Antoine Lecerf

Antoine Lecerf (1950 - April 22, 2011) was a French général de corps d’armée.[1]


Antoine Lecerf
Born1950
France
DiedApril 22, 2011
Allegiance France
Service/branchFrench Army
French Foreign Legion
Years of service1972 - 2010
RankGénéral de corps d'armée
Commands held2nd Foreign Infantry Regiment
2e REI
Commandement des Forces Terrestres
CFT
Battles/warsLebanese Civil War
Opération Épervier
Gulf War
Opération Licorne

Military career

On September 1972, Antoine was admitted at École spéciale militaire de Saint-Cyr. He underwent two years and was part of the de Linares promotion. Following his commission, he chose the infantry and pursued formation at the École de l'infanterie (French: école de l'infanterie) at Montpellier. In September 1975, he joined the 2nd Foreign Regiment 2e RE at Corte-Bonifacio as a section platoon chief (French: chef de section), then was assigned to the 3rd Foreign Infantry Regiment 3e REI at Kourou (Guyana).

On August 1978, the joined the 2nd Foreign Regiment 2e RE at Corte-Bonifacio, where he was assigned as the assistant (French: adjoint) to the commandant of the unit, he commanded the 6th company and participated to the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (French: force intérimaire des Nations unies au Liban) in Beirut, from May to June 1983. Upon returning from Lebanon, he was assigned at Lille to occupy the functions of aide de camp of the general commandant of the 2nd Military Region, commandant of the 3rd Army Corps (French: 3e Corps d’Armée).

In June 1985, he was designated as a candidate at the Command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth (United States - U.S.) before being admitted in June 1987 at the Superior War School (French: l’école supérieure de guerre) in Paris in quality as a candidate of the 101st promotion.

In June 1989, he rejoined, as an instructor chief operations bureau, the 2nd Foreign Infantry Regiment at Nimes and participated from October 1989 to February 1990 to the Land detachment "Épervier (French: Épervier) in Tchad, the operation "Requin" in Gabon from May to June 1990 before assuming the deputy command functions of the regiment.

He participated, from September 1990 to March 1991 to Opération Daguet in Saudi Arabia then was assigned to the cabinet of the minister of defense at Paris in quality of a chief of the Land cell. In July 1994, he commanded the 2nd Foreign Infantry Regiment. He commanded from August to September the detachment of French elements of operational assistance in Central African Republic and was detached from June to November 1995 to Bosnia-Herzegovina (French: Bosnie-Herzégovine) within the cadre of the rapid reaction force as commander of the French Inter-arm Battalion of the Multinational Brigade (French: Bataillon Interarmes Français de la Brigade Multinationale). From May to July 1996, he commanded again the detachment of French elements of operational assistance in Central African Republic and participated to operation "Alamandin II". In July, he joined inter-arm defense college at Paris as a professor.

He was auditor (French: auditeur) of the 50th session of the Institute of High Studies and National Defense (French: l’institut des hautes études de défense nationale) in 1997 then was a chargé mission at inter-arm general staff headquarters for operational planning on July 1998. Two years later, he was assigned to the Commandement des Forces Terrestres as plans division chief. In August 2002, he assumed the functions of division chief "emploi" at the general staff headquarters of the Armies at Paris.

In August 2004, he was designated as commandant of general staff headquarters of Force n° 4 (French: état-major de force n° 4). He then commanded, French forces engaged in Opération Licorne (French: opération Licorne) in Ivory Coast from June 15, 2006 until July 9, 2007. He received on September 15, 2007, the commandment of Land Action Force which became the Commandement des Forces Terrestres in June 2008.

He left the head of the Commandement des Forces Terrestres on July 16, 2010 and bid farewell to the arms.

He passed away on April 22, 2011.

Recognitions and Honors

gollark: I mean, are there not decent economy plugins for servers already?
gollark: What shouldn't be?
gollark: The main advantage for CC use is just that HTTP can't be intercepted by other computers.
gollark: It is also very possible to completely mess up the security of web things, so try not to do that.
gollark: You have a webserver providing a web API allowing... banking operations? Lua code running in CC uses the `http` API to interact with that webserver.

See also

References

  1. Une légende est partie (A legend has faded away), Jean-Marc Tanguy, April 24, 2011

Sources

  • Répertoire des chefs de corps
  • Centre de documentation de la Légion étrangère
  • Répertoire des citations (BCAAM)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.