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Post by JustJohn or JJ on Aug 1, 2014 5:08:53 GMT -7
German officer to serve as U.S. Army Europe's chief of staffJul. 31, 2014 - 09:11PM A German Army brigadier general who recently served with NATO forces in Afghanistan is assuming duties as the chief of staff of U. S. Army Europe, the first time a non-American officer has held that position. Gen. Markus Laubenthal is the first German officer to be assigned to US Army Europe. He is the command's new chief of staff. (US Army Europe)Brig. Gen. Markus Laubenthal, most recently the commander of Germany’s 12th Panzer Brigade in Amberg, and chief of staff of Regional Command North, International Security Assistance Force Afghanistan, will be stationed at USAREUR headquarters, Wiesbaden, Germany. He could report to duty as early as Monday. Laubenthal also has served as military assistant to the deputy commander of operations and assistant chief of staff of operations for NATO forces in Kosovo. As the major staff assistant to USAREUR commander Lt. Gen. Donald Campbell, Laubenthal will synchronize the command’s staff activities much as American predecessors have in the past. “This is a bold and major step forward in USAREUR’s commitment to operating in a multinational environment with our German allies,” said Campbell. “U. S. and German senior military leaders have been serving together in NATO’s International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan for years. Sustaining the shared capability from this experience will benefit both the U. S. and German armies,” said Campbell who has headed the Army’s largest and oldest overseas command since 2012.
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Post by karl on Aug 1, 2014 15:03:25 GMT -7
J.J.
Thank you for introduction of one of our top commanders: Gen. Murkus Laubenthal, of 12th Panzer Brigade {Amberg}. I believe he is to report to USAREUR Headquarters Wiesbaden.
He should do very well with his experience with a Panzer Brigade. For with this, would entail extensive experience with all aspects from deployment/tactics/supply and logistics. For a Panzer unit alone is a vast consumer of supplies and equipment that must be available for operations with their use.
Karl
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Post by pieter on Aug 1, 2014 15:31:55 GMT -7
Excellent choice, thanks for posting John. Ofcourse I aggree with Karls description and opinion on Brig. Gen. Markus Laubenthal. We Dutch, the Poles and the Danes have very good experiances in our military cooperation with the Bundeswehr, and also German command. They are serious, dedicated, well trained, well armed officers and have international experience in NATO cooperation, UN-Peace keeping missions, European military cooperation and coordination, and the fact that for decades foreign armies had their bases on German soil and the Germans cooperated with them. In historic first, German Army general appointed USAREUR chief of staffBy Jad Sleiman Stars and Stripes Published: August 1, 2014Brig. Gen. Markus Laubenthal, commander of the Bundeswehr's Panzerbrigade 12 (12th Armored Brigade) has been named as the next chief of staff for U.S. Army Europe. Laubenthal is the first German officer to be assigned to the USAREUR position, where he will synchronize the activities of the USAREUR staff in much the same manner as his American predecessors. U.S. ArmyKAISERSLAUTERN, Germany — For the first time since U.S. troops arrived in Europe during World War II, a German general will serve as chief of staff of U.S. Army Europe. Brig. Gen. Markus Laubenthal is expected to take up his post as early as Monday, an Army news release said. The announcement of Laubenthal’s appointment comes at a time of strained relations between the U.S. and Germany over allegations of U.S. spying and phone tapping. USAREUR said in March it intended to name a German chief of staff. The U.S. military maintains key bases in Germany, where about 40,000 U.S. servicemembers are stationed, including about 25,000 soldiers. “ This is a bold and major step forward in USAREUR’s commitment to operating in a multinational environment with our German allies,” Lt. Gen. Donald Campbell Jr., USAREUR commander, said of Laubenthal’s appointment. “ U.S. and German senior military leaders have been serving together in NATO’s International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan for years. Sustaining the shared capability from this experience will benefit both U.S. and German armies.” Laubenthal, 51, commanded the Bundeswehr’s 12th Armored Brigade in Amberg before this assignment. In August of last year, he took over as chief of staff for ISAF Regional Command North in Afghanistan, where he helped oversee the drawdown of German troops from Kunduz and Mazar-e-Sharif, according to information on the German army website. Among other assignments, he served as military assistant to the deputy commander of operations and assistant chief of staff for operations for NATO’s Kosovo force. “ As the commander of Panzerbrigade 12 ... I have always valued the joint exercises with our partnership unit, the 2nd Cavalry Regiment in Vilseck,” Laubenthal said, according to the Army’s statement. “ I am sure that I can use the experience I gained in the German army supporting the training of ready army forces in my new position with USAREUR.” Laubenthal’s formal appointment ceremony will be held later this month, a USAREUR spokesman said. A German army spokesman called the move “ a clear sign for a good German-American cooperation.” That cooperation had been strained since last year’s reports of the U.S. National Security Agency’s mass surveillance of German citizens, including the monitoring of German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s personal communications. Last month, German authorities expelled the CIA’s chief in Berlin after investigators identified two suspected spies allegedly working for the U.S. within the German government. Reporter Marcus Kloeckner contributed to this report. General mayor Erhard Bühler (center) gave the command over the Panzerbrigade 12 "Oberpfalz" from Brigade general Stephan Thomas (on the right side) to Oberst i. G. Markus Laubenthal in 2012.
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