03 May 2011

The Breakup of JFCOM

The DoD has announced what JFCOM functions are being housed elsewhere.

As part of the disestablishment of U.S. Joint Forces Command (USJFCOM), the Department of Defense today announced the approved reassignment of critical USJFCOM organizations and functions to designated combatant commands, military services and the Joint Staff.

These organizational reporting reassignments ensure the most critical functions and expertise are maintained for the joint warfighter. This reassignment plan was developed in coordination with the Office of Secretary of Defense, the Joint Staff, combatant commands, and the Services. This organizational transfer of authority for critical functions includes such reassignments as the Joint Enabling Capabilities Command to U.S. Transportation Command, the Joint Warfare Analysis Center to U.S. Strategic Command, the Joint Personnel Recovery Agency to the Air Force, and the NATO School to U.S. European Command.

“Our goal is to transfer streamlined, relevant joint functions to appropriate Department of Defense entities,” said Gen. Raymond Odierno, commander, U.S. Joint Forces Command. “We will ensure we sustain the momentum and gains in jointness while maintaining critical interaction with NATO and other multi-national partners.”

When the transition is complete, nearly 50 percent of USJFCOM personnel and budget will remain in the Hampton Roads area of Virginia along with core missions, such as joint training, joint force provider, joint concept and doctrine development, and joint integration. These functions will be aligned under the Joint Staff for leadership and direction.

The formal transfer of these organizations and functions to designated commands will be completed by late summer. Under the current timeline, USJFCOM will be disestablished as a four-star combatant command by the end of August 2011. The physical moves of all USJFCOM activities will be completed by March 2012.


By: Brant

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I worked at the JECC for four years as a contractor after I retired. Despite some "looking for a mission" aspects, I thought it was a organization that could add value in the stand up of JTF's so am happy to see it survived the death of JFCOM.