Lee F. Gunn

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Lee F. Gunn in 1992 prior to his promotion to Rear Admiral (lower half)

Lee Fredric Gunn[1] (born 1942[2] in Michigan) is a retired Vice Admiral and former Naval Inspector General of the United States Department of the Navy.

Education and Family[]

Gunn earned a Bachelor’s degree in Experimental and Physiological Psychology from the University of California, Los Angeles and a Master of Science degree in Operations Research from the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California.

Naval career[]

Commissioned into the United States Navy from the Naval Reserve Officer Training Program at the University of California, Los Angeles, Gunn served as a junior officer in the cruiser-destroyer force and rose to command the anti-submarine warfare tactical, test, and evaluation destroyer squadron. He later commanded Amphibious Group Three (PHIBGRU THREE), consisting of nineteen ships, twelve other, separate commands, and 16,000 sailors and marines. As commander of this force, he also served as the Commander, Combined Naval Forces, and Deputy Task Force Commander of Operation United Shield, the final withdrawal of United Nations peacekeeping forces from Somalia in February and March 1995. Admiral Gunn served in eight assignments in the areas of manpower, personnel and training. During his last manpower assignment as Deputy Chief of Naval Personnel, and Commander, Navy Personnel Command, he played a key role in redesigning the Navy’s manpower and personnel establishment and he orchestrated the transfer of the Navy’s Personnel Command from Arlington, Virginia to Millington, Tennessee. Appointed Naval Inspector General in July 1997, Vice Admiral Gunn instituted the Navy’s Operational Cost Management training and evaluation program, and reconfigured Navy’s major command management inspection process to teach and evaluate cost management. He retired from active service in August 2000.

Post-Naval Career[]

Immediately after retirement, the Chief of Naval Operations appointed Gunn to lead an executive review of naval training, a nine-month review conducted by a senior team of experts. Gunn has also served as board member of the from 2004 to 2008.[3] President of the , a bi-partisan national security think tank in Washington, DC; Chairman of the Board of Advisors to the Presidents of the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, CA and the Naval War College in Newport, RI;[4] an advisor to the Global Perspectives Initiative at the University of Central Florida: and a member and Executive Board member of the , the professional association of more than 7,000 surface warriors and supporters in the United States Navy. He served as National President of the Surface Navy Association from 2001-2006. Importantly, Gunn joined the CNA Corporation in Alexandria, Virginia in October 2001 and, from 2003 until his retirement in 2015 served as President of CNA's Institute for Public Research (IPR). IPR meets the research and analysis needs of those who address domestic policy issues in the areas of: air traffic management; education; health research and policy; organizational learning and effectiveness; safety and security; justice; energy, water, and climate; and other domestic issues. Gunn has been a member of CNA's Military Advisory Board (retired Admirals and Generals) researching issues in national security since 2009 and has been the Vice Chairman of CNA's MAB since 2012.[5]

Decorations and awards[]

Gunn's awards and decorations include:

References[]

This article includes public domain text produced by the United States Navy.

  1. ^ "PN164 — Navy". U.S. Congress. 22 June 1995. Retrieved 2020-06-18.
  2. ^ Register of Commissioned and Warrant Officers of the United States Navy and Reserve Officers on Active Duty. Bureau of Naval Personnel. 1 October 1976. p. 52. Retrieved 2020-06-18.
  3. ^ American Small Business Coalition website
  4. ^ Report of the Chairman of the Board of Advisors, Naval Postgraduate School, 6 July 2010
  5. ^ CNA website biography Archived 2011-06-15 at the Wayback Machine
Military offices
Preceded by Naval Inspector General
July 1997–August 2000
Succeeded by
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