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The Henry IV quarter at the Palace of Fontainebleau) in 1965. Prior to World War II these offices housed the Artillery School.. The command traces its history to Headquarters, Allied Forces Central Europe (AFCENT), which was activated in August 1953 in Fontainebleau, outside Paris, France. [1]. Ensuring interoperability among land forces of the different NATO Member States has always been a ...
AFNORTH International School is a K-12 school that mainly provides service to American, British, Canadian, and German dependents [6] of military personnel assigned to JFC Brunssum, the US Army base in Brunssum, and NATO Air Base in Geilenkirchen, Germany; as well as the former Soesterberg Air Base, Netherlands. Brunssumerheide
Headquarters Allied Force Command Heidelberg (HQ FC Heidelberg) was a Military formation of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) responsible for providing deployable joint staff elements (DJSE) in support of NATO operations worldwide. It was headquartered at Campbell Barracks, Germany, and reported to the Joint Force Command Brunssum ...
Allied Forces Northern Europe, the most northern NATO headquarters from 1952 to 1993 located at Kolsås, Norway; Regional Command Allied Forces North Europe (RC AFNORTH), a headquarters of the NATO command structure located at Brunssum, the Netherlands, from 2000 to 2004, when it was restructured to become the Joint Force Command Brunssum
Allied Forces Central Europe (AFCENT), a former name of Allied Joint Force Command Brunssum, a NATO military command; United States Air Forces Central (USAFCENT or informally just AFCENT), formerly named United States Central Command Air Forces
The Allied Command Operations (ACO) is one of the two strategic commands of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), the other being Allied Command Transformation (ACT). The headquarters and commander of ACO is Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe (SHAPE) and Supreme Allied Commander Europe (SACEUR), respectively.
In deploying more than 6,000 soldiers and 2,500 vehicles by land, air and sea from Central Europe to Norway, the Corps clearly illustrated the progress made during the NATO Response Force standby period and made a real contribution towards the continual development of the NATO Response Force Full Operational Capability.
In the meantime, the military-political situation had changed fundamentally. After a change in the NATO command structure, the bunker initially seemed superfluous and was "on ice" for a long time. It was not until 1998 that the facility was "rediscovered" and its necessity for the NATO command staff in Brunssum was established.