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Bangladesh Armed Forces: Cira unnata mama śira (Bengali for "Ever High is My Head") . Bengali Army: Samarē āmarā śāntitē āmarā sarbatra āmarā dēśēra tarē (Bengali for "In War, In Peace We are Everywhere for our Country")
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 28 February 2025. Land warfare branch of the Bangladesh Armed Forces Bangladesh Army বাংলাদেশ সেনাবাহিনী Insignia of the Bangladesh Army Founded 26 March 1971 (53 years, 11 months) Country Bangladesh Type Army Role Land warfare Size 160,000 troops 13,408 civilians Part ...
On 21 November 1971, the Bangladesh Forces was divided into three separate services as Bangladesh Army, Bangladesh Navy and Bangladesh Air Force. The Bangladesh Forces received modest assistance from the Indian Government soon after the start of the war, On 3 December 1971, the India-Pakistan war broke out and Indian troops entered Bangladesh ...
The Bangladesh Infantry Regiment (BIR) is an infantry regiment of the Bangladesh Army. It was raised in 2001 as the second infantry regiment after the East Bengal Regiment . [ 1 ] The regiment was raised initially by renaming some battalions of the East Bengal Regiment , before its own recruits were trained. [ 2 ]
Flag of the Bangladesh Army. The Bangladesh Army is commanded by the Chief of Army Staff who is a four star general and chief administrative officer at Army Headquarters. Under the command of army headquarters, Bangladesh Army has 1 training command, 1 logistics command and 10 area commands consigned with their coequal divisions.
Under the division, there are 3 infantry brigades, 8 infantry regiments, 1 artillery brigade, 3 artillery regiments and 7 other various units. [ 5 ] [ 6 ] [ 7 ] Major general A. S. M. Ridwanur Rahman is the current commander of the division.
The Bangladesh Air Force has set up an advanced training unit named 105 Advance Jet Training Unit which is a dedicated fighter pilot training unit of BAF. The unit consists of three training squadrons which will provide advanced training to the pilots selected for operating the fighter jets. [26]
The Army Corps of Clerks (ACC) of the Bangladesh Army is meant to provide military clerks and stenographers to the staff branch of formation headquarters, station headquarters, all Army Schools of Instruction and Colleges (including the Staff College and the Bangladesh Military Academy) and the Bangladesh Military attaches abroad and to certain specified appointments in Army Headquarters and ...