Office of the National Army (Faneria)
The office of the Federal Army is one of the six major Offices of Government in the Federal State of Faneria, and operates as the armed forces of the nation. It should be noted that, while called an 'army', it also includes the nation's naval, air, and strategic military assets due to the organizational structure of the Office. Due to its nature as a military force, its hierarchy is radically different to the civilian branches of the government. The Federal Army is the only one of the Six-Office System which responds primarily to the Office of the Despotate.
Office of the National Army of the Republic | |
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Roinn an Fyddin Feadaral | |
Motto | Unified, we are Unbreakable |
Founded | 1908 |
Service branches | National Land Army
|
Website | www.arm.gov.fh |
Leadership | |
Chief Army Officer | Delyth Guair |
Manpower | |
Military age | 19-45, 25-60 for off-field officers |
Conscription | 19-21 year-olds are required to take a fundamentals course, but are not considered draftees or officially tallied. |
Available for military service | 82,475,947, age 15–49 |
Fit for military service | 27,534,938, age 15–49 |
Active personnel | 859,124 (ranked 8th) |
Reserve personnel | 5,117,866 |
Federal Army of Fhainnaeran | |
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Fyddin Feadaral an Fhainn | |
Founded | 12 March 1906 |
Service branches | National Land Army Bureau Army Sea Guard Bureau Army Air Guard Bureau Army Strategic Bureau |
Headquarters | Ministry of Defence, Oirthidun |
Leadership | |
Despot | Brennan Walaerin |
Chief Army Officer | Delyth Guair |
Manpower | |
Military age | 19-45 |
Conscription | 1 month |
Active personnel | 859,124 (ranked 8th) |
Reserve personnel | 5,117,866 |
Expenditures | |
Budget | 113,866,603,200 (Thaler) |
Percent of GDP | 7.2% (2020) |
Industry | |
Domestic suppliers | |
Related articles | |
History | article article article |
Ranks | Ranks and Insignia of the Fhainnin Army |
GDP: 9,884,253,539,749.65 16% overall tax rate 1,581,480,600,000 usd taxes 7.2% military spending
Office of the Federal Army
History
Pre-national Forces
The typical Fhainnin soldier for the first few thousand years of recorded history (known as a Ceiternin) was armed with a sword (deamhbah), javelins (gah), and various daggers. They generally favored no armor or padded cloth, as tribal tactics focused on skirmishes and ambush over pitched fighting. These troops were organized into rough units collectively referred to as Ceiternn, or warbands, which numbered anywhere from thirty to four hundred men depending on the size of the populations from which they were raised. The leader of each warband was either elected or lead by charisma and was referred to as a Ceiternna, and responded directly to the commanding noble or official, assuming they themselves were not operating autonomously. Many local bands fought against invading forces both foreign and native without a call to arms, often boiling the distinction between soldiery and highwaymen down to a matter of loyalties.
The constant combative nature of the area made proper settlement and annexation by anything other than dedicated armies incredibly difficult, as while early Holy Levantine forces and opportunistic raiders had free reign of the land when organized, attempts to remove or subjugate the native populations of the Ninerivers typically resulted in settlements being sacked at any opportunity.
As Christianity took hold within the country from those foreign settlements which had been established peaceably or lasted in small holds along the coastline, local nobility began to employ professional soldiers in addition to militias. These Ardceiterninn continued to use javelins and swords, but additionally took up shortbows along with rounded wooden shields and metal armor (most commonly mail coats or lamellar designs copied from Latin and Coscivian designs). Most also trained to fight on horseback as their Ceiterninn auxiliaries did, largely replacing the mounted skirmishers and relegating peasant troops to foot combat by the tenth century. While not approaching the social prestige or full plate of Latin knights, these soldiers typically fought with similar discipline and pride, earning a reputation as competent bodyguards and cavalry mercenaries throughout Levantia.
Rethysian Army System
The first Kings of the Fhainn fought with essentially the same troops as their ancestors and opponents had for innumerable generations before, and did so successfully. However, the inherent disorganization and decentralization of feudal forces made mobilizing to fight large wars increasingly difficult, and by the fourteenth century, firearms and cannons made organized formations increasingly important.
In response to this need for a large army loyal directly to the Throne, King (Rih) Bronlan Màrtainn reorganized his personal army into more standardized units of four hundred men, arming them with weapons produced in batches and mixing soldiers from various locales and former polities to head off unit-wide insurrection from the largely independent Vicars ruling in his name. This idea was originally attributed to his father, Rethys Màrtainn, but in modern times this is thought to be an apocryphal tale spread by Bronlan himself to deflect criticism as he did with many of his reforms.
Aside from introducing a degree of standardization, Bronlan created a larger officer system, with Captains (almost invariably minor nobles) replacing Ceiternnas and introducing Sergeant-Generals to lead units of two thousand men, themselves responding a General leading as many troops as were appointed to his command. While still inefficient and lacking in long campaigning ability and contemporary command and control, this system at least allowed for a functional army to be fielded against other states with relative coordination and modern equipment (and, more importantly, without cajoling the Vicars to field soldiers on the behalf of the King).
The Rethysian System formally separated Fhainnin soldiers into distinct infantry and cavalry types, with the Ardceirerninn being transformed into more traditional lancer cavalry, while the levy troops were given arquebuses to replace their earlier ranged weapons. Swords were kept by both branches, with confiscation of the weapons being unrealistic given the proliferation of weapons within the budding country. Foot Ardceirerninn and the few remaining cavalry Ceirerninn specialized as longbowmen and skirmish cavalry respectively, with the former fading into obscurity and the latter taking up varying roles as early dragoons or reconnaissance units for the main armies. Static cannon were also introduced and attached as needed to the infantry for support in sieges.
Combined Royal Army
- army reorganized into conscription system with nobles as officers - later, nobles lose rights due to a coup by the monarch solidifying central power
Great War Era
- republican army organized along more foreign lines,
Post-War Era
Strategic Aims
Political Involvement
Army Land Bureau
Command (Field Command, Installation Command, Central Command):
Quartermaster (Logistics, Supply and Procurement):
Labor (Transport, Engineer Support):
Signals/Intelligence (Communications, Electronic Warfare):
Engineering (Bridging, Mine Warfare, Ordinance and Demolitions, Technical, Labor):
Infantry (Light, Mot, Mech):
Artillery (Field, SP, Missile SP):
Armor:
Recon (Cav, Mot Cav, Mech Cav):
Medical (Hospital, Field Hospital, Mortuary, etc.):
Special (Chemical, Nuclear, Military Police, Law):
Organization
Standard Unit Types:
Infantry: Light, Motorized/Mechanized, Garrison
Armor: Light, Normal
Artillery: Light, Field, Self-Propelled, Anti-Air Field, Anti-Air Self Propelled, Field Rocket, Self-Propelled Rocket, Self Propelled Missile, Anti-Tank Field, Anti-Tank Self-Propelled
Support: Hospital, Logistics/Quartermaster, Signal, Headquarters, Engineering, Ordinance, Recon (Cavalry, Motorized Cavalry, Air Cavalry)
Generally speaking, a Rhon will be marked as Infantry, Armor, or Support, with Infantry and Armor Rhonn containing their own support Bragadts, Catalionn, and Cuartoris; a Support Rhon is composed of several identical noncombat Bragadts with additional support units under a more robust command staff to support local Chorp operations as required. In some cases, additional combat support formations (i.e. Recon or Ordinance) may be attached temporarily to a Rhon or even to a Bragadt within a Rhon - for example, an ad-hoc formation created to counter an armored advance may be assigned an entire anti-tank Catalion per frontline Bragadt in addition to or instead of the one assigned under direct Rhon command, tripling or quadrupling the usual anti-tank armament of the formation as a whole (assuming full staff and supply).
Medical, Signals, and other support formations typically are grouped into Cuartori or at most Bragadt, but normally these personnel are distributed throughout the larger formations they serve with to fulfil their roles directly. Proper formations of these may be grouped into information centers, field or proper hospital units, etc.
Unit types:
HQ (HQ): covers command and bureaucratic units.
Infantry (X): variants include light infantry, mot/mech infantry (x with box), mountain (x, filled bottom), air drop (x, filled top), and marine units (anchor).
Recon (/): variants include horse recon (slash), wheeled (slash, boc, and bottom dots) and tracked recon (slash, block, and bottom line)
Armor (box): variants include light armor (box) and line armor (box with vertical middle line), plus miscellaneous armored wheeled (box with bottom dots) or tracked (box with bottom line) units
Artillery (dot): variants include field guns (dot), self-propelled artillery (dot with box), mortars (x with top tot), and aa guns (self-propelled - dot, box, up-chevron -, static - dot, up chevron -, and missile - up chevron, up triangle)
field (box with and self-propelled missile or rocket (box with down chevron and middle dot)
field missile
sp-missile (
Engineering (E): covers units handling ordinance and bomb disposal, general combat engineering, and construction planning.
Quartermaster (Q): covers supply and logistics bureaucratic units.
Military Police (MP: covers policing and courts units.
Labor and Supply (shovel): covers construction and supply line units.
Maintenance (wrench): covers equipment management units
Hospital (+): covers combat medical personnel, field and rear hospitals, mortuary units, and specialist units such as dental, radiological, etc.
Signals (connection symbol): covers military intelligence, electronic warfare, radio and other communications methods, counterintelligence and other units.
The Army is generally organized into Infantry, Armored, and irregular Rhon and smaller units. As of 2020, these were:
- 39 Infantry Rhon (18 organized into the Chorps structures, 21 'free')
- 9 Armored Rhon (all organized into the Chorps structures)
- 31 Support Rhon (27 organized into the Chorps structures, 4 'free')
- 1 Marine Rhon, 1 Air Drop Rhon, 1 Special Service Rhon, 2 Light Infantry Rhon
- several independent smaller units, typically recruitment, training, and armory/base permanent garrisons
Of these units, the majority of them (9 Armored, 18 Infantry, and 27 Support) are organized into three field armies, each formed of three combat Chorps of one armor and two infantry Rhon and one logistical Chorps of three Support Rhon. Generally, one support Rhon shadows each combat Chorps on campaign.
Of the remaining units, 16 of the remaining infantry Rhon and two of the Support Rhon act as semi-permanent garrisons around the metropole. One infantry Rhon is based in the colony of Mharnsgate, and the remaining two Support and four Infantry Rhon are deployed as-needed. The nonstandard units (marines, paratroops, Special Services, and various military police, intelligence, and minor task forces) are generally split into constituent parts and attached as needed to other units.
Unit | Symbol | Formation Roles | Formation Sizes | |
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Infantry (Light) | frontline combat, frequently garrison duties | |||
Infantry (Motorized) | frontline combat | |||
Infantry (Mechanized) | frontline combat | |||
Infantry (Air Drop) | frontline combat, paradrop landing | |||
Infantry (Mountain) | frontline combat, rough terrain fighting | |||
Infantry (Marine) | frontline combat, shore landing | |||
Infantry (Mortar) | frontline combat, light artillery support | |||
Artillery (Surface-to-Surface, Field) | combat support, infantry support | |||
Artillery (Surface-to-Surface, Self-Propelled) | combat support, mobile infantry support | |||
Artillery (Surface-to-Surface, Field, Missile/Rocket) | combat support, static specialist artillery | |||
Artillery (Surface-to-Surface, Self-Propelled, Missile) | combat support, specialist artillery | |||
Artillery (Anti-Air, Field) | combat support, conventional antiair | |||
Artillery (Anti-Air, Self-Propelled) | combat support, mobile anti-air | |||
Artillery (Anti-Air, Field, Missile) | combat support, static antiair | |||
Artillery (Anti-Air, Self-Propelled, Missile) | combat support, specialist antiair | |||
Artillery (Anti-Armor, Field) | combat support, antitank defense | |||
Artillery (Anti-Armor, Self-Propelled) | combat support, tank hunting | |||
Artillery (Anti-Armor) | combat support | |||
Recon (Horse) | intel and maneuver | |||
Recon (Car/Motorcycle) | intel and maneuver | |||
Recon (Tracked) | intel and maneuver | |||
Recon (Air) | intel and light air support | |||
Armored (Car) | combat support, infantry support | |||
Armored (Tracked) | frontline combat and maneuver, infantry support | |||
Armored (Light) | frontline combat and maneuver | |||
Armored (Line) | frontline combat, anti-armor, | |||
Air (Anti-Air) | air intercept | |||
Air (General Purpose) | air intercept, ground support | |||
Air (Tactical Support) | tactical bombing | |||
Air (Heavy Support) | strategic bombing or transport | |||
Engineer | ||||
Labor and Supply | ||||
Signals | ||||
Military Police | ||||
Quartermaster | ||||
Medical | ||||
Headquarters |
Standard Chorp: Composed of one Headquarters Cuartori, three combat Rhon, and one support Rhon. Other units are usually attached at this organizational level for specialized tasks.
Standard Combat Rhon:
Standard Support Rhon:
Air Service Catalionn: Composed of a Pilot/Technical Cuartori and a logistical Cuartori; 400 men in total typically operating anywhere from 4-40 aircraft depending on type.
Air Supply Bragadt: Composed of one Headquarters Cuartori, one medical Cuartori and a logistics Catalion; 1000 men in total commanding and supporting 2-6 Air Service units.
Army Marine Rhon:
Army Air Drop Rhon:
===Standing Units===
Army Central Command:
Basic Training Rhon:
Specialist Training Rhon:
Reserve Coordination Bragadt:
1. Army: Composed of one Headquarters Cuartori and five standardized Chorps, all of which are mechanized/motorized with tank elements. Attached are two of the Army Special Services' four Catalionn, five Air Supply Bragadts, and eighteen Air Service Catalionn.
2. Army: Composed of one Headquarters Cuartori and five standardized Chorps, one of which is mechanized with tank elements and four of which are motorized. Attached is one of the Army Special Services' four Catalionn, four Air Supply Bragadts, and fifteen Air Service Catalionn.
3. Army: Composed of one Headquarters Cuartori and three standardized Chorps, two of which are motorized and one which is not properly motorized.
Army Special Service HQ and 1st Catalion
Army Marine Rhon:
Army Air Drop Rhon:
Army Garrison/Reserve Coordination Bragadts: Composed of one Headquarters Cuartori and eighteen Bragadts, each including one Headquarters Cuartori, one nonstandard infantry Catalion (which may have anti-aircraft, anti-tank, or other assets depending on placement on a military base or in a city), and one logistical Catalion.
Doctrine and Training
Equipment and Assets
Numbers listed do not include systems employed by nonstandard units, which vary greatly and in some cases are classified.
Land System Type | Primary Model/s | Per New Model Brigade(48) | Per New Model Command Unit (14) | Active New Model | Reserve Total | National Total | Per Old Model Infantry Rhon (0) | Per Old Armor Rhon (0) | Per Old Support Rhon (0) | Active Old Total | Reserve Total | National Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
MBT | Madiodha 2016-1 | 36 | - | 1728 | 2831 | 4 | 220 | - | 2136 | 2831 | 4967 | |
APC/IFV | 210 | - | 10080 | 18385 | 800 | 505 | - | 39489 | 41802 | 80562 | ||
Missile Artillery | 12 | - | 576 | 193 | 4 | 4 | - | 192 | 62 | 254 | ||
SP-Artillery | 36 | - | 1728 | 1440 | 6 | - | - | 234 | 286 | 520 | ||
Towed Artillery | - | - | - | 687 | - | - | - | 14 | 687 | 703 | ||
Armored Transport | 590 | 50 | 29020 | 36560 | 60 | - | - | 2395 | 674 | 3069 | ||
Command Vehicle | 10 | 10 | 620 | 3557 | 75 | 70 | 50 | 3557 | 103 | 3660 | ||
Bridging Support Vehicle | 6 | - | 288 | 334 | 4 | 4 | 10 | 502 | 786 | 1288 | ||
Bulldozer | 9 | - | 432 | 786 | 4 | 4 | 10 | 504 | 1366 | 1870 | ||
Mine Support Vehicle | 9 | - | 432 | 504 | 4 | 4 | - | 192 | 334 | 526 | ||
Recovery Vehicle | 42 | - | 2016 | 803 | 4 | 10 | 10 | 556 | 986 | 1542 | ||
Tow/Crane Vehicle | 3 | - | 144 | 52 | 2 | 4 | 10 | 424 | 803 | 1227 | ||
Unarmored Transport | 504 | 240 | 27552 | 30268 | - | - | 800 | 27710 | 46813 | 74523 | ||
Heavy Transport | 18 | - | 864 | 233 | 10 | 180 | - | 2012 | 863 | 2875 | ||
System Total | - | 1485 | 300 | 75480 | 977 | 1005 | 890 |
Rank Structure
Land Force | LOTA Equivalent | CO and Attendant CO Ranks | Average Full Staff | Composition | Abbreviation and Standardized Designation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cith (Eng. Friends/fireteam) | Sgiobair-Leift. or Corporal, Man-At-Arms or Corporal | 4-6 | |||
Sgibo (I) | Squad (*) | Sgiobair, Sgiobair Leift. | 10-15 | 1st Sgibo | |
NM Tastel (II) | Platoon (***) | Captaen, Serdeant | 75 | The fundamental purpose-based unit; these comprise the entire structure of a Catalion or Ceitern and Bragadt. | |
NM Catalion (O) | Company (I) | Ardcaptaen,Leiftenant | 225-300 | An intermediate unit; Catalionn are primarily used in support roles or as command units in Bragadts and Rhon. | 1st BGT TG1 TS1 |
NM Ceitern (OO) | Battalion or Regiment (II or III) | Leift. General (also referred to as General-Ceiterna), Quartermaster-Ceiterna, Leift. Ceiterna, Hospitaller-Ceiterna | 900 | Composed entirely of Tastel, one of which is a command unit. A 'full' standard mixed-role unit contains nine hundred men in 12 tastels (Command, 3 infantry, scouts, armor, artillery,anti-air, engineering, maintenance, supply, medical evacuation/field hospital). Artillery, anti-air, engineering, and battlefield medical functions are typically performed at this level. | 1.1 BGT TG1 |
Bragadt (X) | Brigade (X) | General-Bragorra, Quartermaster-Bragorra, Leift. Bragorra, Hospitaller-Bragorra | 3525 | Typically composed of a total of 47 Tastel - one command and one helicopter unit, support staff, and 36 Tastels organized into constituent Ceitern. Artillery assets may be reallocated across the Bragadt when needed by the General-Bragorra, while the Bragadt itself has additional rear-line anti-air functions. Military Police, signals units, and air support operate at this level or higher. Support Tastels outside of Ceiternn are: Bridging Engineering, military police, helicopter support, anti-air, quartermaster supply, ordinance supply, maintenance, signals, field hospital, and rear line engineering. | 1.1 BGT |
Rhon (XX) | Division (XX) | General-Rhonorra, Quartermaster Rhonorra, Leift. Rhonorra. Hospitaller-Rhonorra | 18300 | Typically composed of four Bragadts with several support Catalionn: Command, Quartermaster-supply, Rhon Anti-Air, Medical, MP, Ordinance-supply, Rhon-maintenance, 4 general supply, helicopter support, helicopter transport, and signals. Air units are often attached at this level. | 1st RHN |
Front (#) | Corps (XXX) | General, any lower general rank, typically Bragorra | 39600 + | Composed of two or more Rhon with several support Catalionn: Command, Quartermaster-supply, Rhon Anti-Air, Medical, MP, Ordinance-supply, Rhon-maintenance, two or more general supply, and signals. | |
Army Central Command | Marshal, Quartermaster-General, Hospitaller-General, General-Militant | varies |
All COs are technically considered officers in the Fhainnin rank structure, and non-officers are referred to as Men-at-Arms. Any soldier can theoretically attain the rank of Captaen, though this typically is reserved for officer training school candidates and higher ranks require such training as a prerequisite. Appointments to the ranks of Lft. General and higher almost always require appropriate political leanings and specialized schooling in addition to the demonstrated competence and leadership qualities expected of the upper echelons.
Ranks:
Man-at-Arms, Corporal, Sgiobair-Leiftenant, Sgiobair, Serdeant, Captaen, Leiftenant, Ardcaptaen, Quartermaster-Ceitern, Leiftenant Ceitern, Hospitaller-Ceitern, Leift. General, Quartermaster-Bragorra, Leift. Bragorra, Hospitaller-Bragorra, General-Bragorra, Quartermaster-Rhonorra, Leift. Rhonorra, Hospitaller-Rhonorra, General-Rhonorra, General, Quartermaster-General, Hospitaller-General, Marshal
Tascghrúp
Ghrúpcaptaen
Army Sea Bureau
Going into the second quarter of the century, the composition of the Army naval service is changing as older, larger warships become slightly less prominent compared to a larger force of smaller surface combatants. While the light support carrier doctrine employed by the Army remains a key point in Fhainnin strategy within the ______ Sea and in its littoral waters along the open ocean, budget cuts and the lack of a serious neighboring rival make lobbying for a larger navy a weak political position. Currently, the Army plans to phase out much of its older surface fleet in favor of modern designs. While the total number of heavy surface combatants will drop, a larger array of small vessels is planned. Forays into missile boats in particular are in vogue for white-water operations, though the overall trend in modern naval design is a greater integration of air assets with naval ones, as evidenced by the fact that the vast majority of new designs take landing pads into account compared to older Fhainic designs, many of which lagged behind in this area.
Organization
Inner Sea Fleet
First Squadron:
Second Squadron:
Third Squadron:
Fourth Squadron:
Fifth Squadron:
Outer Sea Fleet
First Squadron:
Second Squadron:
Third Squadron:
Ship Class/Role Designations
Doctrine and Training
Modern Fanerian battlegroup composition segregates tasks into distinct roles for each ship - primarily air defense, mine and antisubmarine warfare, fire support, and capital ships (which further breaks down into dedicated air support, land bombardment, and direct combat roles). Generally, any class of ship can perform multiple roles, but each specializes in a particular field and is expected to operate in that role unless circumstances require otherwise. The army additionally employs separate patrol ships.
Ship design is typically funneled into a single production model, with a great deal of competition between design variants. The design process for lighter Fhainnin vessels also involves prototype construction and testing, and increasingly involves computer simulations as well. The army has displayed gaps in its production lines between ship classes over the years, indicating an ad-hoc design process. It is currently believed that the army is conducting panels to standardize the design process further to create some overlap and ensure regular updates to tne naval service's assets.
Equipment and Assets
Ship Class | Produced | Years Produced | Planned | Sunk | Mothballed | Active | Type | Displacement | Air Compliment | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
SM-1921 | 34 | 1927-1941 | - | 25 | 1 | - | Fire Support Destroyer | 630 tons | - | |
SM-1943 | 19 | 1943-1951 | - | 14 | 2 | - | Fire Support Destroyer | 1,330 tons | - | |
SM-1950 | 4 | 1950-1953 | - | - | 1 | - | Fire Support Frigate | 2,400 tons | - | |
SM-1978 | 14 | 1980-1987 | - | 1 | 6 | 7 | Fire Support Destroyer | 3,798 tons | - | Sovremenny-class destroyer basis |
SM-1995 | 5 | 1995-1999 | - | - | 1 | 2 | Fire Support Destroyer | 4,518 tons | 1 Helicopter or VTOL | 3 sold to Cape in 2003 |
SM-2002 | 4 | 2004-2006 | - | - | - | 4 | Fire Support Destroyer | 3730 tons | 1 Helicopter or VTOL | |
SM-2015 | 10 | 2016-present | 1 | - | - | 10 | Fire Support Destroyer | 3,981 tons | 1 Helicopter or VTOL | |
SM-2019 | 3 | 2020-present | 14 | - | - | 3 | Fire Support Destroyer | 5,136 tons | 1 Helicopter or VTOL | |
STL-1961 | 7 | 1963-1970 | - | - | 3 | - | Air Defense Destroyer | 1435 tons | - | |
STL-1970 | 3 | 1972-1975 | - | - | - | 3 | Air Defense Destroyer/Special | 2365 tons | - | Experimental and research class |
STL-1997 | 14 | 1998-2004 | - | - | - | 14 | Air Defense Destroyer | 3815 tons | 1 Helicopter or VTOL | Kashin-class destroyer basis |
STL-2013 | 11 | 2015-present | 3 | - | - | 11 | Air Defense Destroyer | 3760 tons | 1 Helicopter or VTOL | |
STL-2020 | 1 | 2021-present | 16 | - | - | 1 | Air Defense Destroyer | 3710 tons | 1 Helicopter or VTOL | |
STB-1946 | 6 | 1948-1953 | - | 3 | - | - | Mine Warfare Frigate | 1360 tons | - | |
STB-1981 | 11 | 1982-1999 | - | - | 6 | 1 | Mine Warfare Destroyer | 3,290 tons | - | Udaloy-class destroyer basis |
STB-2001 | 4 | 2001-2006 | - | - | - | 3 | Mine Warfare Destroyer | 3,600 tons | 1 Helicopter or VTOL | 1 gifted to Prevalia in 2006 |
STB-2010 | 6 | 2010-2019 | - | - | - | 6 | Mine Warfare Destroyer | 3,630 tons | 1 Helicopter or VTOL | |
STB-2022 | 0 | planned 2023 | 8 | - | - | - | Mine Warfare Destroyer | 3,925 tons | 1 Helicopter or VTOL | |
SC-1935 | 28 | 1935-1950 | - | 21 | - | - | Patrol and Escort Frigate | 230 tons | - | |
SC-1951 | 30 | 1951-1974 | - | 7 | 4 | - | Patrol and Escort Boat | 457 tons | - | |
SC-1980 | 18 | 1980-1988 | - | 1 | 2 | 12 | Patrol and Escort Corvette | 660 tons | - | |
SC-2004 | 16 | 2004-present | 6 | - | 16 | Patrol and Escort Corvette | 730 tons | - | ||
SC-2020 | 1 | 2020-present | 4 | - | 1 | Patrol and Escort Frigate | 1135 tons | |||
CO-1984 | 3 | 1986-1998 | - | 1 | 2 | Hospital Ship | 8,120 tons | |||
CO-2017 | 1 | 2019-present | 1 | - | 1 | Hospital Ship | 8,980 tons | |||
SE-1967 | 4 | - | 1 | - | - | Missile Boat | 260 tons | - | 3 sold to ______ in 1976 | |
SE-2002-1 | 41 | 2003-present | 3 | - | 2 | 36 | Missile Boat | 430 tons | - | |
SE-2002-2 | 22 | 2006-present | 12 | - | - | 21 | Missile Corvette | 725 tons | - | 1 gifted to Vandarch Canal Garrison |
LB-1922 | 5 | - | - | - | Submarine | - | ||||
LB-1934 | 36 | - | 1 | - | Submarine | - | ||||
LB-1940 | 17 | - | - | - | Submarine | - | ||||
LB-1956 | 1 | 1957 | - | - | - | Submarine | - | Initially 18 planned, others scrapped | ||
LB-1963 | 4 | 1968-1969 | - | - | - | Submarine | - | |||
LB-1978 | 12 | 1980-1991 | - | 2 | 1 | Submarine | - | 6 sold abroad in 1986 | ||
LB-1990 | 19 | 1991-1998 | - | 4 | 15 | Submarine | - | |||
LB-2001 | 16 | 2002-2018 | - | - | 15 | Submarine | - | |||
LB-2018 | 4 | 2018-present | 4 | - | 4 | Submarine | - | |||
CM-1931 | 18 | - | - | - | Line Cruiser | 6695 tons | - | |||
CM-1955 | 2 | - | - | Line Cruiser | 8990 tons | - | ||||
CM-1963 | 1 | - | 1 | - | Line Cruiser | - | ||||
CM-1967 | 4 | - | - | - | Line Cruiser | 9310 tons | 1 Helicopter or VTOL | |||
CM-1988 | 16 | - | 12 | - | Line Cruiser | 9380 tons | 1 Helicopter or VTOL | |||
CM-2002 | 10 | - | 1 | 8 | Line Cruiser | 9255 tons | 1 Helicopter or VTOL | 1 sold abroad in 2019 | ||
CM-2004 | 12 | - | - | 12 | Line Cruiser | 8990 tons | 1 Helicopter or VTOL | |||
CM-2016 | 3 | 6 | - | 3 | Line Cruiser | 11,605 tons | 1 Helicopter or VTOL | |||
CT-1958 | 1 | 1958 | - | - | - | Shore Support | 9,125 tons | - | ||
CT-1987 | 4 | 1990-1996 | - | 1 | 1 | Shore Support | 11,425 tons | 3 Helicopters or VTOLs | 1 sold abroad in 2019 | |
CT-2012 | 3 | 2014-2018 | - | - | 3 | Shore Support | 12,355 tons | 4 Helicopters or VTOLs | ||
LD-1923 | 27 | 1927-1946 | - | - | - | Icebreaker | 19,590 tons | - | ||
LD-1984 | 38 | 1985-2000 | - | 6 | 29 | Icebreaker | 17,805 tons | 1 Helicopter or VTOL | ||
LD-2006 | 9 | 2008-present | 2 | - | 8 | Armed Icebreaker | 25,430 tons | 2 Helicopters or VTOLs | 1 sold to private company in 2019 | |
CS-1925 | 4 | - | 2 | - | - | Battleship | 1 given to Fiannria as war debt, 1 converted to CE-1928. | |||
CS-1936 | 3 | 1937-1942 | - | 1 | 1 | - | Battlecruiser | 1 given to Fiannria as war debt | ||
CS-1966 | 1 | - | - | - | - | Battleship | Used as live fire target for 1014 centennial founding day show | |||
CS-1990 | 3 | - | - | 1 | 1 | Battlecruiser | 22,090 tons | 1 Helicopter or VTOL | 1 sunk as target in livefire test | |
CS-2000 | 3 | - | - | - | 3 | Battlecruiser | 22,680 tons | 1 Helicopter or VTOL, 1 stored | ||
CS-2019 | - | 2019-present | 1 | - | - | - | Battlecruiser | 24,540 tons | 2 Helicopters or VTOLs | |
CE-1928 | 1 | 1929 | - | 1 | - | - | Support Carrier | 14 light fixed wing craft | Experimental conversion carrier. | |
CE-1934 | 7 | 1934-1978 | - | 3 | - | - | Support Carrier | 43,150 tons | STOBAR configuration, 25 light fixed wing craft, 2 Helicopters (later) | 3 given to Fiannria as war debt; 1 built 1978 to restart carrier program |
CE-1980 | 1 | 1981 | - | - | 1 | - | Carrier | 48,650 tons | CATOBAR configuration, 25 fixed wing craft, 3 Helicopters or VTOLs | Proof-of-Concept for CATOBAR and nuclear carrier programs. |
CE-1988 | 1 | - | - | - | 1 | Helicopter Carrier | 21,470 tons | 8 Helicopters or VTOLs | ||
CE-1999 | 1 | - | 1 | Support Carrier | 48,230 tons | STOBAR configuration, 28 fixed wing craft, 4 Helicopters or VTOLs | ||||
CE-2004 | 1 | 2007 | - | - | - | 1 | Carrier | 69,930 tons | STOBAR configuration, 34 fixed wing craft, 10 Helicopters or VTOLs | |
CE-2015 | 1 | 2018-present | 1 | - | - | 1 | Support Carrier | 47,760 tons | STOBAR configuration, 20 fixed wing aircraft, 4 Helicopters or VTOLs |
Ship Name | Class | Roles | Displacement | Air Compliment | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
CR2003-1 'Coscach' | Cruiser | Research Ship | 4375 tons | 1 Helicopter or VTOL | Deep Sea Research Vessel. |
CR2003-2 'Catus' | Cruiser | Research Ship | 4375 tons | 1 Helicopter or VTOL | Environmental Studies Vessel |
CVLM1949-7 'White Stripe' | Light Carrier | Air Power Projection | 43,150 tons | STOBAR configuration, 25 light fixed wing craft, 2 Helicopters or VTOLs | Refits later added Helicopter/VTOL pads and missiles. Built considerably later than others in class to restart air power program. |
CVLN1980-1 'Green Stripe' | Light Carrier | Research Ship | 48,650 tons | CATOBAR configuration, 25 fixed wing craft, 3 Helicopters or VTOLs | Proof-of-Concept for CATOBAR and nuclear carrier programs. |
CVLM1988-1 'Thundershrike' | Light Helicopter Carrier | Air Power Projection | 21,470 tons | 8 Helicopters or VTOLs | |
CVLM1999-1 'Haynead' | Light Carrier | Air Power Projection | 48,230 tons | STOBAR configuration, 28 fixed wing craft, 4 Helicopters or VTOLs | |
CVNM2004-1 'Rhigeralt' | Carrier | Air Power Projection | 58,930 tons | STOBAR configuration, 34 fixed wing craft, 10 Helicopters or VTOLs | Completed late for political reasons and design issues. Refits reduced carrying capacity. |
CVLNM2004-1 'Red Stripe' | Light Carrier | Air Power Projection | 48,810 tons | STOBAR configuration, 28 fixed wing craft, 12 Helicopters or VTOLs | |
BCNM1990-1 'Lann Aengle III' | Battlecruiser | Fire Support | 22,090 tons | n/a | |
BCNM2000-1 'Aengland' | Battlecruiser | Fire Support | 22,680 tons | 1 Helicopter or VTOL | |
BCNM2000-2 'Lann Slawe IV' | Battlecruiser | Fire Support | 22,680 tons | 1 Helicopter or VTOL | |
BCNM2000-3 'Lann Fhainnin II' | Battlecruiser | Fire Support, Flagship | 22,680 tons | 1 Helicopter or VTOL |
List of Ships (Individual, Planned/In Construction)
Potential Name | Class | Roles | Displacement | Air Compliment | Hull Status |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
BCNM-2019-1 'Lann Fedarail' | Battlecruiser | Fire Support | 24,540 tons | 1 Helicopter or VTOL | 2027 (Construction begins 2021) |
CVLNM2015-1 'Monarkh Morya' ('Sea Monarch') | Light Carrier | Air Power Projection | 47,760 tons | STOBAR configuration, 20 fixed wing aircraft, 4 Helicopters or VTOLs | Hull Laid |
CVLNM2015-2 'Obraztsovyy Glavnyy' ('Model Major') | Light Carrier | Air Power Projection | 47,760 tons | STOBAR configuration, 20 fixed wing aircraft, 4 Helicopters or VTOLs | Hull Laid |
Hospital Ship CH2017-1 'Angel's Wings' | Cruiser | Noncombat Support | 28,810 tons | 3 Helicopters or VTOLs | Hull Laid |
List of Ships (Collective)
Rank Structure
Army Air Bureau
Organization
Doctrine and Training
Equipment and Assets
Rank Structure
Army Strategic Bureau
Organization
Equipment and Assets
Major Divisions
Army Logistics Bureau
Organization
Equipment and Assets
Major Divisions
misc.
Naming Conventions for small arms, weapons systems, and ships
SS, CV, CVA, BB, BC, CA, CC, CL, DD, CL, DL, TP, N- (nuclear-powered), M- (missile), C- (conventional)
Additional Ranks - Chaplain, Corps-General, Brigade-General, Division-General, Amry-General, Knight- award prefix, Citizen Militant (conscript)
APC, IFV, MOT, MCH, L-ARM, ARM, H-ARM, AT, SP-AT, AA, SP-AA, R-ART, ART, H-ART, L-ART, SP-ART, SPR-ART, etcetera
CIWS, SAMS (surface-air missile), SSMS, AAMS, IMGS (machine gun)
Common system designation example - L-ART Type 2017/1 = mortar, designed 2017, first variant designed in category that year
example 2 - NM-BC 2001-1 #2 - nuclear-powered, missile-equipped heavy cruiser/battlecruiser designed 2001, second of class
859,124 active, 5,117,866 reserve, 36,881 paramilitary = 6,013,871 total
38.4% of pop in eligible age range, 12.82% of total pop in age range and within service parameters
Gantsgun Heavy Engineering
Ladvner Technical Solutions
Hydrus Arms
Spetsford Shipyards United
Seaplane Carriers
Carrier Conversions
Airships
Submarines
Submarine Carriers