Officer Candidate School (Indonesian Army)


The Indonesian Army Officer Candidate School located at Bandung, West Java trains, assesses, and evaluates potential commissioned officers in the Indonesian Army. Officer candidates are senior NCOs or warrant officers. Completing the Secapaad course is one of few routes of becoming a commissioned officer in the Army.

Overview of the Secapaad

The Secapaad course is a rigorous 20-week, 5-6 month course designed to train, assess, evaluate, and develop officers with rank of Second lieutenant within the Army. It is the shortest route on becoming commissioned officers compared to other officer training programs, it is only open to senior enlisted personnel and warrant officers.

History

Historically, Secapaad course is designed to provide numbers of officer especially during the war of independence. Given the lack of training institutions until late 1945. the first generation officers of the Army, either trained in the Koninklijke Militaire Academie in Breda before the Second World War or trained in the Pembela Tanah Air and the Japanese sponsored Heiko or in anti-Japanese guerilla units, began to train selected experienced NCOs to be commissioned as officers with the rank of second lieutenant via either battlefield commissions or meritorious commissions. When the first military academy closed in 1950, the modern day Secapaad began to unite branch-specific system of schools, since at one time there were separate schools each per basic branch, which also served as military academies until 1958 when the military academy was officially reopened in Magelang, Central Java.
The Secapaad was established as a secondary center for the training of Army Officers besides the Magelang-based Military Academy. On the initiative of the then Chief of Staff of the Army General Umar Wirahadikusumah, on Saturday 8 January 1972 the Army OCS was officially opened to the public with Colonel S. Banoearli as the first commandant, thus officially January 8, 1972 is designated as birthday of the Secapaad. Its Bandung campus also honors the former Military Technical Academy, which was fused into the military academy in 1962, a marker with the names of its top graduates, including that of 30 September Movement martyr Pierre Tendean, is located in the campus grounds.

Mission

Secapaad has the principal duty to organize a Basic Forming Education for officer candidates in support of the Army's main tasks.