Commander of the Indonesian National Armed Forces
Commander of the Indonesian National Armed Forces
Panglima TNI | |
---|---|
Indonesian National Armed Forces | |
Style | Panglima |
Member of | Advanced Indonesia Cabinet (Kabinet Indonesia Maju) |
Reports to | President of Indonesia |
Residence | Rumah Dinas Panglima TNI, Menteng - Jakarta |
Seat | Indonesian Armed Forces Headquarters, Cilangkap - Jakarta |
Nominator | President of Indonesia |
Appointer | President of Indonesia with Legislative Board approval |
Formation | 1945 |
First holder | General Soedirman |
Deputy | Deputy Commander of the Indonesian National Armed Forces |
The Commander of the Indonesian National Armed Forces (Indonesian: Panglima Tentara Nasional Indonesia, currently known as Panglima TNI) is the highest position in the Indonesian National Armed Forces. The position is held by the four-star General/Admiral/Air Marshal appointed by and reporting directly to the President of Indonesia.
First official Commander of the Indonesian National Armed Forces is General Soedirman, at the time the position is known as Commanding General of the People's Security Forces (Indonesian: Panglima Besar Tentara Keamanan Rakyat), which later will be called Commander of the Army of the Republic of Indonesia (Indonesian: Panglima Tentara Republik Indonesia), Commander of the Republic of Indonesia Military Forces (Indonesian: Panglima Angkatan Perang Republik Indonesia), Chief of Staffs of the Armed Forces (Kepala Staf ABRI), Commander of the Armed Forces (Panglima ABRI), and finally Commander of the Indonesian National Armed Forces (Panglima TNI, when Indonesian National Police was excluded) until now. As the first commander, General Sudirman is not appointed by the President of Indonesia, instead elected by People's Security Armed Forces personnel during a meeting knownly as People's Security Armed Forces Conference on 12 November 1945. Prior to appointment of General Soedirman, the position is held by Lt. Gen. Oerip Soemohardjo on an interim basis.[1]
Various four-star officers (army generals, navy admirals, and air force marshals) from TNI branches (Army, Navy, Air Force) has held the office. As stated by law (undang-undang no 34/2004), the office has to be held by officer from each service branch who is/was the Chief of Staff (either KSAD, KSAU, or KSAL respectively).
Currently, the office is held by ACM Hadi Tjahjanto, an Indonesian Air Force officer, who was inaugurated by President Joko Widodo on 8 December 2017.[2]
As a commander, Panglima TNI has direct command control to all of the principal operational commands (Komando Utama Operasi or Kotama Ops) such as Kostrad, Kopassus, Korps Marinir, Fleet Commands, Air Ops Commands, etc.. As per president's decree 66/2019, an office of Deputy Commander of the Indonesian National Armed Forces (Wakil Panglima TNI) was established in which a four-star officer (army general, navy admiral, or air force marshal) would be the holder. Currently the position is still vacant.
Responsibilities[]
As per Presidential Decree no.66 of 2019, the responsibilities of the Commander of the Indonesian National Armed Forces are to:
- lead the Armed Forces
- implement the national defense policy
- exercise the military strategy & operations
- develop the doctrinal policies
- exercise TNI power projection for military operation matters
- exercise TNI power development and maintain operational readiness
- provide advisory to Minister of Defense on national defense policy
- provide advisory to Minister of Defense on TNI's demand fulfillment and other defense components
- provide advisory to Minister of Defense on development and execution of strategic planning of national resources for national defense matters
- utilize reserve component after mobilized for military operation matters
- utilize supporting component which has been prepared for military operation matters
- exercise other roles and responsibilities entrusted to his office by the Constitution and laws of the Republic
List of Commanders[]
No. | Portrait | Commander of the Indonesian National Armed Forces | Took office | Left office | Time in office | Defence branch | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
— | Oerip Soemohardjo (1893–1948) Acting | Lieutenant general17 August 1945 | 12 November 1945 | 87 days | Army | [1] | |
1 | Soedirman (1916–1950) [a] | General12 November 1945 | 29 January 1950 † | 4 years, 78 days | Army | [1] | |
2 | T. B. Simatupang (1920–1990) as Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces | Major general29 January 1950 | 4 November 1952 | 2 years, 280 days | Army | [1] | |
Vacant Position abolished by President Sukarno after the 17 October 1952 incident. | |||||||
3 | Abdul Haris Nasution (1918–2000) as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff[b] | GeneralDecember 1955 | July 1959 | 3 years, 7 months | Army | [1] | |
4 | (1912–1975) as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff[c] | Air Chief MarshalJuly 1959 | 19 January 1962 | 2 years, 6 months | Air Force | [1] | |
(3) | Abdul Haris Nasution (1918–2000) as Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces[b] | GeneralJanuary 1962 | March 1966 | 4 years, 1 month | Army | [1] | |
Vacant Position abolished by President Sukarno after the 30 September Movement incident. | |||||||
5 | Soeharto (1921–2008) as Commander of the Armed Forces[d] | GeneralJune 1968 | March 1973 | 4 years, 9 months | Army | [1] | |
6 | Maraden Panggabean (1922–2000) | GeneralMarch 1973 | April 1978 | 5 years, 1 month | Army | [1] | |
7 | Mohammad Jusuf (1928–2004) | GeneralApril 1978 | 28 March 1983 | 4 years, 11 months | Army | . | |
8 | Leonardus Benjamin Moerdani (1932–2004) [e] | General28 March 1983 | 27 February 1988 | 4 years, 336 days | Army | . | |
9 | Try Sutrisno (born 1935) | General27 February 1988 | 19 February 1993 | 4 years, 358 days | Army | . | |
10 | (1938–2006) [f] | General19 February 1993 | 21 May 1993 | 91 days | Army | . | |
11 | Feisal Tanjung (1939–2013) | General21 May 1993 | 12 February 1998 | 4 years, 267 days | Army | . | |
12 | Wiranto (born 1947) [g] | General16 February 1998 | 26 October 1999 | 1 year, 256 days | Army | . | |
13 | Widodo Adi Sutjipto (born 1944) | Admiral26 October 1999 | 7 June 2002 | 2 years, 224 days | Navy | . | |
14 | Endriartono Sutarto (born 1947) | General7 June 2002 | 13 February 2006 | 3 years, 251 days | Army | . | |
15 | Djoko Suyanto (born 1950) | Air Chief Marshal13 February 2006 | 28 December 2007 | 1 year, 318 days | Air Force | [3] | |
16 | Djoko Santoso (1952–2020) | General28 December 2007 | 28 September 2010 | 2 years, 274 days | Army | [4] | |
17 | Agus Suhartono (born 1955) | Admiral28 September 2010 | 30 August 2013 | 2 years, 336 days | Navy | [5] | |
18 | Moeldoko (born 1957) | General30 August 2013 | 8 July 2015 | 1 year, 312 days | Army | [6] | |
19 | Gatot Nurmantyo (born 1960) | General8 July 2015 | 8 December 2017 | 2 years, 153 days | Army | [7] | |
20 | Hadi Tjahjanto (born 1963) [h] | Air Chief Marshal8 December 2017 | Incumbent | 3 years, 277 days | Air Force | [2] |
See also[]
- Chief of Staff of the Indonesian Army
- Chief of Staff of the Indonesian Navy
- Chief of Staff of the Indonesian Air Force
- Chief of the Indonesian National Police
Notes[]
- ^ Position known as Grand Commander of the People's Security Armed Forces and later as Commanding General of the National Armed Forces (Panglima Besar Tentara Keamanan Rakyat until 1946, Panglima Besar TNI from 1948-1950 )
- ^ Jump up to: a b Also served concurrently as Chief of Staff of the Army.
- ^ Also served concurrently as Chief of Staff of the Air Force.
- ^ Also served concurrently as President and Minister of Defence and Security.
- ^ Also served concurrently as Commander of the Operational Command for the Restoration of Security and Order (Kopkamtib). First Commander of the Armed Forces who was not also appointed as Minister of Defense.
- ^ Also served concurrently as Minister of Defence and Security (from 17 March 1993) and Chief of Staff of the Army (until 23 March 1993).
- ^ Also served concurrently as Minister of Defence and Security.
- ^ also served concurrently as Chief of Staff of the Air Force (until 17 January 2018).
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i [1] Archived 9 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Jump up to: a b "Marsekal Hadi Tjahjanto Resmi Jabat Panglima TNI".
- ^ Indonesian Parliament Endorse Djoko Suyanto as Military Chief Archived 5 February 2006 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Biografi di tokohindonesia.com
- ^ Adm. Agus Suhartono to be installed as new TNI chief Tuesday Archived 3 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine. The Jakarta Post. 28 September 2010.
- ^ Rinaldo (30 August 2013). "Presiden SBY Lantik Panglima TNI dan KSAD Pagi Ini". liputan6dotcom. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
- ^ "Gatot Nurmantyo officially becomes TNI commander". The Jakarta Post. 14 July 2015. Retrieved 18 October 2015.
2. Perpres nomor 66 tahun 2019 tentang Struktur Organisasi Tentara Nasional Indonesia [2].
- Commanders of the Indonesian National Armed Forces
- Military of Indonesia
- Chiefs of defence