Supreme Allied Commander Europe

The Supreme Allied Commander Europe (SACEUR) is the commander of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's (NATO) Allied Command Operations (ACO) and head of ACO's headquarters, Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe (SHAPE). The commander is based at SHAPE in Casteau, Belgium. Effectively SACEUR is the second-highest military position within NATO, below only the Chair of the NATO Military Committee in terms of precedence.[2] There is another Supreme Allied Commander in NATO, Supreme Allied Commander Transformation (SACT), titularly equal, but their duties are less important. SACT, in Norfolk, Virginia, has responsibility for capability development, rather than operations.

Supreme Allied Commander Europe
SHAPE coat of arms
Standard
Incumbent
General Christopher G. Cavoli
since 4 July 2022[1]
North Atlantic Treaty Organization
Allied Command Operations (Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe)
AbbreviationSACEUR
Reports toNorth Atlantic Council,
through NATO Military Committee
ResidenceChateau Gendebien
SeatCasteau, Mons, Belgium
NominatorPresident of the United States,
with Senate advice and consent
AppointerNorth Atlantic Council
Formation2 April 1951
First holderGeneral of the Army
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Websiteshape.nato.int

SACEUR has always been held by a U.S. military officer, and the position is dual-hatted with that of Commander of United States European Command.

The current SACEUR is General Christopher G. Cavoli of the United States Army.

List of holders

Gen. Eisenhower in front of the flag of SHAPE on 8 October 1951
2013 SACEUR change of command at SHAPE

Since 2003 the Supreme Allied Commander Europe (SACEUR) has also served as the head of Allied Command Europe and the head of Allied Command Operations.The officeholders have been:[3]

No.PortraitSupreme Allied CommanderTook officeLeft officeTime in officeDefence branch
1Eisenhower, DwightGeneral of the Army
Dwight D. Eisenhower
(1890–1969)
2 April 195130 May 19521 year, 58 days  United States Army
2Ridgway, MatthewGeneral
Matthew Ridgway
(1895–1993)
30 May 195211 July 19531 year, 42 days  United States Army
3Gruenther, AlfredGeneral
Alfred Gruenther
(1899–1983)
11 July 195320 November 19563 years, 132 days  United States Army
4Norstad, LaurisGeneral
Lauris Norstad
(1907–1988)
20 November 19561 January 19636 years, 42 days  United States Air Force
5Lemnitzer, LymanGeneral
Lyman Lemnitzer
(1899–1988)
1 January 19631 July 19696 years, 181 days  United States Army
6Goodpaster, AndrewGeneral
Andrew Goodpaster
(1915–2005)
1 July 196915 December 19745 years, 167 days  United States Army
7Haig, AlexanderGeneral
Alexander M. Haig Jr.
(1924–2010)
15 December 19741 July 19794 years, 198 days  United States Army
8Rogers, BernardGeneral
Bernard W. Rogers
(1921–2008)
1 July 197926 June 19877 years, 360 days  United States Army
9Galvin, JohnGeneral
John Galvin
(1929–2015)
26 June 198723 June 19924 years, 363 days  United States Army
10Shalikashvili, JohnGeneral
John Shalikashvili
(1936–2011)
23 June 199222 October 19931 year, 121 days  United States Army
11Joulwan, GeorgeGeneral
George Joulwan
(born 1939)
22 October 199311 July 19973 years, 262 days  United States Army
12Clark, WesleyGeneral
Wesley Clark
(born 1944)
11 July 19973 May 20002 years, 297 days  United States Army
13Ralston, JosephGeneral
Joseph Ralston
(born 1943)
3 May 200017 January 20032 years, 259 days  United States Air Force
14Jones, JamesGeneral
James L. Jones
(born 1943)
17 January 20037 December 20063 years, 324 days  United States Marine Corps
15Craddock, BantzGeneral
Bantz J. Craddock
(born 1949)
7 December 20062 July 20092 years, 207 days  United States Army
16Stavridis, JamesAdmiral
James G. Stavridis
(born 1955)
2 July 200913 May 20133 years, 315 days  United States Navy
17Breedlove, PhilipGeneral
Philip M. Breedlove
(born 1955)
13 May 20134 May 20162 years, 357 days  United States Air Force
18Scaparrotti, CurtisGeneral
Curtis Scaparrotti
(born 1956)
4 May 20163 May 20192 years, 364 days  United States Army
19Wolters, Tod D.General
Tod D. Wolters
(born 1960)
3 May 20194 July 20223 years, 62 days  United States Air Force
20Cavoli, Christopher G.General
Christopher G. Cavoli
(born c. 1965)
4 July 2022Incumbent1 year, 297 days  United States Army

Deputy

The position of Deputy Supreme Allied Command Europe (DSACEUR) has been known as Deputy Head of Allied Command Operations since 2003. From January 1978 until June 1993 there were two DSACEURs, one British and one German. From July 1993 this reverted to a single DSACEUR. With a small number of exceptions who were German military officers, DSACEUR is normally a British military officer. The officeholders have been as follows:

No.PortraitDeputy Supreme Allied CommanderStart of termEnd of termBranchUnit of Commission
1. Field Marshal

The Viscount Montgomery of Alamein, KG GCB DSO PC DL

2 April 195123 September 1958  British ArmyRoyal Warwickshire Regiment
2. General

Sir Richard Gale, GCB KBE DSO MC

23 September 195822 September 1960  British ArmyWorcestershire Regiment
3. General

Sir Hugh Stockwell, GCB KBE DSO*

22 September 19601 January 1964  British ArmyRoyal Welch Fusiliers
4. Marshal of the Royal Air Force

Sir Thomas Pike, GCB CBE DFC* DL

1 January 19641 March 1967 Royal Air ForceN/A
5. General

Sir Robert Bray, GCB KBE DSO*

1 March 19671 December 1970  British ArmyDuke of Wellington's (West Riding) Regiment
6.General

Sir Desmond Fitzpatrick, GCB GCVO DSO MBE MC

1 December 197012 November 1973  British Army1st The Royal Dragoons
7. General

Sir John Mogg, GCB CBE DSO*

12 November 197312 March 1976  British ArmyOxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry
8.General

Sir Harry Tuzo, GCB OBE MC DL

12 March 19762 November 1978  British ArmyRoyal Artillery
9.General

Gerd Schmückle

3 January 19781 April 1980 German Army-
10.General

Sir Jack Harman, GCB OBE MC

2 November 19789 April 1981  British Army2nd Dragoon Guards (Queen's Bays)
11. Admiral

Günter Luther

1 April 19801 April 1982 German NavyNaval aviation
12.Air Chief Marshal

Sir Peter Terry, GCB AFC

9 April 198116 July 1984 Royal Air ForceRoyal Air Force Regiment (anti-aircraft artillery)
13. General

Günter Kießling

1 April 19822 April 1984 German Army-
14.General

Hans-Joachim Mack

2 April 19841 October 1987 German ArmyBundesgrenzschutz
15.General

Sir Edward Burgess, KCB OBE

16 July 198426 June 1987  British ArmyRoyal Artillery
16.General

Sir John Akehurst, KCB CBE

26 June 198717 January 1990  British ArmyNorthamptonshire Regiment
17.General

Eberhard Eimler

1 October 19872 October 1990 German Air ForceN/A
18.General

Sir Brian Kenny, GCB CBE

17 January 19905 April 1993  British Army4th Queen's Own Hussars
19.General

Dieter Clauss

2 October 19901 July 1993 German Army-
20.General

Sir John Waters, GCB CBE

5 April 199312 December 1994  British ArmyGloucestershire Regiment
21.General

Sir Jeremy Mackenzie, GCB OBE DL

12 December 199430 November 1998  British ArmyQueen's Own Highlanders
22.General

Sir Rupert Smith, KCB DSO* OBE QGM

30 November 199817 September 2001  British ArmyParachute Regiment
23. General

Dieter Stöckmann

17 September 200118 September 2002 German ArmyPanzergrenadier
24.Admiral

Rainer Feist

18 September 20021 October 2004 German NavyN/A
25. General

Sir John Reith, KCB CBE

1 October 200422 October 2007  British ArmyParachute Regiment
26. General

Sir John McColl, KCB CBE DSO KStJ

22 October 2007March 2011  British ArmyRoyal Anglian Regiment
27. General

Sir Richard Shirreff, KCB CBE

March 2011March 2014  British Army14th/20th King's Hussars
28. General

Sir Adrian Bradshaw, KCB OBE

March 2014March 2017  British Army14th/20th King's Hussars
29. General

Sir James Everard, KCB CBE

March 2017April 2020  British Army17th/21st Lancers
30. General

Sir Tim Radford, KCB DSO OBE

April 2020July 2023  British ArmyThe Light Infantry
31. Admiral

Sir Keith Blount, KCB OBE FRAeS

July 2023Incumbent  Royal NavyFleet Air Arm

Role in intra-European defence integration

DSACEUR's role in European Union missions

Under the 2002 Berlin Plus agreement, SHAPE may take part in the European Union's (EU) command and control structure as an operational headquarters (OHQ) for EU missions. In such an instance, the Deputy Supreme Allied Commander Europe (DSACEUR), who is always a European, would serve as Operation Commander (OpCdr). This use of SHAPE by the EU is subject to a "right of first refusal", i.e. NATO must first decline to intervene in a given crisis,[4][5] and is contingent upon unanimous approval among NATO states, including those outside of the EU.[6]

See also

References

External links