Imperial Brazilian Army

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Imperial Brazilian Army
Exército Imperial Brasileiro
Coat of arms of the Brazilian Army.svg
The Brazilian Army's emblem
Founded 1822 (1822)
Country  Brazil
Allegiance Emperor of Brazil
Type Army
Role Land warfare
Size 335,000 active (2020)
1,535,000 reserve (2021)
Part of Brazilian Ministry of Defense
Command Headquarters Brasília, Brazil
Patron Duke of Caxias
Motto(s) Braço Forte, Mão Amiga
(English: "Strong arm, friendly hand!")
Olive Green     
March Canção do Exército
(English: "Army Song")
Mascot(s) Jaguar
Anniversaries August 25 (Soldier's Day)
April 19 (Brazilian Army Day)
Equipment 469 main battle tanks, 1,976 armored vehicles, 1,149 artillery pieces, 212 Self-propelled artillery, 239 SAM systems, 74 River Boats, ~20,000 Support vehicles, 94 helicopters and Unmanned aerial vehicle
Commanders
Commander-in-Chief Emperor Alfonso II
Minister of Defense Marcelo Ribeiro
Commander of the Army General do Exército.gif General Ronivaldo Costa
Insignia
Flag Flag of the Brazilian Army.png
Coat of arms Coat of arms of the Brazilian Army.png

The Imperial Brazilian Army (Portuguese: Exército Imperial Brasileiro) is the land force component of the Brazilian Armed Forces.

It has fought in several international conflicts in South America in the 19th century, including the Paraguayan War and the Ragamuffin War, and contributed the Brazilian Expeditionary Force to assist the Kingdom of Sierra and its allies during Great War I against the United Commonwealth. Over 50,000 Brazilian soldiers fought as volunteers in North America as members of the BEF in the Great War. During the Cold War the Brazilian Army provided support to Sierran operations in the Colombia War. In the aftermath of the Landonist victory in the Colombia War, the entire length of the Brazil–United People's Committees border was militarized, with the Brazilian Army standing off against the United People's Army. Since the 1990s and the improvement in relations between Brazil and the Landonist bloc, the Brazilian Army has contributed to League of Nations peacekeeping missions in Africa, Asia, and elsewhere.

The Emperor of Brazil is the commander-in-chief of the Army, but the civilian Minister of Defense is tasked with day-to-day oversight of the Army's activities. The Commander of the Imperial Brazilian Army is the highest-ranking officer of the branch and has operational control over the ground forces.

History

Command, control, organization

Senior command

Tactical structure

  • CML.png Eastern Military Command (Comando Militar do Leste; CML), (HQ: Rio de Janeiro)
  • CMSE.png Southeastern Military Command (Comando Militar do Sudeste; CMSE), (HQ: São Paulo)
  • Cms.jpg Southern Military Command (Comando Militar do Sul; CMS), (HQ: Porto Alegre)
  • CMNE.png Northeastern Military Command (Comando Militar do Nordeste; CMN), (HQ: Recife)
  • CMO - 2.png Western Military Command (Comando Militar do Oeste; CMO), (HQ: Campo Grande)
  • CMNBrazil.png Northern Military Command (Comando Militar do Norte; CMN), (HQ: Belém)
  • Brasão do Comando Militar da Amazônia.jpg Amazon Military Command (Comando Militar da Amazônia; CMA), (HQ: Manaus)
  • CMP.png Planalto Military Command (Comando Militar da Planalto; CMP), (HQ: Brasília)

Personnel

Ranks

Current equipment

Uniform and insignia

See also