Chief of the United States Army Reserve
Chief of the United States Army Reserve | |
---|---|
since 1 August 2024 | |
Office of the Chief of Army Reserve Army Staff | |
Type | Reserve component commander |
Abbreviation | CAR |
Member of | Reserve Forces Policy Board |
Reports to | Secretary of the Army (as Chief of Army Reserve) Chief of Staff of the United States Army (as Chief of Army Reserve) Commanding General, United States Army Forces Command (as Commanding General, U.S. Army Reserve Command) |
Seat | Office of the Chief of Army Reserve, Fort Liberty, North Carolina |
Appointer | The President with Senate advice and consent |
Term length | 4 years Renewable |
Constituting instrument | 10 U.S.C. § 7038 |
Formation | 12 June 1923 |
First holder | MAJ Charles F. Thompson (as Chief of Reserve Section, G-2) MG Frederick M. Warren (as Chief of Army Reserve) |
Deputy | Deputy Chief of Army Reserve |
Website | www.usar.army.mil |
The chief of the United States Army Reserve (CAR)[1] 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[2] 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.[3] 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.[4]
By statute, the CAR is a member of the Army Staff,[5] as well as one of five Army Reserve members of the Reserve Forces Policy Board.[6] The CAR is also designated by statute as the executive agent for the Full Time Support Program, a personnel program under the Department of Defense. The Chief's headquarters is the Office of the Chief of Army Reserve, housed at Fort Liberty, North Carolina.
The 34th chief of the Army Reserve is Lieutenant General Robert Harter.
Appointment and rank
[edit]As an officer's appointment in the United States Armed Forces, the nominee requires confirmation by the United States Senate by majority vote. The chief of Army Reserve is nominated for appointment by the president of the United States with the advice and/or recommendation of the secretary of defense and secretary of the Army, as well as a determination from the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff that the nominee has had significant joint duty experience.[3]
Until 1968, the office of the chief of the Army Reserve was not set by statute due to concerns that institutionalizing a commander of Army reserve forces would separate it from the Regular Army, much like how the Militia Act of 1903 had rendered the early National Guard independent from the Regular Army.[7] On 17 May 1968, Major General William J. Sutton was confirmed by the Senate in accordance with the passage of Pub. L. 90–168, thus making Sutton the first statutory Chief of Army Reserve.[8]
The CAR's rank was initially that of major in 1923, and was successively raised to colonel in 1924, to brigadier general in 1933 (making Charles D. Herron the first CAR to hold general officer rank), and to major general in 1950. The CAR's rank, alongside those of reserve leaders of other service branches, was raised to lieutenant general in the National Defense Authorization Act of 2001, making Thomas J. Plewes, then chief of Army Reserve, the first to hold three-star rank.[9] The statutory requirement for the CAR to hold the rank of lieutenant general was repealed in the 2017 NDAA, but the officeholder is still appointed to that rank.[10]
The CAR serves for a four-year term, which can be renewed once for a total of eight years.[3]
List of officeholders
[edit]No. | Chief[11] | Term | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Portrait | Name | Took office | Left office | Term length | |
Chief of the Reserve Section, G-2 | |||||
1 | Major Charles F. Thompson (1882–1954) | 12 June 1923 | 1 July 1923 | 19 days | |
2 | Walter O. Boswell (1877–1953) | Major2 July 1923 | 31 July 1924 | 1 year, 29 days | |
Chief of the Reserve Branch, G-2 | |||||
3 | Colonel Douglas Potts (1878–1940) | 1 August 1924 | 30 December 1925 | 1 year, 151 days | |
4 | Lieutenant Colonel John C. Pegram (1881–1972) | 31 December 1925 | 14 August 1926 | 226 days | |
5 | Frederick B. Ryons (1877–1946) | Lieutenant Colonel15 August 1926 | 30 September 1926 | 46 days | |
6 | Stanley H. Ford (1877–1961) | Colonel1 October 1926 | 10 February 1927 | 132 days | |
Executive for Reserve Affairs | |||||
7 | David L. Stone Jr. (1876–1959) | Colonel5 March 1927 | 30 June 1930 | 3 years, 117 days | |
8 | Brigadier General Charles D. Herron (1877–1977) | 1 July 1930 | 30 June 1935 | 4 years, 364 days | |
9 | Edwin S. Hartshorn Sr. (1874–1963) | Brigadier General1 July 1935 | 15 September 1938 | 3 years, 76 days | |
10 | Charles F. Thompson (1882–1954) | Brigadier General16 September 1938 | 9 June 1940 | 1 year, 267 days | |
11 | John H. Hester (1886–1976) | Brigadier General21 June 1940 | 23 March 1941 | 275 days | |
Executive for Reserve and ROTC Affairs | |||||
- | Frank E. Lowe (1885–1968) Acting | Colonel24 March 1941 | 4 June 1941 | 72 days | |
12 | Frank E. Lowe (1885–1968) | Brigadier General5 June 1941 | 10 August 1942 | 1 year, 66 days | |
13 | Edward W. Smith (1894–1966) | Brigadier General16 September 1942 | 14 October 1945 | 3 years, 28 days | |
14 | Edward S. Bres (1888–1967) | Brigadier General15 October 1945 | 30 November 1947 | 2 years, 46 days | |
15 | Wendell Westover (1895–1960) | Brigadier General1 December 1947 | 14 November 1949 | 1 year, 348 days | |
16 | Major General James B. Cress (1889–1967) | 1 January 1950 | 31 January 1951 | 1 year, 30 days | |
17 | Hugh M. Milton II (1897–1987) | Major General24 February 1951 | 18 November 1953 | 2 years, 267 days | |
18 | Philip F. Lindeman Jr. (1909–1988) | Major GeneralNovember 1953 | 6 December 1954 | 1 year, 17 days | |
Chief, Army Reserve and ROTC Affairs | |||||
18 | Philip F. Lindeman Jr. (1909–1988) | Major General7 December 1954 | 31 July 1957 | 2 years, 236 days | |
19 | Ralph A. Palladino (1904–1981) | Major General1 August 1957 | 31 May 1959 | 1 year, 303 days | |
20 | Frederick M. Warren (1903–1986) | Major General1 September 1959 | 12 February 1963 | 3 years, 164 days | |
Chief, Army Reserve | |||||
20 | Frederick M. Warren (1903–1986) | Major General13 February 1963 | 31 August 1963 | 199 days | |
21 | William J. Sutton (1908–1972) | Major General1 September 1963 | 31 May 1971 | 7 years, 272 days | |
22 | J. Milnor Roberts Jr. (1918–2009) | Major General1 June 1971 | 31 May 1975 | 3 years, 364 days | |
23 | Henry Mohr (1919–1997) | Major General1 June 1975 | 31 May 1979 | 3 years, 364 days | |
24 | William R. Berkman (1929–2014) | Major General1 June 1979 | 31 July 1986 | 7 years, 60 days | |
- | Harry J. Mott III (1929–2023) Acting | Brigadier General1 August 1986 | 30 November 1986 | 121 days | |
25 | William F. Ward Jr. (1928–2018) | Major General1 December 1986 | 1 October 1990 | 3 years, 304 days | |
Chief, Army Reserve and Commanding General, U.S. Army Reserve Command | |||||
25 | William F. Ward Jr. (1928–2018) | Major General1 October 1990 | 31 July 1991 | 303 days | |
26 | Roger W. Sandler (born 1934) | Major General1 August 1991 | 31 January 1994 | 2 years, 183 days | |
27 | Max Baratz (born 1934) | Major General1 February 1994 | 24 May 1998 | 4 years, 112 days | |
28 | Lieutenant General Thomas J. Plewes (born 1940) | 25 May 1998 | 24 May 2002 | 3 years, 364 days | |
29 | James R. Helmly (born 1947) | Lieutenant General25 May 2002 | 25 May 2006 | 4 years, 0 days | |
30 | Jack C. Stultz Jr. (born 1952) | Lieutenant General25 May 2006 | 9 June 2012 | 6 years, 15 days | |
31 | Jeffrey W. Talley (born 1959) | Lieutenant General9 June 2012 | 1 June 2016 | 4 years, 22 days | |
- | Michael R. Smith Acting | Major General1 June 2016 | 30 June 2016 | 29 days | |
32 | Charles D. Luckey (born 1955) | Lieutenant General30 June 2016 | 2 July 2020 | 4 years, 2 days | |
- | Michael C. O'Guinn Acting | Major General3 July 2020 | 28 July 2020 | 25 days | |
33 | Jody J. Daniels (born c. 1962) | Lieutenant General28 July 2020 | 30 July 2024 | 4 years, 2 days | |
- | Deborah Kotulich (born 1968) Acting | Major General30 July 2024 | 1 August 2024 | 2 days | |
34 | Robert Harter (born c. 1970) | Lieutenant General1 August 2024 | Incumbent | 125 days |
See also
[edit]- Office of the Chief of Army Reserve
- Chief of the National Guard Bureau
- Vice Chief of the National Guard Bureau
- Army National Guard
References
[edit]- ^ "Appendix C - Military and Army Acronyms, Abbreviations and Terms" (PDF). University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Retrieved 8 January 2022.
- ^ This does not include the director of the Army National Guard, who also reports to the chief of the National Guard Bureau and secretary of the Army for Army National Guard matters.
- ^ a b c 10 U.S.C. § 7038 - Office of Army Reserve: appointment of Chief.
- ^ "WHO WE ARE-U.S. Army Reserve Command". U.S. Army Reserve Command.
- ^ 10 U.S.C. § 7031 - The Army Staff: function; composition.
- ^ 10 U.S.C. § 10302 - Army Reserve Forces Policy Committee.
- ^ "A History of the Office of Chief, Army Reserve" (PDF). Fort Bragg, NC: Office of the Chief of Army Reserve. April 2013. p. 14.
- ^ "A History of the Office of Chief, Army Reserve" (PDF). Fort Bragg, NC: Office of the Chief of Army Reserve. April 2013. p. 14.
- ^ National Defense Authorization Act, Fiscal Year 2001 (PDF) (506). 30 October 2000.
- ^ "National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017" (PDF). Government Publishing Office.
- ^ Hilkert 2004, pp. 309–311.
Sources
[edit]- Hilkert, David E. (December 2004). Chiefs of the Army Reserve: Biographical Sketches of the United States Army Reserve's Senior Officers. Fort McPherson, GA: Office of Army Reserve History, U.S. Army Reserve Command.
- "A History of the Office of Chief, Army Reserve" (PDF). Fort Bragg, NC: Office of the Chief of Army Reserve. April 2013.