Battle of Middle Boggy Depot

The U.S. Army Combined Arms Center (USACAC) is located at Fort Leavenworth and provides leadership and supervision for leader development and professional military and civilian education; institutional and collective training; functional training; training support; battle command; doctrine; lessons learned and specified areas the Commanding General, United States Army Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC) designates in order to serve as a catalyst for change and to support developing relevant and ready expeditionary land formations with campaign qualities in support of the joint force commander.

Components

Components (all based in Fort Leavenworth) are:[1]

  • The Army University, which was created in 2015 and charged with directly integrating 70 separate U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC) internal school programs under one university system while also synchronizing instruction with more than 100 additional TRADOC institutions.[2]
    • Subcomponents include the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College (the Army's graduate school and the center's most famous institution)
    • Army University Press is the U.S. Army's top multimedia publishing house. In 2015, Army University brought the Combat Studies Institute, Military Review, and the NCO Journal together to form Army Press, which was later renamed Army University Press in 2017. They publish journals, books, and films to benefit Army leaders at all levels. The Staff Ride Team designs and executes both live and virtual staff rides. These provide essential insights into military operations, leadership, and the human dimension of warfare through focused study, methodical field study, and detailed analysis of insights gained. The Films Team creates thoroughly researched and historically accurate documentaries to educate viewers about the U.S. Army doctrine as it exists now.[3]
  • Combined Arms Center for Training
  • Mission Command Center of Excellence (MCCoE): established in 2010 as the focal point in the development, integration, and synchronization of leader development, Army profession, and mission command doctrine, organization, training, materiel, leadership and education, personnel, facilities requirements, and policy solutions (DOTMLPF-P). Mission Command is the Army's approach to command and control that empowers subordinate decision making and decentralized execution appropriate to the situation. Mission Command supports the Army's operational concept of unified land operations and its emphasis on seizing, retaining, and exploiting the initiative. (ADP 6–0)
    • Mission: MCCoE, as the lead for the Mission Command Force Modernization Proponent and the Command and Control Warfighting Function, conducts continuous DOTMLPF-P analysis to identify, develop, integrate, and synchronize C2 requirements and solutions in order to best prepare leaders and formations to successfully exercise the C2 of multidomain operations during competition, crisis, and conflict, across the competition continuum.
    • Subordinate Organizations:
    • Army Joint Support Team (AJST)
    • Air Land Sea Application (ALSA) Center
    • Combined Arms Doctrine Directorate (CADD)
    • Command Assessment Program Directorate (CAPD)
    • Center for the Army Profession and Leadership (CAPL)
    • Directorate of Training (DOT)
    • Force Modernization Proponent Center (FMPC)
    • Mission Command Network Integration (MCNI)
    • Security Force Assistance Proponent (SFAP)
    • Mission Command Capability Development Integration Directorate (MC CDID)

Components (based in Fort Novosel) are:

Overview

Fort Leavenworth, Kansas is the oldest continuously operating Regular Army installation west of the Mississippi River. This historic post, noted for its campus setting, open green spaces and hometown character, is the home of the US Army's Combined Arms Center (CAC). CAC, as a major subordinate headquarters of the US Army Training and Doctrine Command, has often been referred to as the "Intellectual Center of the Army". It is, in many regards, "home base" for the majority of field grade officers across the Army.

Since 1882, CAC and its predecessor organizations have been engaged in the primary mission of preparing the Army and its leaders for war. At present, this mission is divided between preparing the Army for the Global War on Terrorism and transforming it to meet future threats.

In order to accomplish these critical missions, CAC provides Army-wide leadership and supervision for leader development and professional military and civilian education; institutional and collective training; functional training; training support; battle command; doctrine; lessons learned; and other specified areas that the TRADOC Commander designates. All of these are focused toward making CAC a catalyst for change and to support the development of a relevant and ready ground force to support joint, interagency and multinational operations anywhere in the world.[4]

Organizational structure

Grant Hall is the headquarters of the U.S. Army Combined Arms Center.

The Combined Arms Center is organized along four basic levels:

The commander exercises overall responsibility over assigned personnel and subordinate organizations to ensure that assigned missions are accomplished in the most efficient and effective manner possible. The Command Sergeant Major, by tradition, is responsible for the conduct and development of enlisted soldiers and non-commissioned officers across the command.

The CAC Chief of Staff manages and oversees the activities of a coordinating staff and a special staff. The coordinating staff is focused on policy and procedure development for the command; the special staff provides command-wide advice in specialized or technical areas.

Major subordinate organizations carry out the majority of the functions assigned to the CAC commander. In general, each is resourced for and focused on a core function and one or more specified functions.

Schools, centers and specialized activities are spread across the country and are responsible for executing a portion of the CAC mission. In general, each of these organizations is responsible for the training of specific branch skills (such as "Infantry") and serving as the Army's functional expert in that area. In this regard, CAC is an integrator of specialized skills, on one hand, and an executor of common skills, on the other.

Military Review

Since 1922, the center has published the bimonthly journal Military Review.[5]

Commanders

Since 1976 commandant of the college has been a Lieutenant General (three stars). David Petraeus was a commandant immediately before going to command the Multinational Force - Iraq.

Command Sergeants Major

  • Command Sergeant Major L. H. Smith 1991–1993
  • Command Sergeant Major Edward D. Naylor 1993–1997
  • Command Sergeant Major Cynthia A. Pritchett 1997–2003
  • Command Sergeant Major John D. Sparks 2003–2005
  • Command Sergeant Major Cory N. McCarty 2005–2007
  • Command Sergeant Major David M. Bruner 2007–2008
  • Command Sergeant Major Philip F. Johndrow 2008–2011
  • Command Sergeant Major Christopher K. Greca 2011–2013
  • Command Sergeant Major Jeffrey W. Wright 2013–2014
  • Command Sergeant Major David Turnbull 2014–2018
  • Command Sergeant Major Eric C. Dostie 2018–2021
  • Command Sergeant Major Stephen H. Helton 2021–Present

See also

References

External links

39°21′05″N 94°54′54″W / 39.35139°N 94.91500°W / 39.35139; -94.91500