Title: JFCOM Command Briefing
1 United States Joint Forces Command Command
Overview
Presenter Position, USJFCOM
1
2Joint Forces Command Mission
- The United States Joint Forces Command provides
mission-ready Joint Capable forces and supports
the development and integration of Military,
Government, and Multinational capabilities to
meet the present and future operational needs - of the Joint Force.
3The Challenge
- Build the right numbers
- Provide the right equipment
- Provide the right guidance
- Be able to operate together with Partners
- US and Multi-national
- Military and Civilian
Deconflicted
Coordinated
Integrated
4 Commanders Guidance
- Jointness is not a natural state deserves our
best effort - Our enemy means every word it says
- We will fight future wars with partners
- Our military must improve capability in the
irregular fight - Maintain our conventional dominance
Reshape our forces to fight a new way of war
5Organizing for Synergy JFCOM Model
Air Force, and Multi-Service Tactics, Techniques
Procedures
Army
Army Training Doctrine and Capabilities
Integration Center
JFCOM Lakeview Tech Park
JFCOM Headquarters
JFCOM in Suffolk
Navy
Partner Nations
Marines
Federal Government
Laboratory
Training
Industry
Experimentation
Universities
Military, Industry, Academia, Government, and
other Nations Located Together
6USJFCOM ApproachSupporting the Joint Commander
- Developing joint concepts and experimenting
- Find out what works for the future
- Ensuring military systems talk to each other
- Fixing those that dont, making new systems that
do - Training Joint Forces
- From Headquarters Staffs to Individuals
- Providing deployable joint teams
- A team available right now to meet Commanders
immediate needs - Providing Joint Forces
- Right mix of forces and equipment to get the job
done
7Joint Forces Command Components
8USJFCOM Multi-National Collaboration
19 Nations with Bilateral MOU/A with USJFCOM - 29
Representatives (Exchange/Foreign Liaison
Officers)
Jordan 1 (J7) (Gapped)
Morocco 1 (J7)
Australia 1 (J8)
Canada 2 (J7/J9)
Finland 2 (J8/J9)
Germany 3 (J9)
Israel 1 (J9)
Denmark 1(J9)
Japan 2 (J8/J9)
Hungary 1(J9)
Italy 1(J9)
Sweden 2 (J9/JPRA)
UK 3 (J7/J8/J9)
Singapore 1 (J9) (Gapped)
Poland 1 (J9)
Romania 1 (J7)
Spain 1 (J9)
Portugal 1 (J9)
7 Nations pursuing Bilateral MOU/A with USJFCOM 3
Visitors/Representatives at JFCOM
3 Nations with Additional-Duty Relationship
with USJFCOM - 3 Representatives
Mexico 1 (USFF)
Sweden 1 (ACT)
Brazil 1 (USFF)
Pakistan (J7)
Thailand
Algeria
France 2 (J7/J9)
Greece 1 (J9)
Czech Republic
Qatar
Additional Opportunities for Multi-National
Collaboration - NOT attached to USJFCOM
23 NATO Nations with Local National Liaison
Representatives (NLR) to Allied Command
Transformation - 35 Representatives
Belgium 1
Bulgaria 2
Canada 1
Czech Republic 2
Denmark 1
Estonia 1
France 2
Germany 2
Greece 1
Hungary 2
Italy 2
Latvia 1
Lithuania 1
Netherlands 1
Norway 2
Poland 2
Portugal 1
Romania 2
Slovakia 2
Slovenia 2
Spain 2
Turkey 1
UK 1
10 Partnership for Peace Nations with NLR to ACT
- 10 Representatives
1 Partnership for Peace Nation 1 Representative
(not NLR)
Austria 1
Albania 1
Armenia 1
Azerbaijan 1
Finland 1
FYROM 1
Croatia 1
Ukraine 1
Switzerland 1
Sweden 1
Georgia 1
7 Latin American Nations at U.S. Fleet Forces
Command - 7 Representatives
Peru 1
Argentina 1
Brazil 1
Chile 1
Ecuador 1
Mexico 1
Colombia 1 (Gapped)
9Current Efforts
- Continue Focused Support to Win the Current Wars
- Improve Global Force Management Process
- Maintain our Conventional Superiority and Improve
Capability in the Irregular Fight - Improve Joint Command and Control
- Leader centric, network enabled
- Support our Partners
- Multi-national, US, military and civilian
- Maintain Deployable Operational Headquarters
Maintain a Bias for Action
10