The
Chief of Army is the most senior appointment in the
Australian Army, responsible to both the
Chief of the Defence Force (CDF) and the
Secretary of Defence (SECDEF). The rank associated with the position is
Lieutenant General (
3-star).
History
The first Commander of the Australian Army was titled General Officer Commanding, Australian Military Forces, in line with the usual British practice of the time. Experience soon showed that the position concentrated more power than the
Ministers for Defence—of whom there were twelve in as many years in 1901–1913—liked. Moreover, the
British Army had encountered administrative problems in the
Second Boer War which led to the abolition of the position of
Commander-in-Chief of the Forces there in 1904, and its replacement by an
Army Board.
In 1904, Minister for Defence
Anderson Dawson commissioned a report which recommended a similar system for Australia, with a Military Board consisting of four military members, the minister, and a finance member. This was implemented by his successor,
James Whiteside McCay. However instead of creating a Chief of the General Staff as per the report, McCay's Military Board consisted of only three military members, the Deputy Adjutant General, the Chief of Ordnance, and the Chief of Intelligence. The post of Chief of the General Staff was finally created by the new Minister of Defence,
George Pearce, in...
Read More