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Portuguese military

Portuguese Armed Forces
Forças Armadas
Military flag of Portugal.svg
Portuguese military colors
Founded 12th century
Current form 1950
Service branches Portuguese Army HeraldyMini.png Portuguese Army
Portuguese Navy Heraldry Mini.png Portuguese Navy
Portuguese Air Force Heraldry.png Portuguese Air Force
Headquarters EMGFA
Leadership
Supreme Commander Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa
Minister of National Defense Azeredo Lopes
Chief of the General Staff Artur Pina Monteiro
Manpower
Available for
military service
2,566,264 males, age 18–35 (2010),
2,458,297 females, age 18–35 (2010)
Fit for
military service
2,103,080 males, age 18–35 (2010),
2,018,004 females, age 18–35 (2010)
Reaching military
age annually
62,208 males (2010),
54,786 females (2010)
Active personnel 32,992 (88% males, 12% females) (2016)
Deployed personnel 600
Expenditures
Budget €2.1 billion (2014)
Percent of GDP 1.1% (2014)
Industry
Foreign suppliers  Austria
 Belgium
 Canada
 Finland
 France
 Germany
 Israel
 Italy
 Japan
 Netherlands
 South Africa
 Sweden
  Switzerland
 United Kingdom
 United States
Related articles
History Military history of Portugal
Ranks Military ranks of Portugal

The Portuguese Armed Forces (Portuguese: Forças Armadas) are the military of Portugal. They include the General Staff of the Armed Forces, the other unified bodies and the three service branches: Portuguese Navy, Portuguese Army and Portuguese Air Force.

The President of the Republic is the head of the Portuguese military, with the title of "Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces" (Comandante Supremo das Forças Armadas). The management of the Armed Forces and the execution of the national defense policy is however done by the government via its Minister of National Defense. The highest-ranking officer in the military is the Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces, which has operational control of the Armed Forces during peacetime and assumes their full control when a state of war exists.

The Armed Forces are charged with protecting Portugal as well as supporting international peacekeeping efforts when mandated by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, the United Nations and/or the European Union.

Portugal was ranked the 5th most peaceful country in the World in the Global Peace Index 2016, presently not having significant national security issues. The Portuguese Armed Forces have been thus focused in non military public service activities and in external military operations. Recent external operations include anti-piracy action in the Gulf of Aden, the conflicts in the Central African Republic and in the Afghanistan, the peacekeeping missions in East-Timor, Lebanon, Kosovo and Bosnia-Herzegovina, and the air policing of Iceland and the Baltic States.


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