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#1
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Re: Lt Gen vs. Maj Gen
I read your reasonings behind why a LT General outranks a MAJ General, and it's a little simpler than that. Being in the Army for 18 years, I've heard this explanation numerous times, here's how it goes.
When the rank of General was first created, there were three ranks: Captain General Lieutenant General Sergeant Major General As time went by, the "Captain" and the "Sergeant" were dropped from the names, giving us what we have today: General Lieutenant General Major General |
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#3
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No artwork for that column?
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#4
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Quote:
__________________
-Christian "You won't like me when I'm angry. Because I always back up my rage with facts and documented sources." -- The Credible Hulk |
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#5
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Plus, even to this day we have armies (mostly central and eastern European and those inspired therein) where the general officer two steps above Major General is a "Colonel General", which would make the intermediate Lieutenant General an implicit Lieutenant-Colonel General, thus fully parallelling the field ranks.
(That anglophone armies eventually reintroduced the Sergeant Major in the sense of the enlisted adjutant to field commanders just bears witness to that the job itself still needed to be done...) Last edited by JRDelirious; 08-01-2012 at 06:46 PM. |
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#6
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The outranks notion fails in several areas.
The notion comes into play in the real world in this: AREA OF RESPONSIBILITY. So, a full general of all four stars cannot overrule a brigadier general if his area of responsibility doesn't cover the "junior" general. That can occur within a theater, command or nationally. As an example the US CENTCOM commanding general cannot order a brigadier general outside of his command, whether it be geographical or military, to perform any action that is unrelated to that US CENTCOM's AOR. In short, he cannot order a SAC bomber to nuke something (actually, THAT gets even MORE complicated, as civilians "own" nuclear weapons). He can't order a BG to ignore the national command authority. He can't order a BG to even give him a pistol that isn't owned by his command, he can only request it. In the REAL world, I've watched officers in charge of officers senior to them, as THEY were placed in command. For, command is where it lays. WHO is in command of whom. In theory, one COULD place a full general under the command of a brigadier general. In practice, it would be a breach of protocol and a disgrace, but it is possible. |
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#7
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In the National Archives in Washington, D.C. in one of the cases in the Rotunda is a handwritten note from Lincoln to the Senate, I have seen it in person when I was there before. If I can quote from memory; I nominate Ulysses Grant to the rank of LT. General. Before that he was a Major General according to his bio on Wikipedia So, Lt. does outrank Major, one would think it the opposite, yes. Now, I am unsure if the Senate had to confirm it, or they were just being notified? Does anyone know of today if a General has to be confirmed by the Senate? |
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#8
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Quote:
And as for the note, the terms "major general" and "lieutenant general" were already in use, with the latter being a promotion over the former , in the late 18th Century. George Washington's last US Army rank in his lifetime was in fact LTG (posthumously promoted since all the way to GOTArmies). |
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#9
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Wizard One, there is a well-understood distinction between rank and line of command. You appear to be suggesting that Cecil was equating the two. He was not, he was just avoiding the unnecessary complication of line of command from the question about rank.
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#10
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Quote:
__________________
John W. Kennedy "The blind rulers of Logres Nourished the land on a fallacy of rational virtue." -- Charles Williams. Taliessin through Logres: Prelude |
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#11
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Is it true that General Marshall (the first five-star General) refused to accept the rank of 'Field Marshall' because he was not going to be called Marshall Marshall? So the title 'General of the Army' was created instead?
Or is this just apocryphal nonsense? |
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#12
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Quote:
Quote:
So there was precedent for the "...of the..." styling in US Army history, and avoiding the inconvenience of a Marshal Marshall was a factor but relatively minor (more like "Field Marsal" or "Generalissimo" would have sounded kind of alien and imperial to American ears). When the General of the Army and Fleet Admiral ranks were created in the US in WW2, they were set immediately behind the elder "of the Armies" and "of the Navy" titles for ceremonial precedence. The military long considered George Washington to be senior to every other officer ever in the US Armed Forces, so he was always treated as above whatever the highest grade at the time might be, but until 1976 nobody had never gotten around to actually passing the Act of Congress required to officially get him there. Last edited by JRDelirious; 08-04-2012 at 08:17 PM. |
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#13
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But if Trinity had fizzled, MacArthur and Nimitz would have been promoted to be the first to wear six stars on their uniforms, and to hold six-star ranks on active wartime duty. The proposed design was the five-star arrangement with one more star in the center.
__________________
John W. Kennedy "The blind rulers of Logres Nourished the land on a fallacy of rational virtue." -- Charles Williams. Taliessin through Logres: Prelude |
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#14
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However, you're wrong about them potentially being the first six-stars on active duty. As noted just above, Pershing was the first--and probably only--one. It's just that he never bothered to actually wear six stars. |
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#15
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Basically, in order to command the planned allied invasion of Japan, MacArthur would be superior to numerous five-star-level officers in both U.S. and allied forces. So until Japan surrendered after Nagasaki, plans were in the works to establish a six-star rank to make that chain of command incontrovertible.
As a reference, Wikipedia cites Hell to Pay: Operation Downfall and the Invasion of Japan by D.M. Giangreco, as well as MacArthur's own service record. Quote:
Powers &8^] |
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#16
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Almost any discussion of the six-star rank eventually mentions it. The obvious place is Wikipedia, under the obvious headings, but I remember there were various DOD sites that give the same story.
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#17
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He wore four physical stars on his uniform by his own choice, but there is no question that he and Washington are officially regarded as six-star today, and that the five-star rank was explicitly stated when it was established during WW2 to be lower than Pershing’s.
__________________
John W. Kennedy "The blind rulers of Logres Nourished the land on a fallacy of rational virtue." -- Charles Williams. Taliessin through Logres: Prelude |
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#18
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Until it was standardized with the various WW2 theater commanders, the General of the Army/Armies had been appointed only one at a time, so it was not a big deal to make him choose a distinctive insignia.
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#19
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Quote:
If Pershing's rank was considered six-star, then Washington's posthumous promotion to six stars wouldn't have achieved the stated goal of making him superior to all other Army officers, because Pershing would still have more seniority. (Washington's promotion was effective July 4, 1976; it was not retroactive.) Thus, the clear intent is that Pershing's rank is inferior to Washington's. Powers &8^] |
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#20
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Any dope on "brigadier general" and "general of the army/field marshall?"
Was it true that Ike, as supreme commander in Europe, was theoretically a "general of the armies" or a six-star? |
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#21
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Field Marshal is a historic grade that evolved to survive to this day. As the words indicate, it's the officer that marshals the forces in the field (thus the colloquial sports usage to refer to a gridiron quarterback). As the general grades became more complexly defined, it rose in status as most Old-World nations reserved the title for the seniormost generals. Some, e.g. German armies up to WW2, as a true operational rank -- Generalfeldmarschal as the superior to Generaloberst (colonel general). Others as a special dignity that is granted to a general for very distinguished service or when holding a special post (France). "Brigadier" referred to the rank level at which you'd be in charge of a Brigade (duh), a unit assembled of components from more than one regiment, not yet a division; currently it's the main maneuver component of a division - usually at least two batalllions of your primary combat arm plus appropriate units of other branches (say, a cavalry troop, an engineer company, etc.). Depending on your military's history, the traditional officer grade associated with this command was either a senior colonel or other super-field-grade officer (as in the British "Brigadier", known to Dr. Who fans) or the lowest rank of General. Napoleonic armies organized generalships by command: Brigade General, Division General, Corps General, Army General; many nations borrowed part of this structure - English speaking nations generally only the bottom grade because they tended to not have had it before (to this day, some armies do NOT have a BG equivalent and skip directly from COL to MG); Spanish-speaking armies have tended to borrow the bottom two. In modern practice, US Brigades are actually commanded mostly by full colonels. The straight jump from COL to MG in some armies created more room at the top, actually -- in the Soviet military the grades were COL, then MG, LTG, Colonel General, Army General, and then two different types of Marshal: "Of (Branch)" and "Of The Soviet Union". |
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