Chief of the General Staff (Yugoslavia)

Chief of the General Staff
Standard of the Chief of the General Staff (1995–2003)
Longest in office
Colonel general Stane Potočar

15 October 1972 – 10 July 1979
Royal Yugoslav Army (1918–41)
Yugoslav People's Army (1945–92)
Armed Forces of Serbia and Montenegro (1992–2006)
Type Chief of staff
Status Abolished
Abbreviation NGŠ
Member of General Staff
Reports to Minister of Defence of Yugoslavia
Seat Yugoslav Ministry of Defence building, Belgrade (1965–99)
Appointer Head of state of Yugoslavia (1918–92)
President of Serbia and Montenegro (1992–2006)
Term length No fixed length
Precursor Chief of the Serbian General Staff
Formation 1 December 1918
First holder Field Marshal Živojin Mišić
Final holder Lt. Col. General Ljubiša Jokić
Abolished 3 June 2006
Superseded by Chairman of the Chiefs of Joint Staff (BiH)
Chief of the General Staff (Croatia)
Chief of the General Staff (North Macedonia)
Chief of the General Staff (Montenegro)
Chief of the Serbian General Staff
Chief of the General Staff (Slovenia)
Deputy Deputy Chief of the General Staff

The Chief of the General Staff of Yugoslavia (Serbo-Croatian: Начелник Генералштаба / Načelnik Generalštaba; Slovene: Načelnik Generalštaba; Macedonian: Началник на Генералштабот, romanizedNačalnik na Generalštabot) refers of the chief of the General Staff of the Royal Yugoslav Army from 1918 to 1941, the Yugoslav People's Army from 1945 to 1992 and the Armed Forces of Serbia and Montenegro (officially named the Armed Forces of Yugoslavia between 1992 and 2003) from 1992 to 2006.

List of chiefs of the general staff

† denotes people who died in office.

Royal Yugoslav Army (1918–1920)

No. Portrait Chief of Staff of the Supreme Command Took office Left office Time in office Defence branch
1
Živojin Mišić
Field Marshal
Živojin Mišić
(1855–1921)
1 December 1918 5 May 1920 1 year, 156 days Royal Army

Royal Yugoslav Armed Forces (1920–1941)

No. Portrait Chief of the General Staff Took office Left office Time in office Defence branch
1
Živojin Mišić
Field Marshal
Živojin Mišić
(1855–1921)
5 May 1920 20 January 1921 † 260 days Royal Army
Petar Pešić
General
Petar Pešić
(1871–1944)
Acting
21 January 1921 10 March 1921 48 days Royal Army
2
Petar Bojović
Field Marshal
Petar Bojović
(1858–1945)
10 March 1921 8 December 1921 273 days Royal Army
3
Petar Pešić
General
Petar Pešić
(1871–1944)
8 December 1921 4 November 1922 331 days Royal Army
Milan Milovanović
General
(when appointed)
Divisional general
(since 1923)
Milan Milovanović
(1874–1942)
Acting
4 November 1922 30 July 1924 1 year, 269 days Royal Army
(3)
Petar Pešić
Army general
Petar Pešić
(1871–1944)
30 July 1924 11 April 1929 4 years, 255 days Royal Army
4
Milan Milovanović
Army general
Milan Milovanović
(1874–1942)
11 April 1929 18 April 1934 5 years, 7 days Royal Army
Petar Kosić
Divisional general
Petar Kosić
(1881–1949)
Acting
18 April 1934 1 June 1934 44 days Royal Army
5
Milan Nedić
Army general
Milan Nedić
(1877–1946)
1 June 1934 9 March 1935 281 days Royal Army
Petar Kosić
Divisional general
Petar Kosić
(1881–1949)
Acting
10 March 1935 12 May 1935 63 days Royal Army
6
Ljubomir Marić
Army general
Ljubomir Marić
(1878–1960)
12 May 1935 8 March 1936 301 days Royal Army
Petar Kosić
Divisional general
Petar Kosić
(1881–1949)
Acting
8 March 1936 6 September 1936 182 days Royal Army
Milutin Nedić
Divisional general
Milutin Nedić
(1882–1945)
Acting
6 September 1936 6 September 1937 1 year Royal Army
7
Milutin Nedić
Army general
Milutin Nedić
(1882–1945)
6 September 1937 25 August 1938 353 days Royal Army
Mihailo D. Bodi
Divisional general
Mihailo D. Bodi
(1884–1953)
Acting
25 August 1938 15 September 1938 21 days Royal Army
8
Dušan Simović
Army general
Dušan Simović
(1882–1962)
15 September 1938 3 January 1940 1 year, 110 days Royal Air Force
9
Petar Kosić
Army general
Petar Kosić
(1881–1949)
3 January 1940 27 March 1941 1 year, 83 days Royal Army
(8)
Dušan Simović
Army general
Dušan Simović
(1882–1962)
27 March 1941 14 April 1941 18 days Royal Air Force
Danilo Kalafatović
Army general
Danilo Kalafatović
(1875–1946)
Acting
15 April 1941 17 April 1941 2 days Royal Army

Yugoslav Army Outside the Homeland (1941–1942)

No. Portrait Chief of Staff of the Supreme Command Took office Left office Time in office Defence branch
1
Miodrag Lozić
Lieutenant colonel
Miodrag Lozić
1941 1942 0–1 years JVvO

Yugoslav Army in the Homeland (1942–1945)

No. Portrait Chief of Staff of the Supreme Command Took office Left office Time in office Defence branch
1
Dragoljub Mihailović
Army general
Dragoljub Mihailović
(1893–1946)
1942 1944 1–2 years JVuO
2
Miodrag Damjanović
Brigadier general
Miodrag Damjanović
(1893–1956)
1944 1945 0–1 years JVuO

National Liberation Army (1941–1945)

No. Portrait Name Took office Left office Time in office Party Defence branch
N/A
Josip Broz Tito
Marshal of Yugoslavia
Josip Broz Tito
(1892–1980)
Commander of the Supreme Headquarters and Commander-in-Chief
27 June 1941 1 March 1945 3 years, 247 days SKJ NOV i POJ
N/A
Arso Jovanović
Lt. Col. General
Arso Jovanović
(1907–1948)
Chief of the Supreme Headquarters
12 December 1941 1 March 1945 3 years, 79 days SKJ NOV i POJ

Yugoslav People's Army (1945–1992)

The Chief of the General Staff (Serbo-Croatian: Načelnik Generalštaba - NGŠ, Начелник Генералштаба - НГШ; Macedonian: Началник на Генералштабот; Slovene: Načelnik Generalštaba) was the chief of staff of the General Staff of the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) during its existence from 1945 to 1992. He was appointed by the President (after 1980 Presidency) of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, who was the commander-in-chief. While the Federal Secretary of People's Defence (defence minister) headed the Federal Secretariat of People's Defence (Savezni sekretarijat za narodnu odbranu - SSNO) and it was the most effective military person, the Chief of the General Staff (which was the formational part of SSNO) was the most professional and staff body.

No. Portrait Chief of the General Staff Took office Left office Time in office Party Defence branch
1
Arso Jovanović
Colonel general
Arso Jovanović
(1907–1948)
1 March 1945 15 September 1945 198 days SKJ Ground Forces
2
Koča Popović
Colonel general
Koča Popović
(1908–1992)
15 September 1945 27 January 1953 4 years, 134 days SKJ Ground Forces
3
Peko Dapčević
Colonel general
Peko Dapčević
(1913–1999)
27 January 1953 29 April 1955 2 years, 92 days SKJ Ground Forces
4
Ljubo Vučković
Colonel general
Ljubo Vučković
(1915–1976)
29 April 1955 16 June 1961 6 years, 48 days SKJ Ground Forces
5
Rade Hamović
Colonel general
Rade Hamović
(1916–2009)
16 June 1961 15 June 1967 5 years, 364 days SKJ Ground Forces
6
Miloš Šumonja
Colonel general
Miloš Šumonja
(1918–2006)
15 June 1967 5 January 1970 2 years, 204 days SKJ Ground Forces
7
Viktor Bubanj
Colonel general
Viktor Bubanj
(1918–1972)
5 January 1970 15 October 1972 † 2 years, 284 days SKJ Air Force
8
Stane Potočar
Colonel general
Stane Potočar
(1919–1997)
15 October 1972 10 July 1979 6 years, 268 days SKJ Ground Forces
9
Branko Mamula
Admiral
Branko Mamula
(1921–2021)
10 July 1979 5 May 1982 2 years, 299 days SKJ Navy
10
Petar Gračanin
Colonel general
Petar Gračanin
(1923–2004)
5 May 1982 1 September 1985 3 years, 119 days SKJ Ground Forces
11
Zorko Čanadi
Colonel general
Zorko Čanadi
(1925–2003)
1 September 1985 15 September 1987 2 years, 14 days SKJ Ground Forces
12
Stevan Mirković
Colonel general
Stevan Mirković
(1927–2015)
15 September 1987 29 September 1989 2 years, 14 days SKJ Ground Forces
13
Blagoje Adžić
Colonel general
Blagoje Adžić
(1932–2012)
29 September 1989 27 February 1992 2 years, 151 days SKJ Ground Forces
14
Života Panić
Colonel general
Života Panić
(1933–2003)
27 February 1992 20 May 1992 83 days Independent Ground Forces

Timeline

Života Panić Blagoje Adžić Stevan Mirković Zorko Čanadi Petar Gračanin Branko Mamula Stane Potočar Viktor Bubanj Miloš Šumonja Rade Hamović Ljubo Vučković Peko Dapčević Koča Popović Arso Jovanović

Armed Forces of Yugoslavia / Serbia and Montenegro (1992–2006)

Following the breakup of Yugoslavia and the secession of four out of six constituent republic in the SFR Yugoslavia the remaining two (Serbia and Montenegro) established a federation in 1992 called the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (FR Yugoslavia). This lasted until 2003 when it was reconstituted as a state union called Serbia and Montenegro. In 2006 both countries declared independence and parted ways.

No. Portrait Chief of the General Staff Took office Left office Time in office Defence branch
1
Života Panić
Colonel general
Života Panić
(1933–2003)
20 May 1992 26 August 1993 1 year, 98 days Ground Forces
2
Momčilo Perišić
Colonel general
Momčilo Perišić
(born 1944)
26 August 1993 26 November 1998 5 years, 92 days Ground Forces
3
Dragoljub Ojdanić
Colonel general
Dragoljub Ojdanić
(1941–2020)
26 November 1998 7 February 2000 1 year, 73 days Ground Forces
4
Nebojša Pavković
Colonel general
Nebojša Pavković
(born 1946)
7 February 2000 24 June 2002 2 years, 137 days Ground Forces
5
Branko Krga
Colonel general
Branko Krga
(born 1945)
24 June 2002 23 December 2004 2 years, 182 days Ground Forces
6
Dragan Paskaš
Lt. Col. General
Dragan Paskaš
(born 1951)
23 December 2004 6 October 2005 287 days Ground Forces
7
Ljubiša Jokić
Lt. Col. General
Ljubiša Jokić
(born 1958)
6 October 2005 3 June 2006 240 days Air Force

See also