Adjutant
An
adjutant (from the
Latin adiutans, present participle of the verb
adiutare, "to help"; the Romans actually used
adiutor for the noun) is an
officer who assists a more senior officer.
In various uniformed hierarchies, the term is used for number of functions, but generally as a principal aide to a commanding officer.
A
Regimental Adjutant,
Garrison Adjutant etc. is a staff officer, who assists the
commanding officer of a
regiment,
battalion or
garrison in the details of regimental, garrison or similar duty. In
United States Army squadrons, the adjutant is often the officer-in-charge (OIC) of the administrative platoon.
In the
British Army, the
Adjutant (Adj; sometimes actually referred to as this) is usually a senior
captain (sometimes a
major). As the colonel's personal staff officer, he was once in charge of all the organisation, administration and discipline for a
battalion or
regiment, although now the bulk of administrative work is carried out by the
Regimental Administrative Officer (RAO). Until the 1970s the adjutant was also the regimental operations officer, although this job is now filled by a separate officer. Unlike the RAO (who is an officer of the
Adjutant General's Corps), the adjutant is a member of the
corps or regiment of which their unit is a part. The adjutant's job is not solely a 'backroom' one, since he usually accompanies the colonel - Captain David Wood, the adjutant of
2 Para, was killed in action at the
Battle of Goose Green, for example.
In the
US Army, the Adjutant will generally also be a member of the branch or regiment of the parent unit (i.e. in an infantry battalion, the adjutant will usually be an infantry officer). The Adjutant at the battalion-level is generally a junior
captain or senior
first lieutenant and, in conjunction with the S-1 section, manages the administrative functions of the unit. The adjutant, particularly in a battalion, also works closely with the unit's
command sergeant major for awards ceremonies, traditional ceremonial functions, casual events (hails and farewells), evaluation reports, and management of correspondence and other secretarial functions. At the brigade-level, an adjutant will be either a captain or a
major and will likely be a member of the
Adjutant General's Corps). Above the brigade level, the officer in charge of the personnel section of the element is is no longer called an adjutant. At any level, the adjutant no longer serves as the commander's personal assistant, but more as a functioning member of the staff managed by the
executive officer.
There is a
bugle call announcing the adjutant that is still used in military ceremonies today.
An
Adjutant General is one of two things:
*the principal staff officer of an army, through whom the commanding general receives communications and issues military orders. or
*A State's commander of the
United States National GuardSubedar Adjutant (
SA) is a position unique to the Indian Army. He is a
Subedar who acts as deputy to the Adjutant. On all formal parades, the standard procedure is for the
Company Havildar Major to first report to the Subedar Adjutant, and the Subedar Adjutant in turn to report to the Adjutant. In the
British Indian Army, the equivalent position was the
Jemadar Adjutant, who held the lower rank of
Jemadar.
In some armies,
Adjudant (Adjutant) is a grade of
Warrant Officer. In the
French Army, the warrant officer ranks are
Adjudant,
Adjudant-Chef and
Major. In the
Belgian Army and
Luxembourg Army, the ranks are
Adjudant,
Adjudant-Chef and
Adjudant-Major (or
Adjudant-Majoor in
Dutch). In Dutch, they are collectively known as
Keuronderofficier ("elite NCOs").
Adjudant-Onderofficier is the only grade of warrant officer in the
Royal Netherlands Army.
In the
Canadian Army and
Canadian Air Force,
Adjudant is the
French form of the
English "Warrant Officer", and as such can refer to both the cadre of
Warrant Officers, and the specific ranks of
Adjudant (
Warrant Officer),
Adjudant-maƮtre (
Master Warrant Officer), and
Adjudant-chef (
Chief Warrant Officer).
In
zoology, an
adjutant is a very large species of
stork (
Ciconia argala, after the native name "argala"), a native of
India, also called the
gigantic crane. It feeds on
carrion and
offal, and is also known for killing
snakes.