McG
Army.ca Legend
- Reaction score
- 5,271
- Points
- 1,260
Well, there are a several US Army numbered Special Forces Groups, and a few USAF numbered Special Operations Groups. The US Army also previously had many support groups (Corps Support Groups, Area Support Groups, and Region Support Groups), but most of those were upgraded to sustainment brigades over the last dozen years. There are the numbered CDSGs in Canada today, and the last time Canada had division level doctrine the divisional Engineers, CSS, and HSS were each organized into groups. Much like the Light Infantry Group being proposed today, a group in 1989 would not have had an integral Svc Bn for its own second line requirements -> the Log Bn & Maint Bn of the DISGP provided that support for units of groups within the division.Sorry @McG im trying to find an example of a "group" outside of the previously mentioned Canadian ones. Certainly army groups exist, or have existed, but im struggling to find any other examples. Can you point me to the NATO, or Canadian, doctrine source for a group?
"Army Group" is a uniquely defined term completely unrelated to any other meanings of "Group" in doctrine. NATO doctrine has been using "Group" and "Regiment" as far back as I have access to, and I have seen similar US documentation supporting this usage going back even farther. The Birtish don't recognize that level of heirarchy, and non-English nations either use "Regiment" a word that bears no similarity to either Regiment or Group (Pulk/Polk is common in the east).
NATO Doctrine in 1986:

NATO doctine updated in 1998:

And continued to the 2023:

Since 2008 Canada has been providing this table to NATO as how we describe ourselves, and since 2011 all NATO nations have accepted the explanatory notes associated with each level as shown on the right:

... I am surprised that we have gotten away with an English only submission given that the tables are submitted in a nation's native language and the Belgians have theirs in bilingual format.
Last edited:

