Alliance Contribution

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Alliance Civil Government

  • Clerks: Rank 0. Simple volunteers seeking to lend a hand in whatever fashion they might, a Civil Government clerk aids the Alliance bureaucracy in whatever way they might, lending various non-military skill sets to the Allliance's efforts. Clerks were frequently placed under the mentorship of a senior Aide.
  • Alliance Aides: Rank 1-4. The aides are the rank and file of Alliance bureaucracy, frequently shuffled about as needed: an aide's career may include basic bureaucratic wrangling for anyone from the Chancellor to a particularly pressured Alliance Command post (although Alliance Commands are usually required to staff their own postings). Talented aides–whether diplomats, computer technicians, scholars, or quartermasters–are frequently watched closely and plucked out of general service to lend their talents to a specific Cabinet.
  • Ministry Administrator: Rank 5-8. Alliance civil servants of this rank hold positions within specific Alliance Civil Ministries (Finance, Industry, Education, State, Supply, and War). Even those ministries that do not currently have Ministers still function, under the defacto leadership of the Secretary of the Cabinet. Administrators of this ranking are usually assigned work groups of aides and clerks to help get their jobs done.
  • Minister: Rank 9-11. Alliance Ministers oversee one of the six core ministries that make the Alliance run. Currently, only three of them (Finance, Industry, and Education) have Ministers. The others run with skeleton crews overseen by the Secretary of the Cabinet.
  • Secretary of the Cabinet: Rank 12-13. The Secretary of the Cabinet runs the Alliance Civil Government where the Chancellor cannot. The Secretary has an extensive bureaucracy to aid in their efforts, and the current Secretary, Senator Bail Organa of Alderaan, is already setting an impressive example for future holders of the office.
  • Chancellor: Rank 14+. The Chancellor–who is also simultaneously the Commander-in-Chief for the Alliance Forces–is an elected dictatorship. While they have virtually unlimited authority, their decisions can be overturned by the Advisory Council (composed of the highest leadership of both the Civil Government and the Alliance Forces) with a two-thirds majority. This is intended to be a last-ditch means of limiting potential autocrats, as when such a veto occurs, the Chancellor is expected to step down along with it; as such, most such possible issues are solved through compromise and negotiation.

Alliance Forces

  • Trainees: Rank 0. Trainees are frequently raw recruits, more fervor than skill. Some may be attached to one of the Alliance branches, but most often they are new voluteers looking to prove themselves in the fight against Imperial oppression.
  • Commander-in-Chief: Rank 14+ The Commander-in-Chief acts as the head of the Alliance Military, though they are expected to take the advice of their High Command (the various Allied Commanders, along with the Minister of War) in all decisions.

Alliance Fleet (Navy)

Fleet Command: Admiral Raddus
The Alliance Fleet is the Rebels' most important military force. The fleet gives the Rebels the mobility and firepower it needs to legitimately challenge Imperial military forces. However, as the fleet is only a small fraction of the size of the Imperial Navy, it must pick and choose its battles very carefully. Mon Mothma has forbidden Admiral Raddus from engaging the Imperials directly in a large-scale battle (much to the curmudgeonly old Mon Calamari's irritation). By and large the Alliance lacks the means to replace capital ships or large swathes of vessels at once, so it cannot afford to undertake any action that endangers a large part of the fleet at any one time. "The Alliance can survive the loss of its central command base or its fleet, but not both," Mon Mothma is famously quoted as saying, and the Alliance's command structure agree with her.

Ranking in the naval structure is fairly straightforward. The rank and file are made up of deckmen (Rank 1) and senior deckmen (Rank 2). The earliest command position is a petty officer (Rank 3-4), which may be made captain of a small vessel of about patrol boat or transport size, or more likely serves as mid-level command aboard a larger vessel. A chief petty officer (Rank 5-6) may hold command of an armored freighter, or oversees a section of petty officers and their crews aboard larger vessels. An ensign (Rank 7-8) or lieutenant (Rank 9) might be given command of a corvette or frigate, or serve as bridge crew aboard a larger vessel. Rebel cruisers all have commanders (Rank 10), captains (Rank 11), and admirals (Rank 12+) as their vessel commanders, with a whole cascade of lower ranking officers and naval crew beneath them.

The Fleet's structure is not permanently organized into specific ship models or designs, unlike the Imperial fleet. Elements of the fleet are combined on an ad hoc basis, building specialized groups to tend to specific Rebel missions, and then reabsorbed into the greater fleet afterwards. This makes the fleet available across the galactic disk, whether tending to specific missions for High Command, or allocated to other Alliance forces (notably Sector Commands). Some of the organized groupings include:

  • Element: 1 vessel. A single starship is known as an element, commanded by the vessel's captain.
  • Section: 3-12 vessels. A cluster of up to a dozen starships. Heavy cruisers are rarely available for such a small command (though specialized missions might warrant one or two of them). More often, a section is made up of 3-8 corvettes, frigates, or similar light capital ships. If the section is made up of both capital vessels and close-support ships, it is called a flotilla. The most senior vessel's captain acts as the commander.
  • Squadron: 12-36 vessels, plus support units. Four sections are combined into a squadron, using such elements as a line of capital ships, a section of escort ships, or a picket line of armored freighters. The squadron is the most common fleet detachment assigned to general Alliance missions – any task that requires more than a squadron to accomplish is usually under the command of Fleet Command itself. Squadrons are commanded by a senior captain or admiral (sometimes called a line admiral), as directed by Fleet Command or Alliance High Command. Sector Commands with squadron-level resources usually rank its commander as a commodore.
  • Battle Group: 48-72 vessels, plus support units. Two to four squadrons may be combined into a battle group under the command of a line admiral.

Starfighter Command

These ranks apply to the pilots and gunners who fly in Alliance starfighter groups, referred to as Starfighter Command, organized under General Antoc Merrick.

  • Flight Cadet: Rank 1-4.
  • Flight Officer: Rank 5-7.
  • Lieutenant: Rank 8.
  • Captain: Rank 9.
  • Commander: Rank 10
  • Colonel (Wing Commander): Rank 11.
  • General: Rank 12+.

Special Forces

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Sector Forces (Army)

Sector Command: General Jan Dodonna
The Alliance does not field a unified army force – it can't afford to, quite honestly. Instead, it coordinates and supports a variety of Sector Forces, the local military power of a variety of sectors in open or semi-open rebellion against Imperial forces. Each such Sector Force consists of its own structured military, although they are encouraged to adopt the Alliance's command structure (typically a Commander-in-Chief, a Chief-of-Staff, and commanders leading individual departments within the Force, such as Intelligence or Starfighter Command).

Sector Forces absorb independent resistance groups that want to join the Rebellion; if there are none when a group wishes to join, they become the foundation of a new Sector Force. Sector Forces include all types of units within their organization, including the types of forces that might ordinarily be under the command of other parts of the Alliance military, and which are often loaned to the larger commands in question for tasks where their aid is needed.

The following organizational structure is used:

  • Squad: 9 Troopers. The smallest unit of army command, made up of 8 troopers (Rank 1-2), commanded by a sergeant (Rank 3-4).
  • Platoon: 36 Troopers. A unit consisting of four squads, led by a sergeant major (Rank 5-6) and a lieutenant (Rank 7-8).
  • Company: 144 Troopers, plus Support Personnel. A unit consisting of four platoons, led by a captain (Rank 9).
  • Battalion: 576 Troopers, plus Support Personnel. A unit consisting of four companies, led by a major (Rank 10).
  • Regiment: 2304 Troopers, plus Support Personnel. A unit consisting of four batallions, led by a colonel (Rank 11).
  • Brigade: 9216 Troopers, plus Support Personnel. A unit consisting of four regiments, led by a colonel (Rank 11) or a general (Rank 12+). In some Allied Commands, a brigade might be referred to as a legion.
  • Corps: 36,864 Troopers, plus Support Personnel. A unit consisting of four brigades, led by a general (Rank 12+).

In theory, multiple corps make up a proper Sector Army, but most Rebel forces in a sector are lucky to field a regiment. The highest ranking general usually holds the Commander-in-Chief office, and coordinates with Sector Command.

Intelligence

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Ordnance & Supply

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Support Services

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Alliance SpecForce

These ranks apply to a number of other Alliance operations, including Intelligence (under General Airen Cracken), Ordnance & Supply (under General Baccam Grafis), and Support Services (under General Dustil Forell).

  • Trooper: Rank 1.
  • Senior (1st) Trooper: Rank 2.
  • Sergeant: Rank 3-4.
  • Master Sergeant: Rank 5.
  • Lieutenant: Rank 6-7.
  • Senior Lieutenant: Rank 8.
  • Captain: Rank 9.
  • Major: Rank 10
  • Colonel: Rank 11.
  • General: Rank 12+.


Rank Civil Government Sector Forces Alliance Fleet Starfighter Forces SpecForces + Others
0 Clerk Trainee Trainee Trainee Trainee
1 Aide Trooper Deckman Flight Cadet Trooper
2 Aide Senior Trooper Senior Deckman Flight Cadet Senior (1st) Trooper
3 Aide Sergeant Petty Officer Flight Cadet Sergeant
4 Aide Sergeant Petty Officer Flight Cadet Sergeant
5 Ministry Administrator Sergeant Major Chief Petty Officer Flight Officer Master Sergeant
6 Ministry Administrator Sergeant Major Chief Petty Officer Flight Officer Lieutenant
7 Ministry Administrator Lieutenant Ensign Flight Officer Lieutenant
8 Ministry Administrator Lieutenant Ensign Lieutenant Senior Lieutenant
9 Minister Captain Lieutenant Captain Captain
10 Minister Major Commander Commander Major
11 Minister Colonel Captain Colonel (Wing Commander) Colonel
12+ Secretary of the Cabinet General Admiral General General