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United States Northern Command
Unified combatant command of the United States Armed Forces
Unified combatant command of the United States Armed Forces
| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| unit_name | United States Northern Command | |
| image | Seal of the United States Northern Command.svg | |
| image_size | 210 | |
| start_date | 1 October 2002 | |
| ( ago) | ||
| country | United States | |
| type | Unified combatant command | |
| role | Geographic combatant command | |
| command_structure | United States Department of Defense | |
| garrison | Peterson Space Force Base, Colorado Springs, Colorado, U.S. | |
| garrison_label | Headquarters | |
| motto | "We have the watch" | |
| decorations | [[File:Streamer JMUA.PNG | 200px]] |
| Joint Meritorious Unit Award | ||
| website | ||
| <!-- Commanders --> | commander1 | General Gregory M. Guillot, USAF |
| commander1_label | Commander | |
| commander2 | Lieutenant General Thomas Carden Jr., USA | |
| commander2_label | Deputy Commander | |
| commander3 | CMSgt John G. Storms, USAF | |
| commander3_label | Senior Enlisted Leader | |
| notable_commanders | ||
| identification_symbol | [[File:NATO Map Symbol - Unit Size - Region or Front.svg | 100px]] |
| [[File:Military Symbol - Friendly Unit (Solid Light 1.5x1 Frame)- AA - Northern Command (FM 1-02, 2004 September 21).svg | 100px]] | |
| identification_symbol_label | NATO Map Symbol |
a Unified Combatant Command of the U.S. Armed Forces
( ago) Joint Meritorious Unit Award
The United States Northern Command (USNORTHCOM) is one of eleven unified combatant commands of the United States Department of Defense. The command is tasked with providing military support for non-military authorities in the U.S., and protecting the territory and national interests of the United States within the continental United States, Puerto Rico, Canada, Mexico, The Bahamas, Greenland (Denmark) and the air, land and sea approaches to these areas. It is the U.S. military command which, if applicable, would be the primary defender against an invasion of the U.S.
USNORTHCOM was created on 25 April 2002 when President George W. Bush approved a new Unified Command Plan, following the September 11 attacks. USNORTHCOM went operational on 1 October 2002.
Creation
USNORTHCOM was established on 25 April 2002 when President George W. Bush approved a new Unified Command Plan, and attained initial operating capability on 1 October 2002.
Mission
According to the UCP, Northern Command's mission is to:
- Conduct operations to deter, prevent, and defeat threats and aggression aimed at the United States, its territories, and interests within the assigned area of responsibility and,
- As directed by the President or Secretary of Defense provide military assistance to non-military authorities including consequence management operations
Area of responsibility
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USNORTHCOM's Area of Responsibility (AOR) includes air, land and sea approaches and encompasses the continental United States, Canada, Mexico and the surrounding water out to approximately 500 nmi. It also includes the Gulf of Mexico, the Straits of Florida, portions of the Caribbean region to include The Bahamas, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the British Virgin Islands, Bermuda, and the Turks and Caicos Islands. The commander of USNORTHCOM is responsible for theater security cooperation with Canada, Mexico, and The Bahamas. In May 2011, NORTHCOM was mobilized in the wake of the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico to provide air, ground, and logistical support. In October 2014, NORTHCOM took administrative control of Alaskan Command. In June 2025, the area of responsibility of Greenland (Denmark) was shifted from USEUCOM to USNORTHCOM.
Organizational structure
Headquarters
.jpg)
Commander, U.S. Northern Command is concurrently Commander of the U.S.-Canadian North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD). The two are co-located at Peterson Space Force Base in Colorado Springs, Colorado. General Ralph Eberhart was the first CDRUSNORTHCOM.
USNORTHCOM headquarters has approximately 1,200 uniformed and civilian staff. In its first period of organising in 2002–03, one priority was to hire civilian staff which could help respond to a Weapons of Mass Destruction attack and to coordinate disaster recovery.
Component commands
| Emblem | Command | Acronym | Commander | Established | Headquarters | Subordinate Commands | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [[File:United_States_Army_North_CSIB.svg | 75px]] | ARNORTH | Lt General Allan Pepin | JBSA-Fort Sam Houston, Texas | ||||
| [[File:Marine Corps Forces Northern Command.jpg | 75px]] | MARFORNORTH | Lt General Roberta L. Shea | Naval Station Norfolk, Virginia | ||||
| [[File:Seal_of_the_Commander_of_the_United_States_Fleet_Forces_Command.svg | 75px]] | NAVNORTH | Admiral Karl O. Thomas | Naval Support Activity Hampton Roads, Virginia | ||||
| [[File:1st_Air_Force.png | 75px]] [[File:ConrAfnorthAfspace.jpg | 75px]] | 1 AF (AFNORTH) | Lt Gen M. Luke Ahmann | Tyndall Air Force Base, Florida | |||
| [[File:US Space Forces Northern.png | thumb | 113x113px]] | United States Space Forces Northern |
Subordinate unified commands
| Emblem | Command | Acronym | Commander | Established | Headquarters | Subordinate Commands | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [[File:Alaskan Command Logo.svg | 75px]] | Alaskan Command | ALCOM | Lt General Case Cunningham, USAF | Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska | ||
| [[File:SOCNORTH Emblem.jpg | 75px]] | Special Operations Command North | SOCNORTH | Colonel Matthew P. Tucker, USA | Peterson Space Force Base, Colorado |
Standing joint task force
| Emblem | Command | Acronym | Commander | Established | Headquarters | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [[File:JointForceHeadquartersNationalCapitalRegionLogo.jpg | 75px]] | Joint Force Headquarters National Capital Region | JFHQ-NCR | Major General Trevor J. Bredenkamp, USA | Fort Lesley J. McNair, Washington D.C. | |
| [[File:Joint_Task_Force_Civil_Support_emblem.jpg | 75px]] | Joint Task Force – Civil Support | JTF-CS | Colonel Tanya S. McGonegal, ARNG | Joint Base Langley-Eustis, Virginia | |
| [[File:Joint_Task_Force_North.jpg | 75px]] | Joint Task Force North | JTF-North | Major General Henry S. Dixon, ARNG | Fort Bliss, Texas | |
| Joint Task Force 51 | JTF-51 | Major General Scott M. Sherman, ARNG | 2005 | Joint Base San Antonio |
Commanders
Main article: Leadership of the United States Northern Command

The commander of United States Northern Command is a four-star general or admiral in the United States Armed Forces who serves as the head of all U.S. military forces within the command's geographical area of responsibility. The commander of U.S. Northern Command concurrently serves as the commander of North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) and is the head of all United States and Canadian joint aerospace military operational forces, stationed within the Northern American territories. The commander of U.S. Northern Command is nominated for appointment by the President of the United States and must be confirmed by the United States Senate. The commander of U.S. Northern Command typically serves for two years.
Note: The National Defense Authorization Act of 2008 stipulates that at least one deputy commander of USNORTHCOM be a National Guard general officer unless the commander is already such an officer.
Planning and strategy
Northern Command has created several classified "concept plans" (e.g. "Defense Support of Civil Authorities") that are intended to address the 15 National Planning Scenarios that NORTHCOM must be prepared to respond to.
However, in 2012, the GAO found that the national strategy to defend the United States is several years out of date.
On 20 January 2025, President Donald Trump issued an executive order instructing the Secretary of Defense to give Northern Command the mission to "seal the borders and maintain the sovereignty, territorial integrity, and security of the United States," requiring the secretary to revise the Unified Command Plan within 10 days in accordance with the order, and the commander of Northern Command to present a plan within 30 days on how NORTHCOM will achieve this mission.
Domestic operations and training
NORTHCOM operates extensive domestic intelligence operations which both share and receive information from local, state and federal law enforcement agencies. Employees of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Central Intelligence Agency, National Security Agency, Defense Intelligence Agency, National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, and other agencies maintain offices at NORTHCOM and receive daily intelligence briefings. The total of 14 agencies with representatives at NORTHCOM in December 2002 included the State Department, NASA, and the Federal Aviation Administration.
Northern Command has completed several joint training exercises with local, state and federal law enforcement agencies, the Department of Homeland Security, and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).
In Exercise Vigilant Shield 2008, Northern Command, Pacific Command, the Department of Homeland Security, and numerous law enforcement agencies across the U.S. conducted exercises to test their "response abilities against a variety of potential threats".
In January 2025 the Northern Command activated military police and combat engineer units from the Army and Marine Corps to support Customs and Border Patrol on the U.S. southern border. In March 2025, the newly formed Joint Task Force-Southern Border, from the headquarters of the 10th Mountain Division, took over control of the operation along the Mexico–United States border, to oversee joint forces and serve as the NORTHCOM land component command for the mission, which involves about 10,000 service members.
References
References
- "NORTHCOM History".
- "USNORTHCOM Vision".
- "Commander, North American Aerospace Defense Command and U.S. Northern Command".
- "Lieutenant General Thomas Carden, USA".
- "Command Senior Enlisted Leader, North American Aerospace Defense Command and U.S. Northern Command".
- (21 September 2004). "FM 1-02 Operational Terms and Graphics". US Army.
- (14 August 2018). "ADP 1-02 Terms and Military Symbols". US Army.
- Informally known simply as "NORTHCOM" or "Northern Command")
- [https://www.northcom.mil/HomelandDefense USNORTHCOM]
- (2009). "Homeland security: legal and policy issues". American Bar Association.
- Bolkcom, Christopher. (2005). "Emerging issues in homeland security". Nova Publishers.
- (2004). "Triage for civil support: using military medical assets to respond to terrorist attacks". RAND Corporation.
- (31 December 2012). "The Beginning".
- "2014 NC Posture Statement".
- U.S. Northern Command Public Affairs. (22 October 2009). "About USNORTHCOM". U.S. Northern Command.
- "USNORTHCOM responds to Deepwater Horizon oil spill". Northcom.mil.
- (13 July 2010). "Deepwater Horizon airspace activity now coordinated at 601st AOC". Northcom.mil.
- "NORTHCOM assumes oversight of Alaskan Command - Stripes". Stars and Stripes.
- . (June 17, 2025). ["Statement by Chief Pentagon Spokesman, Sean Parnell on the Unified Command Plan"](https://www.war.gov/News/Releases/Release/Article/4218736/statement-by-chief-pentagon-spokesman-sean-parnell-on-the-unified-command-plan/). *US Department of Defence*.
- Cutler, Thomas. (2011). "Navcivguide". Naval Institute Press.
- "U.S. Northern Command History".
- "U.S. Northern Command".
- (15 August 2002). "New military command seeks civilian managers".
- "ARNORTH Organization".
- "MARFORCOM Units".
- "Fleet Marine Force, Atlantic, Marine Forces Command, Marine Forces Northern Command".
- "US Navy Fleet Forces Command".
- "1st Air Force Units".
- "Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson > Units > Alaskan Command".
- "Special Operations Command North (SOCNORTH)".
- link. (18 March 2012 Pub.L. 110-181: National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008)
- link. (18 March 2012 Pub.L. 110-181: National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 full text)
- (2008). "Managing the next domestic catastrophe: ready (or not)? : a beyond Goldwater-Nichols phase 4 report". CSIS.
- [http://gao.gov/products/GAO-13-128?source=ra "DOD Needs to Address Gaps in Homeland Defense and Civil Support Guidance GAO-13-128, Oct 24, 2012."]
- Obis, Anastasia. (22 January 2025). "Trump's executive order directs NORTHOM to 'seal' the border". [[Federal News Network]].
- (21 January 2025). "Trump's Pentagon to begin task of crafting NORTHCOM plan to 'seal' US borders". Breaking Defense.
- Miller, Russell A.. (2008). "US national security, intelligence and democracy: from the Church Committee to the War on Terror". Taylor & Francis.
- Shenon and Schmitt NYT 2002.
- (2009). "Domestic deployment of the armed forces: military powers, law and human rights". Ashgate Publishing.
- (24 January 2025). "Active-duty forces to bolster security at U.S. southern border". USNORTHCOM.
- Hicks, Samarion. (25 March 2025). "Joint Task Force-Southern Border assumes authority of Southern Border Mission". U.S. Army.
- (26 October 2006). "Bush Moves Towards Martial Law, 26 October 2006". Towardfreedom.com.
- (30 September 2008). "Brigade homeland tours start 1 Oct.". Army Times.
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