Armed Forces of the Republic of the Congo | |
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Forces Armées de la République du Congo | |
Flag of the Republic of the Congo
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Founded | August 15, 1960 |
Current form | January 16, 1961 |
Service branches | Army Air Force Marine (Navy) Gendarmerie |
Headquarters | Brazzaville |
Leadership | |
President | Denis Sassou Nguesso |
Minister of National Defense | Charles Richard Mondjo |
Chief of General Staff | Guy Blanchard Okoï |
Manpower | |
Military age | 20 |
Active personnel | 10,000 (2014) |
Expenditures | |
Budget | $705 million (2015) |
Percent of GDP | 8.4% (2015) |
Industry | |
Domestic suppliers | None |
The Armed Forces of the Republic of the Congo (French: Forces armées de la République du Congo), also less formally denoted as the Forces armées congolaises or its acronym FAC, are the military forces of the Republic of the Congo. They consist of the Congolese Army, the Congolese Air Force, and the Congolese Marine (Navy). The dissolution of French Equatorial Africa in 1958, and France's impending military withdrawal from the Congo in August 1960, provided the impetuous for the formation of the FAC. The FAC and state paramilitary agencies are headed by an Armed Forces Chief of General Staff, usually appointed by the President of the Republic of the Congo. Major General Guy Blanchard Okoï has served as chief of staff since 2012.
The Congolese military was created on January 16, 1961, and reflected the nature of the colonial security forces, which recruited among the country's northern ethnic groups and were staffed by junior Bakongo officers and a handful of French senior commissioned officers. President Alphonse Massamba-Débat, who seized power in 1963, expelled all the French personnel and sidelined the military in favor of independent political militias, which were trained by Cuban troops. The militias and the Congo's civil defense corps were later integrated with the FAC as the Armée Nationale Populaire.
Under the People's Republic of the Congo, the FAC was again reorganized, with Mbochi career soldiers making up the bulk of the new officer corps; its effectiveness and standards, however, were gradually eroded by draconian political purges throughout the 1970s. A second major setback occurred during the 1990s, when mass desertions led to many FAC officers and enlisted troops joining regional militias. The FAC was reformed for the third time after the Second Congo War, incorporating many former rebels and militia combatants.