by his personal military chancellery and represented by an Inspector General, a position held by Field Marshal Archduke
Albert of Austria-Teschen from 1869 to 1895. His successor General of the Cavalry and Admiral Archduke
Franz Ferdinand of Austria-Este in 1906 achieved the dismissal of Minister Pitreich and 76-year-old Chief of the General Staff
Friedrich von Beck-Rzikowsky, who was replaced by Franz Ferdinand's confidant Field Marshal Lieutenant
Franz Conrad von Hötzendorf. Dismissed in 1911 but again appointed together with Minister Alexander von Krobatin during the 1912
Balkan Wars, Conrad acted autonomously, being directly responsible to the emperor. In the 1914
July Crisis upon the
assassination of Franz Ferdinand, he and Minister Krobatin declared the Austro-Hungarian armed forces '
prepared for war'. On 30 October 1918, Emperor
Charles I of Austria assigned the Naval command to the newly established Yugoslavian
State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs. After the
Kingdom of Hungary left the
real union with Austria the next day, the last Austro-Hungarian minister Stöger-Steiner had to supervise the liquidation of the remaining
Cisleithanian troops. Upon the resignation of Emperor Charles on 12 November, he was answerable to an Army state secretary of the republican
German-Austrian government under Chancellor
Karl Renner. The 'War Ministry in Liquidation' was renamed 'Military Liquidation Agency' in 1920, when the Austrian
Federal Ministry of the Army was established. It was not dissolved until 1931. ==The War Ministry==