Headquarters Rapid Reaction Corps – France

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HQ RRC-Fr
Crr fr.png
CountryFrance
BranchFrench Army
TypeHeadquarters
Garrison/HQLille
Commanders
Current
commander
Lieutenant General Pierre Gillet
Lille's Citadelle aerial view

Headquarters Rapid Reaction Corps-France (HQ RRC-FR), created on 1 July 2005, is a French headquarters, NATO certified, able to command a national or multinational land component of between 5,000 and 60,000 personnel.

With around 450 soldiers coming from fifteen different nations, HQ RRC-FR is stationed in Lille, within a 17th-century citadel also known as "the Queen of the Citadels", designed by the famous French Field Marshal Vauban.

The royal gate

History[]

The headquarters is a combined but French Army led formation designed to lead an army corps-sized multinational joint unit, comprising 60,000 men, under French, EU or NATO command. It employs 450 (including 70 non-French officers and NCOs, from 12 different EU or NATO countries), and up to 750 in time of crisis.

In 2003, the decision was taken to constitute a general quarter for a rapid reaction force. The headquarters was created on 1 July 2005. The CRR-FR was officially founded on 1 October 2006, in a ceremony comprising representatives of 22 nations, along with generals Henri Bentégeat and , then Chief of Staff of the French Army. The organization of this structure has been cited as a move to strengthen and favor the emergence of a European defense force.[1]

Following a detailed examination of its capabilities, the Headquarters Rapid Reaction Corps-France was certified High Readiness Force (HRF) by NATO in July 2007.

Once placed on alert, it is able to deploy reconnaissance teams to an operation area within two days, following a political decision to commit troops, and a command post (CP) in less than thirty days.

Commanding post shelters

Flexible[]

HQ RRC-FR is able to perform a wide variety of missions, ranging from initial entry to stabilisation operations.[2]

It can be committed within a multinational environment, in the framework of NATO, the European Union (EU), or even under a national mandate. Thus:

  • From 1 July to 31 December 2008, it assumed NATO Response Force (NRF11) Land Component standby period.
  • From January to May 2009, part of the HQ staff members contributed to reinforce European Force (EUFOR) in Chad and the Central African Republic.
  • From August 2010 to January 2011, about 180 personnel (including about thirty allies) were deployed to Afghanistan, to man part of the positions of International Security Assistance Force tactical headquarters positions, ISAF Joint Command (IJC).
  • Until the end of 2014, HQ RRC-FR assumed NATO Response Force (NRF) Land Component standby period.
  • In 2015, HQ RRC-FR celebrated its 10th anniversary.
  • In 2015-2016, deployment of a part of the Headquarters as the Joint Command Post of Operation Barkhane in Africa.
  • In 2017, NATO Joint Task Force (JTF) certification.
  • Summer 2017: beginning of the NATO JTF standby period (one year).

At the same time, French personnel of RRC-FR’s staff are contributing to the Opération Sentinelle as all French army operational units.

Open to the world[]

HQ RRC-FR completes the range of French Land Forces Headquarters. Its creation allows France to contribute according to its position and international commitments, while remaining consistent with the requirements of national security and defence, within the framework of the EU or NATO.

A multinational headquarters subordinated to Land Forces Command (LFC) based in Lille, the HQ RRC-FR is open to all EU and NATO members (18% of its strength). Though stationed in France, its working language is English.

In a crisis, French and Allied operational reinforcements would augment its strength up to 750 personnel, to enable HQ RRC-FR to conduct long term high-intensity operations.

Shooting exercise

Focus on…[]

Fifteen contributing nations[]

In addition to France, HQ RRC-FR framework nation, fifteen different nations contribute to the staff on a permanent basis, representing a total of 80 personnel.

Everything is done to draw on the military experience of each nation. A constant exchange is facilitated by the use of English as a common working language.

  • NATO and European Union members
  • NATO members

A 21st-century headquarters[]

HQ RRC-FR benefits from the best fibre-optic-equipped site among the French Army: about 300 km fibre deployed between and inside its 17th-century walls. There, are 18 (French + NATO) computer and phone networks.

All of them can be projected, via satellite link to an operational theatre providing HQ RRC-FR with the capacity to command, if needed, an operation from its Citadel based Command Post, thanks to a rear Homebase Operation Center (HBOC).

As for now, HQ RRC-FR benefits from the sole French phone exchange directly connected to the NATO network.

A 24 person-team is responsible for assembling, maintenance and operation on these networks, which offers HQ RRC-FR complete autonomy in this domain, compared to other headquarters.

When deployed, HQ RRC-FR can use up to five thousand square metres of tentage, four hundred and fifty modular CP shelters, seventy kilometres of electrical cable, one hundred and twenty kilometres of fibre optics and sixteen hundred computers.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Lancement officiel du Quartier général du Corps de réaction rapide-France à Lille Archived 2012-02-25 at the Wayback Machine, French Embassy to the United Kingdom
  2. ^ Stabilisation operation: creating the necessary conditions for the normalisation of the situation, particularly in the field of security, and thereby enabling functioning state institutions.

External links[]

External links[]

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