staff officer - meaning and definition. What is staff officer
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What (who) is staff officer - definition

GROUP OF MILITARY OFFICERS THAT ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR THE NEEDS OF A UNIT
Staff Officer; S2 (military); G2 (military intelligence); S1 (military); S3 (military); S4 (military); S6 (military); S2 (Army); S-2 (officer); General Staff; The military staff; G-2 officer; General staff; Staff officer; Continental Staff System; General Staff System; NATO Staff System; Staff office; Staff officers; Staff Offices; Staff corps; Staff Corps; General Staff Officer; Military staff; S5 (military); GSO2; GSO1; GSO3; General Staff officer; General staff officer; Action officer; Continental staff system; Upper rank
  • Staff meeting of the U.S. [[112th Regimental Combat Team]] in [[Arawe]] with General [[Julian Cunningham]] (seated), standing left to right: unidentified, Lieutenant Colonel C. E. Grant, Major D. M. McMains, Colonel A. M. Miller and Lieutenant Colonel P. L. Hooper

staff officer         
¦ noun a military officer serving on the staff of a headquarters or government department.
staff officer         
(staff officers)
In the army and air force, a staff officer is an officer who works for a commander or in the headquarters.
N-COUNT
general staff         
¦ noun [treated as sing. or plural] the staff assisting a military commander.

Wikipedia

Staff (military)

A military staff or general staff (also referred to as army staff, navy staff, or air staff within the individual services) is a group of officers, enlisted and civilian staff who serve the commander of a division or other large military unit in their command and control role through planning, analysis, and information gathering, as well as by relaying, coordinating, and supervising the execution of their plans and orders, especially in case of multiple simultaneous and rapidly changing complex operations. They are organised into functional groups such as administration, logistics, operations, intelligence, training, etc. They provide multi-directional flow of information between a commanding officer, subordinate military units and other stakeholders. A centralised general staff results in tighter top-down control but requires larger staff at headquarters (HQ) and reduces accuracy of orientation of field operations, whereas a decentralised general staff results in enhanced situational focus, personal initiative, speed of localised action, OODA loop, and improved accuracy of orientation.

A commander "commands" through their personal authority, decision-making and leadership, and uses general staff to exercise the "control" on their behalf in a large unit. The traditional role of the general staff in control role has evolved from the simpler "C2" (command and control) to "C3" (C2 with addition of "communication", such as PsyOps) to "C4" (C3 with addition of "computers", such as IT and networks) to C4I2 (C4 with addition of "intelligence" and "interoperability") to "C5I" (C4 with addition of "collaboration" and "intelligence") to "C6ISR" (subsumes C4I2 and C5I by combining C4 element of "command, control, communications and computers" with addition of 2C "cyber-defense and combat systems" (e.g. aegis) and ISR elements of "intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance").

Most NATO nations, including the United States and most European nations, use the Continental Staff System which has origin in Napoleon's military. The Commonwealth Staff System, used by most of the Commonwealth, has its origin in the British military.

Examples of use of staff officer
1. "Finally, a general staff officer with imagination and intelligence!" he said.
2. This brilliant staff officer spent every moment of his spare time planning to kill his employer.
3. Carter Ham, a Pentagon staff officer and former commander of U.S. forces in Mosul.
4. "Ian Blair didn‘t know; the staff officer didn‘t know," said the source.
5. He said Zuce served as technical assistant to him and not as Presidential Staff Officer as he claimed.