Modern four-star officer appointments are governed by the unified officer promotion framework established by the Defense Officer Personnel Management Act (DOPMA) of 1980, as amended. [1]
In 2017, Congress began separating military space activities into a standalone service, culminating in the Space Force Act of 2019 that redesignated Air Force Space Command as the United States Space Force, the first new military service since the Air Force was spun off from the Army in 1947. [2]
Starting in 1981, four-star officers were appointed under the unified officer promotion framework established by the Defense Officer Personnel Management Act (DOPMA) of 1980. An officer could be promoted to a maximum active-duty grade of major general or rear admiral, a rank-in-person that was carried to any assignment. Three- and four-star grades were rank-in-position that could only be held on active duty while serving in positions designated to carry those grades. [1]
All four-star appointments required nomination by the president and confirmation by the Senate. In July 2019, a month after being confirmed by the Senate to be the next chief of naval operations (CNO) but before taking office, Admiral William F. Moran declined the appointment and retired upon being investigated for using his personal email to conduct official business with a former staff member who had been fired by the incumbent CNO for inappropriate personal conduct. [3] [4]
Delays in submitting a nomination could leave a four-star position vacant for months.
After the commanding general of Army Futures Command (AFC) retired in December 2021, the position was left vacant for almost a year because the president did not nominate a successor until September 2022. The secretary of defense, Army secretary, and Army chief of staff all recommended that the president nominate Lieutenant General Walter E. Piatt, but members of Congress blamed Piatt for delaying the military response to the attack on the United States Capitol on January 6, 2021, so the White House blocked his nomination until the Pentagon gave up and picked a different AFC commander. Lieutenant General Charles A. Flynn also attracted blame for the slow response, but was allowed to assume his four-star command of U.S. Army Pacific (USARPAC) in June 2021 because he had already been confirmed for that position in December 2020. [5]
The top two positions in the National Guard fell vacant simultaneously in 2024, when the White House did not submit nominations for the new chief of the National Guard Bureau (CNGB) and vice chief of the National Guard Bureau (VCNGB) in time for the Senate to confirm them before their predecessors retired. All four leaders of the National Guard had long been scheduled to retire that summer, including the four-star CNGB, the three-star directors of the Army and Air National Guards, and the three-star VCNGB, whose successor was slated to be the first four-star VCNGB. Air National Guard lieutenant general Steven S. Nordhaus was finally nominated to be CNGB in August, shortly before the Senate left on a six-week recess, and the newly appointed Army National Guard director had to act as CNGB until Nordhaus could be confirmed in September. The VCNGB nominee, reported to be Army National Guard major general Joseph F. Jarrard, remained stalled in the White House even though the position had been vacant since May. [6] [7]
The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010 (2010 NDAA) set numerical caps on the number of four-star officers, with dedicated allocations for each service—7 Army generals, 6 Navy admirals, 9 Air Force generals, 2 Marine Corps generals—and a separate pool of 20 joint-duty four-star officers. [8] [9] When the Army asked to restore a fourth star to its component commander in Europe and Africa in 2020, Congress raised the Army allocation to 8 but lowered the joint-duty allocation to 19, keeping the total number of four-star authorizations constant. [10]
Effective December 31, 2022, the 2017 NDAA cut the total number of general and flag officers in joint-duty positions that were exempted from grade caps by 25 percent, but deleted the grade distribution restrictions for those positions, which previously had been limited to 19 joint-duty four-star officers. [11] [12] [13] The 2023 NDAA allocated 2 generals to the Space Force, corresponding to the chief and vice chief of space operations. [14]
A Senate hold on a nomination was a communication by a senator of an objection to approving the nomination by unanimous consent. Of the thousands of nominations submitted to the Senate each year, the majority were military promotions and appointments that were typically approved in large groups by unanimous consent, since considering them separately would take too much time. Although the full Senate could always override any individual hold by majority vote, the majority leader typically would try to resolve the senator's concerns before invoking the lengthy cloture process. [15]
Sometimes a senator placed a hold on a nomination to escalate a dispute with the executive branch that had little to do with the specific nominee. In 1994, Senator David Durenberger placed a hold on the nomination of vice chief of naval operations Stanley R. Arthur to be commander in chief of U.S. Pacific Command, to pressure the Navy about a constituent's claim of being dropped from naval flight training after reporting sexual harassment by her instructor, and was surprised when the Navy withdrew Arthur's nomination rather than risk another controversial confirmation battle in the wake of the 1991 Tailhook sexual assault scandal. [16] In 1997, three senators from Utah and Oklahoma placed holds on the nomination of Lieutenant General George T. Babbitt Jr. to be four-star commander of Air Force Materiel Command, in order to protest administration plans to privatize maintenance jobs instead of transferring them to Air Force logistics centers in their states. [17]
In May 2020, Senator Dan Sullivan placed a hold for three weeks on the nomination of General Charles Q. Brown Jr. to be chief of staff of the Air Force, to pressure the Air Force to base the KC-46 tanker in his state. [18] Two months later, Senator Tammy Duckworth blocked 1,123 Army promotions for two weeks, including the four-star chief of the National Guard Bureau, until she received written confirmation that the Department of Defense had not blocked the promotion of Army lieutenant colonel Alexander Vindman after he testified against the president during an impeachment inquiry. [19]
In November 2024, Senator Markwayne Mullin placed a hold on the nomination of Lieutenant General Christopher T. Donahue to be four-star commanding general of Army forces in Europe and Africa. As a two-star general, Donahue had led the final evacuation of U.S. forces from Afghanistan in 2021, an operation whose messy outcome had been a campaign issue in the 2024 presidential election. [20] Donahue was confirmed in early December, after Mullin dropped his hold. [21]
In February 2023, Senator Tommy Tuberville placed a blanket hold on all civilian and military nominations in the Defense Department to pressure the secretary of defense to retract a December 2022 policy allowing servicemembers to travel to get legal abortions after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June 2022.
For most four-star officers, the delay in confirming their successors merely extended their tenure in office, but members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff had statutory four-year terms that could not be extended, so when their terms expired the service vice chiefs held double duty as acting chiefs. The four-year term of the Marine Corps commandant expired on July 11, the Army chief of staff on August 3, and the chief of naval operations on August 11, and the term of the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff was scheduled to expire on October 1. On September 20, the Senate held individual votes to confirm the Air Force chief of staff as the next chairman, the Army vice chief of staff as chief of staff, and Marine Corps assistant commandant Eric M. Smith as commandant—leaving their former jobs vacant, since their successors had not been confirmed. [22] Smith suffered a heart attack on October 29, and on November 2, the Senate confirmed a new assistant commandant to serve as acting commandant while Smith was hospitalized, as well as the nominees for Air Force chief of staff, and chief of naval operations. [23] [24]
On December 5, 2023, Tuberville finally released his hold on all but the remaining four-star nominees, 11 of whom were confirmed separately by the Senate on December 19. [25] The Senate passed a bill to make all general and flag officer promotions delayed by the Tuberville holds retroactive to the dates expected if they had been confirmed normally, but the House took no action. [26] The Senate included a similar provision in its version of the next year's annual defense authorization bill. [27]
In 2024, Tuberville placed a hold on the July nomination of Lieutenant General Ronald P. Clark to be four-star commander of Army forces in the Pacific over Clark's role as senior military assistant to secretary of defense Lloyd Austin during Austin's secret hospitalization in January. Tuberville dropped his hold after a few weeks and Clark was confirmed in September. [28]
After successfully serving in a three- or four-star position, an officer could retire with that grade if the secretary of defense certified that the officer had sufficient satisfactory service in that grade. [1]
Four-star officers were routinely approved to retire in grade, unless accused of personal misconduct. Retired Air Force general Arthur J. Lichte was retroactively retired as a major general in 2017 when the secretary of defense withdrew his certification of satisfactory service as a four-star general after the Air Force Office of Special Investigations found Lichte had coerced sex from a subordinate officer while serving as three-star Air Force assistant vice chief of staff and as four-star commander of Air Mobility Command. [29] In March 2024, Army general Charles R. Hamilton was suspended but not relieved as Army Materiel Command (AMC) commanding general for interfering with a subordinate's command assessment panel, leaving AMC with an acting commander for months while Hamilton was investigated by the Department of Defense inspector general. [30]
Compensation for four-star officers included a salary called basic pay, allowances for housing and food that were not subject to federal income tax, and an annual personal money allowance of $4,000 for members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and $2,200 for other four-star officers. Basic pay for general and flag officers was capped at Level II of the Executive Schedule, so two-, three-, and four-star officers received about the same basic pay. [12] [31]
The Army had been authorized 7 four-star generals for positions within the service by the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010 (2010 NDAA), and employed 6 in 2017: the chief and vice chief of staff (CSA, VCSA); the commanding generals of Forces Command (FORSCOM), Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC), and Army Materiel Command (AMC); and the Army component commander in the Pacific (USARPAC). [8] [32] The remaining slot was used to establish Army Futures Command (AFC) in 2018. [33]
In July 2020, the three-star Army component commander in Europe, Christopher G. Cavoli, was nominated for a fourth star even though the Army was already using all 7 of its institutional four-star authorizations. The Senate confirmed him anyway, and he was promoted in October, giving the Army 8 service-specific four-star generals, which the 2021 NDAA ratified in December by allocating one more general to the Army and reducing the joint four-star pool to compensate. [10] [34]
By the end of 2020, the Army had 18 four-star generals on active duty, exceeding the 17 four- and five-star generals it had at the end of World War II (including the Army Air Forces) or the 17 four-star generals it had at the height of the Vietnam War, its previous peaks. [33] [34] [35] The Army had won an unusually high number of joint-duty assignments to the competitive positions of chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, chief of the National Guard Bureau, and combatant commanders of U.S. Africa Command (USAFRICOM), U.S. Cyber Command (USCYBERCOM), or U.S. Special Operations Command (USSOCOM); the expected position of commander of U.S. forces in Korea, traditionally an Army command; the unlikely positions of combatant commander of U.S. Transportation Command (USTRANSCOM) or U.S. Space Command (USSPACECOM), traditionally Air Force or Space Force commands; and the unrepeatable positions of final commander of U.S. forces in Afghanistan and chief operating officer of Operation Warp Speed, the federal government's COVID-19 vaccine development and delivery program. [36] [37] Four years later, the Army held none of these positions except that of USSOCOM commander and commander of U.S. forces in Korea, adding only the commanders of USEUCOM and U.S. Southern Command (USSOUTHCOM), for a total of 12 four-star generals by the end of 2024. [38]
The Air Force had been authorized 9 four-star generals for positions within the service by the 2010 NDAA, corresponding in 2017 to the Air Force chief and vice chief of staff (CSAF, VCSAF); the commanders of Air Combat Command (ACC), Air Mobility Command (AMC), Air Force Materiel Command (AFMC), Air Force Space Command (AFSPC), and Air Force Global Strike Command (AFGSC); and the Air Force component commanders in Europe (USAFE) and the Pacific (PACAF). [8] [39]
AFSPC was redesignated as the United States Space Force (USSF) in December 2019 and its commander became the first chief of space operations (CSO). [2] The new service initially had no statutory limits on its distribution of general officer grades, so the secretary of the Air Force established a four-star vice chief of space operations (VCSO) administratively in October 2020. [40] [41] The 2023 NDAA imposed Space Force general officer grade caps similar to the other services. The act authorized 2 four-star generals for positions within the Space Force, corresponding to the CSO and VCSO, but did not decrement the Air Force allocation to account for the spin-off of AFSPC. [14]
The Navy had been authorized 6 four-star admirals for positions within the service by the 2010 NDAA, corresponding in 2017 to the chief and vice chief of naval operations (CNO, VCNO), the commander of Fleet Forces Command (USFFC), the Navy component commanders in Europe (USNAVEUR) and the Pacific (USPACFLT), and the director of naval nuclear propulsion (NAVSEA-08). The Marine Corps was authorized 2 institutional four-star generals, corresponding to the commandant and assistant commandant (CMC, ACMC). [8] [32]
The Senate version of the 2025 NDAA proposed giving the three-star commander of Naval Sea Systems Command (NAVSEA) a statutory eight-year term like the four-star director of naval nuclear propulsion, with possible promotion to admiral for the last three years. [27]
The Coast Guard had been authorized 2 four-star admirals since 2016: the commandant and vice commandant (CCG, VCCG). [42] The 2022 NDAA required the vice commandant to serve at least two years as a four-star admiral in order to retire in that grade, similar to other four-star officers. [43]
The Public Health Service Commissioned Corps had been authorized 1 four-star admiral since 1990: the assistant secretary for health (ASH), if a commissioned officer. [44]
Congress gave service chiefs a statutory four-year term starting in 1969, with extensions beyond four years needing special legislation except during war or national emergency. [45] The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (CJCS) typically also served four years in renewable two-year terms, as did the vice chairman. The chief of the National Guard Bureau, added to the JCS in 2008, inherited the four-year term limit set in 1920 for the chief of the Militia Bureau, and the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (2017 NDAA) gave a single four-year term to the remaining JCS members, starting in 2019 for the chairman and 2021 for the vice chairman. [46]
Whenever a service chief was promoted to chairman, the four-year tours of the new chairman and his successor as service chief became synchronized. When the 2017 NDAA was being drafted, the last three chairmen had been the Navy, Army, and Marine Corps chiefs, and if the Air Force got its turn next, as widely expected, every member of the JCS except the chief of the National Guard Bureau would turn over simultaneously in 2019. [47] To preserve continuity in top military leadership, the 2017 NDAA offset the vice chairman's term by two years from the chairman's term, and barred the vice chairman from promotion or reassignment to any other military position. [46] The last vice chairman appointed under the old rules, Air Force general John E. Hyten, retired after a single two-year term to achieve the desired staggering with the chairman's term. [48]
So many senior officers were scheduled to end their tours in 2023 that Senate Armed Services Committee chairman Jack Reed said, "I have never in my almost three decades here seen so many key military positions coming up for replacement." [49] Four-star nominees that year included the JCS chairman, the chief of every service except the Space Force, every service vice chief, and several key combatant commanders. [25] When Senator Tommy Tuberville blocked all military nominations for ten months, most four-star incumbents remained in place until their replacements were confirmed, but not the service chiefs, whose terms could not be extended without special legislation. The Army, Navy, and Marine Corps chiefs retired on schedule that summer, leaving their services with only acting chiefs until their successors were confirmed along with the new JCS chairman and Air Force chief in September and November. [24] With the statutory terms of five of eight JCS members now synchronized to expire within two months of each other, the 2024 NDAA authorized the secretary of defense to stagger the terms of the service chiefs, vice chairman, and chairman by extending or reducing their four-year terms by up to six months. [50]
The vice chief of the National Guard Bureau (VCNGB) was created in 1988 to play the same role for the National Guard as the vice chiefs of the Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marine Corps, who all had the same four-star grade as their respective service chiefs. The VCNGB was likewise intended to carry the same three-star grade as the chief of the National Guard Bureau (CNGB) and be appointed from the opposite service, giving a three-star general to both the Army and Air National Guards, whose directors were then two-star generals. However, because neither CNGB nor VCNGB carried three-star grade by statute, any third star had to be charged to their respective service's grade cap, which the Air Force was unwilling to spend on the first VCNGB, an Air National Guard major general. [51]
In 1994, Congress made the VCNGB the statutory two-star deputy to the three-star CNGB, who could not be from the same service. [52] A decade later, the two-star VCNGB was redesignated as director of the Joint Staff of the National Guard Bureau, four years after being superseded in the CNGB succession when the Army and Air National Guard directors were given a third star. [53] Congress reestablished the VCNGB as the CNGB's statutory three-star successor when it gave the National Guard full membership on the Joint Chiefs of Staff in 2011, and charged both positions to the joint-duty pool. [54] The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2024 raised the VCNGB's grade to general, finally matching the CNGB. [55]
National Guard officers could have different ranks for federal and non-federal service if their state promoted them to grades that did not qualify for federal recognition. For example, states occasionally promoted their adjutant general to lieutenant general, but ranks above major general for state adjutants general were not federally recognized. [56]
In 2008, the Delaware General Assembly authorized the governor to give the adjutant general the state rank of lieutenant general. [57] The governor promoted National Guard major general Francis D. Vavala to that rank on January 7, 2017, three weeks before Vavala retired on January 31 after 18 years as Delaware adjutant general. [58] On April 7, Vavala was promoted in retirement to the rank of general in the Delaware state militia. [59]
An independent space service was proposed as early as 1983, but picked up momentum in 1999 when the annual defense authorization act chartered a commission to assess the management and organization of national security space programs, chaired by former defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld. [60] The Space Commission's final report in 2001 inspired many of the provisions of the Space Force Act in 2019. Judging that the existing space establishment was too small to support a standalone service immediately, the commission contemplated first creating a Space Corps within the Air Force that could grow into an independent Space Force, just as military aviation was incubated within the Army as the semi-autonomous Army Air Forces before becoming an independent Air Force. [61] Senior defense and Air Force leaders spanning multiple administrations vigorously opposed a separate space service, arguing that it would only increase bureaucracy at the expense of aerospace integration. [62]
By early 2017, dissatisfaction over Air Force management of military space programs had revived congressional interest in an independent Space Corps, especially after Russia and China organized their own space-specific military branches in 2015. In April 2017, the Air Force tried to preempt the proposed Space Corps by adding a three-star deputy chief of space operations (A11) to the Air Staff, but in July the House passed a version of the annual defense authorization bill that established a Space Corps within the Department of the Air Force. The four-star chief of staff of the Space Corps would have a six-year term and full membership on the Joint Chiefs of Staff, co-equal with the Air Force chief of staff. The incumbent commander of Air Force Space Command (AFSPC) could be appointed as the first Space Corps chief of staff without further Senate consent. A four-star U.S. Space Command would be established as a subordinate unified command of U.S. Strategic Command, the same as U.S. Cyber Command. [63]
Reaction to the House bill was skeptical. Dubbed "a solution in search of a problem" by a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, the Space Corps was opposed by the defense secretary, Air Force secretary, Air Force chief of staff, and even the future Space Force chief, AFSPC commander John W. Raymond. [64] [65] The Senate amended the bill to prohibit the creation of any new service or corps, specifically including a Space Corps, and strengthened the AFSPC commander by mandating a six-year term with a possible extension to ten years. [66] In December 2017, the final version of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (2018 NDAA) dropped the Space Corps proposal and abolished the A11 organization, which the conference report derided as a "hastily developed half-measure". Instead, all Air Force space activities were consolidated under AFSPC, whose commander now held a statutory four-star grade for a term of six years, modeled after the statutory eight-year term of the four-star director of the similarly technical Naval Reactors program. [67] [68]
Only six months later, at a June 2018 meeting of the National Space Council, President Donald Trump unexpectedly directed the Department of Defense (DoD) to immediately begin the process to establish the Space Force as the sixth branch of the armed forces, "separate but equal" with the Air Force. [69] It was too late to add the necessary legislative changes to that year's defense authorization bill, so the DoD announced it would submit the Space Force proposal in the following year. [70] In the meantime, the 2019 NDAA established U.S. Space Command (USSPACECOM) as a subordinate unified command of U.S. Strategic Command, with a statutory four-star commander. The AFSPC commander could serve concurrently as USSPACECOM commander for the first three years, after which the positions had to be separated. [71]
In February 2019, the DoD submitted a legislative proposal to establish an independent Space Force under the Department of the Air Force, in the same way that the Marine Corps was an independent service under the Department of the Navy. The House and Senate passed their own proposals that summer. The House proposal created a Space Corps with a four-star commandant, analogous to the Marine Corps. The DoD and Senate proposals both created a Space Force headed by two four-star generals, titled chief of staff and vice chief of staff by the DoD and commander and vice commander by the Senate. The DoD and House proposals gave the space service chief a seat on the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) immediately, but the Senate proposal postponed full JCS membership for the commander of the Space Force by one year, during which the JCS chairman could invite the commander to attend meetings concerning Space Force issues, the same capacity in which the commandant of the Marine Corps and the chief of the National Guard Bureau had attended JCS meetings before being elevated to full members in their own right. [72] [73]
Critics observed that the Space Force would have by far the largest ratio of four-star officers to personnel of any service. In 2019, the entire Defense Department had 36 four-star officers to oversee 1.3 million active-duty service members, a ratio of one four-star officer for every 36,500 service members. By contrast, a Space Force with only 18,000 service members and 3 four-star generals—service chief, vice chief, and USSPACECOM commander—would have one four-star general for every 6,000 service members. [74]
On December 20, 2019, the United States Space Force Act, part of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020 (2020 NDAA), redesignated Air Force Space Command as the United States Space Force, establishing the first new military service since the Air Force was spun off from the Army in 1947. [2]
The Space Force Act transferred the dual-hatted AFSPC and USSPACECOM commander, Air Force general John W. Raymond, to the new service as its first chief of space operations (CSO). [75] The CSO was granted full membership on the JCS after one year, but the JCS chairman invited Raymond to begin attending meetings immediately. The CSO could only be dual-hatted as USSPACECOM commander for a one-year transition period, so Raymond turned over command of USSPACECOM to Army general James H. Dickinson in August 2020. [2] [76]
In October 2020, the Air Force lieutenant general serving as Space Force vice commander, David D. Thompson, was transferred to the Space Force to be the first vice chief of space operations (VCSO), a new four-star position established administratively by the secretary of the Air Force. [41] The 2023 NDAA permanently allocated two generals to the Space Force, corresponding to the CSO and VCSO. [14] [77]
Starting in 2021, the Department of Defense submitted annual legislative proposals to give the Space Force vice chief the same statutory charter and grade as the other service vice chiefs, but none were included in the final NDAA. [40] [78] Alluding to the episode the previous summer when the Army, Navy, and Marine Corps vice chiefs had to exercise their statutory roles as successors to their service chiefs during Senator Tommy Tuberville's blanket hold on military nominations, the 2024 legislative proposal argued that the Space Force needed similar authority enshrined in law for the VCSO's grade, functions, and succession to the CSO, which were all defined by executive policy that could change at any time. [41] The Senate included this provision in its version of the 2025 NDAA. [27]
On rare occasions, Congress authorized a posthumous promotion to four-star rank or higher, although the president might not choose to execute it immediately or at all.
Congress first created the grade of General of the Armies of the United States in 1799 to promote former president George Washington, then serving as lieutenant general and commander in chief of the forces being raised for the Quasi-War with France, but he died without being promoted and the unused grade lapsed in 1802. Washington remained a lieutenant general who by 1953 was outranked by 45 other Army generals, living and dead, holding four- or five-star grades or the special General of the Armies grade awarded to World War I general John J. Pershing in 1919. [79]
In 1976, as part of the United States Bicentennial celebration, Congress passed a law to prevent Washington from being outranked by any other Army officer, creating for him a new grade of General of the Armies with precedence over all previous Army grades, including Pershing's grade with the same title. [80] The president signed the law on October 11, 1976, but the Department of the Army did not implement it until March 13, 1978, posthumously promoting Washington to the grade of General of the Armies of the United States, effective from the 200th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1976. [81]
In 2021, joint resolutions authorizing the president to appoint Ulysses S. Grant posthumously to the grade of General of the Armies of the United States were introduced in the House and Senate by a bipartisan congressional delegation from his home states of Ohio, Missouri, and New York. In a letter to the secretary of defense, three of the bill's sponsors argued that by reestablishing the General of the Armies grade with "precedence over all other grades of the Army, past or present," the 1976 law authorizing Washington's promotion had effectively lowered the grade to which Grant was appointed in 1866. [82] [83]
Supporters of Grant's promotion hoped the law would pass in time for his 200th birthday on April 27, 2022, the date of rank specified in the bill, which was titled the "Ulysses S. Grant Bicentennial Recognition Act". The joint resolutions were referred to the House Armed Services Committee and Senate Judiciary Committee, neither of which took any action. [82] [84] Instead, the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 (2023 NDAA) used different language to authorize Grant's appointment to the grade of General of the Armies, adding a clause equating his rank and precedence to that of Pershing to avoid elevating Grant at Pershing's expense. [85]
Like Washington, who was authorized the grade of General of the Armies in 1976 but not promoted until 1978, Grant's promotion was not immediately executed, and was pending through his 201st birthday in 2023. [86] After the law was signed by the president, the secretary of defense approved and issued a memorandum to the secretary of the Army to posthumously advance Grant to General of the Armies on April 19, 2024. [87]
The 2001 NDAA asked the president to posthumously advance Navy rear admiral Husband E. Kimmel on the retired list to the four-star rank he lost upon being fired as Pacific Fleet commander after the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. [88] The president already had the authority to advance Kimmel under the Officer Personnel Act of 1947, so Congress could only urge the president to actually make the promotion. [89] However, no president had promoted Kimmel as of 2024, and the Navy Department turned down a request from his family as recently as 2023. [90]
In 1972, four-star Seventh Air Force commander John D. Lavelle was fired for conducting unauthorized airstrikes during the Vietnam War and retired in his permanent two-star grade. In 2010, he was posthumously nominated to be advanced to general on the retired list after declassified White House tapes suggested that Lavelle actually did have prior authorization for the airstrikes. The Senate Armed Services Committee rejected his nomination, saying the historical record was incomplete, so the Department of the Air Force commissioned a review led by former director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and director of central intelligence William H. Webster, who recommended in 2015 that Lavelle be posthumously advanced to lieutenant general, not general. However, the Air Force Board for Correction of Military Records (AFBCMR) ruled the next year that Lavelle should be restored to his four-star rank. [91]
In 2024, the House and Senate versions of the 2025 NDAA both included provisions to posthumously advance Lavelle on the retired list. The Senate version implemented Webster's recommendation to advance Lavelle only to lieutenant general, but the House version directed the secretary of defense to recommend a posthumous rank based on the AFBCMR ruling. [27] [92]
Legislation | Citation | Summary | Service |
---|---|---|---|
Act of January 20, 2017 | 131 Stat. 6 |
| USMC |
Act of December 12, 2017 [National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018] | 131 Stat. 1718 |
| USAF |
Act of August 13, 2018 [John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019] | 132 Stat. 2101 |
| USAF |
Act of December 20, 2019 [United States Space Force Act] | 133 Stat. 1561 133 Stat. 1563 133 Stat. 1564 |
| USSF |
Act of January 1, 2021 [William M. (Mac) Thornberry National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021] | 134 Stat. 3563 134 Stat. 3821 |
| USA, USN, USAF, USMC, USSF |
Act of January 20, 2021 | 131 Stat. 3 |
| USA |
Act of December 23, 2022 [James M. Inhofe National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023] | 136 Stat. 2557 136 Stat. 2558 136 Stat. 2611 136 Stat. 4039 |
| USA, USN, USAF, USMC, USSF, USCG |
Act of December 22, 2023 [National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2024] | 137 Stat. 241 137 Stat. 244 |
| USA, USN, USAF, USMC, USSF, NGB |
[with scanned attachment copy of April 19, 2024, U.S. Department of Defense] Memorandum for the Secretary of the Army; Subject: Posthumous Advancement on the Retired List; . . . General Ulysses S. Grant . . . to the grade of General of the Armies . . .
The Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) is the body of the most senior uniformed leaders within the United States Department of Defense, which advises the president of the United States, the secretary of defense, the Homeland Security Council and the National Security Council on military matters. The composition of the Joint Chiefs of Staff is defined by statute and consists of a chairman (CJCS), a vice chairman (VJCS), the chiefs of the Army, Marine Corps, Navy, Air Force, Space Force, and the chief of the National Guard Bureau. Each of the individual service chiefs, outside their JCS obligations, works directly under the secretaries of their respective military departments, e.g. the secretary of the Army, the secretary of the Navy, and the secretary of the Air Force.
The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (CJCS) is the presiding officer of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS). The chairman is the highest-ranking and most senior military officer in the United States Armed Forces and the principal military advisor to the president, the National Security Council, the Homeland Security Council, and the secretary of defense. While the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff outranks all other commissioned officers, the chairman is prohibited by law from having operational command authority over the armed forces; however, the chairman assists the president and the secretary of defense in exercising their command functions.
The vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (VJCS) is, by U.S. law, the second highest-ranking military officer in the United States Armed Forces, ranking just below the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The vice chairman outranks all respective heads of each service branch, with the exception of the chairman, but does not have operational command authority over their service branches. The vice chairman assists the chairman in exercising their duties. In the absence of the chairman, the vice chairman presides over the meetings of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and performs all other duties prescribed under 10 U.S.C. § 153 and may also perform other duties that the president, the chairman, or the secretary of defense prescribes.
In the United States military, a general is the most senior general-grade officer; it is the highest achievable commissioned officer rank that may be attained in the United States Armed Forces, with exception of the Navy and Coast Guard, which have the equivalent rank of admiral instead. The official and formal insignia of "general" is defined by its four stars.
The surgeon general of the Navy (SGN) is the most senior commissioned officer of the Medical Corps of the United States Navy and is the principal advisor to the United States Secretary of the Navy, Chief of Naval Operations and director of the Defense Health Agency on all health and medical matters pertaining to the United States Navy and United States Marine Corps. As head of the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, the surgeon general also manages Navy and Marine healthcare policy, administering the services' healthcare and biomedical research facilities as well as the various staff corps of BUMED, including the Medical Corps and an enlisted corps. The surgeon general is also a member of the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations.
A rear admiral in four of the uniformed services of the United States is one of two distinct ranks of commissioned officers; "rear admiral (lower half)," a one-star flag officer, and "rear admiral" (sometimes referred to as "rear admiral (upper half)"), a two-star flag officer. The two ranks are only utilized by the United States Navy, U.S. Coast Guard, U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, and the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration Commissioned Officer Corps. In contrast, in most other nations' rank-bearing services, the term "rear admiral" refers exclusively to two-star flag officer rank.
The chief of the National Guard Bureau (CNGB) is the highest-ranking officer of the National Guard and the head of the National Guard Bureau. The position is a statutory office, held by a federally recognized commissioned officer who has served at least 10 years of federally recognized active duty in the National Guard; the Army National Guard or the Air National Guard. In a separate capacity as a member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the chief is a military adviser to the National Security Council, the Homeland Security Council, the secretary of defense, and the president on matters pertaining to the National Guard.
The chief of the United States Army Reserve (CAR) is the commanding officer of the United States Army Reserve, the reserve component of the United States Army. As the highest-ranking officer in the United States Army Reserve, the CAR is the principal advisor to the chief of staff of the Army on all matters relating to the Army Reserve, and is responsible for the personnel, operations and construction budgets of the Army Reserve, subject to the supervision and control of the secretary of the Army. Dual-hatted as Commanding General, United States Army Reserve Command, the CAR is also responsible to the Commanding General, United States Army Forces Command for the oversight of operationally-deployed Army Reserve forces.
United States Space Force rank insignia are used to indicate the rank and status of the United States Space Force officers and enlisted personnel. Equivalency between the military services is indicated by associated NATO code and pay grade.
Although four-star officers appeared in organizations like the Continental Army before the United States of America was founded in 1776, the legislative history of four-star officers in the United States uniformed services began in 1799, when Congress authorized the grade of General of the Armies of the United States for former president George Washington, who was commanding the forces being raised for the Quasi-War with France as a lieutenant general but died without being promoted.
After World War II, four-star appointments were governed by the Officer Personnel Act (OPA) of 1947 until the passage of the Defense Officer Personnel Management Act (DOPMA) in 1980.
From 1981, four-star appointments in the United States were governed by the Defense Officer Personnel Management Act (DOPMA), which established the first unified framework for officer promotions in every armed service.