Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

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Vice Chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff
Joint Chiefs of Staff seal.svg
Seal of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
Flag of the Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.svg
Flag of the Vice Chairman of the JCS
ADM Christopher W. Grady (2).jpg
Incumbent
Admiral Christopher W. Grady, USN

since December 20, 2021
Joint Chiefs of Staff
AbbreviationVJCS
Member ofDefense Acquisition Board
Joint Chiefs of Staff
Joint Requirements Oversight Council
Reports toThe President
Secretary of Defense
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
SeatThe Pentagon, Arlington County, Virginia, U.S.
AppointerThe President
with Senate advice and consent
Term length4 years
Renewable
Constituting instrument10 U.S.C. § 154
FormationFebruary 6, 1987
First holderRobert T. Herres
DeputyDirector of the Joint Staff
Websitewww.jcs.mil

The vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (VJCS)[1][2] is, by U.S. law, the second highest-ranking military officer in the United States Armed Forces,[3] 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.[3] 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.[3]

The 12th and current vice chairman is Admiral Christopher W. Grady, who assumed office on December 20, 2021.

Responsibilities[]

Although the office of Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff is considered to be very important and highly prestigious, neither the vice chairman nor the Joint Chiefs of Staff as a body have any command authority over combatant forces. The operational chain of command runs from the president to the secretary of defense directly to the commanders of the unified combatant commands.[4] The vice chairman's primary duties include: "overseeing joint military requirements, representing the military in National Security Council deputies meetings, and performing other duties as directed by the chairman."[5]

Appointment and term limitations[]

The vice chairman is nominated by the president for appointment from any of the regular components of the armed forces, and must be confirmed via majority vote by the Senate.[3] The chairman and vice chairman may not be members of the same armed force service branch.[3] However, the president may waive that restriction for a limited period of time in order to provide for the orderly transition of officers appointed to serve in those positions.[3] The vice chairman serves a single four-year term of office at the pleasure of the president,[3][6] and cannot be reappointed to serve additional terms unless in times of war or national emergency,[3][6] in which case there is no limit to how many times an officer can be reappointed.[3]

The vice chairmen is also not eligible to be appointed for promotion to chairman, or any other four-star position in the armed forces, unless the president determines that it is necessary in the interest of the nation.[3][6] The vice chairman assumes office on October 1st of every odd-number year, except the assumption of that term may not begin in the same year as the term of the chairman.[6] By statute, the vice chairman is appointed as a four-star general or admiral.[3]

History[]

The position of vice chairman was created by the Goldwater–Nichols Act of 1986 in order to centralize the military advisory chain of command to the president, the secretary of defense, and to the National Security Council. Originally the vice chairman was not included as a member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, until the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1992 made him a full voting member.[7] Historically, the vice chairman has served two, two-year terms before the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 amended the vice chairman's term length, beginning on January 1, 2021.[6] The same act also set a statutory beginning term date.[6] Prior to that, the position was filled whenever the previous holder left office.

List of JCS vice chairmen[]

General Richard B. Myers and General Peter Pace were later appointed to serve as Chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff from 2001 to 2005 and from 2005 to 2007, respectively.

No. Portrait Vice Chairman Took office Left office Time in office Service branch Chairman
1
Robert T. Herres
Herres, Robert T.General
Robert T. Herres
(1932–2008)
February 6, 1987February 28, 19903 years, 22 daysMilitary service mark of the United States Air Force.svg
U.S. Air Force
William J. Crowe
Colin Powell
2
David E. Jeremiah
Jeremiah, DavidAdmiral
David E. Jeremiah
(1934–2013)
[a]
March 1, 1990February 28, 19943 years, 364 daysEmblem of the United States Navy.svg
U.S. Navy
Colin Powell
John Shalikashvili
3
William Owens
Owens, WilliamAdmiral
William Owens
(born 1940)
March 1, 1994February 27, 19961 year, 363 daysEmblem of the United States Navy.svg
U.S. Navy
John Shalikashvili
4
Joseph Ralston
Ralston, JosephGeneral
Joseph Ralston
(born 1943)
March 1, 1996February 29, 20003 years, 365 daysMilitary service mark of the United States Air Force.svg
U.S. Air Force
John Shalikashvili
Hugh Shelton
5
Richard Myers
Myers, RichardGeneral
Richard Myers
(born 1942)
[b]
February 29, 2000October 1, 20011 year, 215 daysMilitary service mark of the United States Air Force.svg
U.S. Air Force
Hugh Shelton
6
Peter Pace
Pace, PeterGeneral
Peter Pace
(born 1945)
[b]
October 1, 2001August 12, 20053 years, 315 daysEmblem of the United States Marine Corps.svg
U.S. Marine Corps
Richard Myers
7
Edmund Giambastiani
Giambastiani, EdmundAdmiral
Edmund Giambastiani
(born 1948)
August 12, 2005July 27, 20071 year, 349 daysEmblem of the United States Navy.svg
U.S. Navy
Richard Myers
Peter Pace
8
James E. Cartwright
Cartwright, JamesGeneral
James E. Cartwright
(born 1949)
August 31, 2007August 3, 20113 years, 337 daysEmblem of the United States Marine Corps.svg
U.S. Marine Corps
Michael Mullen
Martin Dempsey
9
James A. Winnefeld, Jr.
Winnefeld, JamesAdmiral
James A. Winnefeld, Jr.
(born 1956)
August 4, 2011July 31, 20153 years, 361 daysEmblem of the United States Navy.svg
U.S. Navy
Martin Dempsey
10
Paul J. Selva
Selva, PaulGeneral
Paul J. Selva
(born 1958)
[8]
July 31, 2015July 31, 20194 years, 0 daysMilitary service mark of the United States Air Force.svg
U.S. Air Force
Martin Dempsey
Joseph Dunford
11
John E. Hyten
Hyten, JohnGeneral
John E. Hyten
(born 1959)
November 21, 2019November 19, 20211 year, 363 daysMilitary service mark of the United States Air Force.svg
U.S. Air Force
Mark Milley
12
Christopher W. Grady
Grady, ChristopherAdmiral
Christopher W. Grady
(born 1962)
December 20, 2021Incumbent5 daysEmblem of the United States Navy.svg
U.S. Navy
Mark Milley

Vice Chairman by branch of service[]

  • Air Force: 5
  • Navy: 5
  • Marine Corps: 2
  • Army: none
  • Space Force: none
  • Coast Guard: none

Positional color[]

VJCS flag with yellow fringe.

The positional color (flag) of the vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff is white with a diagonal medium blue strip from upper hoist to lower fly. Centered on the flag is an American bald eagle with wings spread horizontally, in proper colors. The talons grasp three crossed arrows. A shield with blue chief and thirteen red and white stripes is on the eagle's breast. Diagonally, from upper fly to lower hoist are four five-pointed stars, medium blue on the white, two above the eagle, and two below. The fringe is yellow; the cord and tassels are medium blue and white. The design was approved by Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger on 20 January 1987.[9]

See also[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ Served as acting Chairman
  2. ^ a b Later served as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs

References[]

  1. ^ Senior Enlisted Advisor to the Chairman - DSD/VJCS NEWS CONFERENCE
  2. ^ Department of Defense - DSD/VJCS NEWS CONFERENCE
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k 10 U.S.C. § 154 - Vice Chairman
  4. ^ 10 U.S.C. § 162 - Combatant commands: assigned forces; chain of command
  5. ^ "Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff".
  6. ^ a b c d e f Public Law 114–328 - The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 increased the term length Chairman and the Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff from two years to four years and the Vice Chairman is no longer eligible to become Chairman.
  7. ^ "Joint Chiefs of Staff > About > The Joint Staff > Vice Chairman". www.jcs.mil. Retrieved 2021-02-21.
  8. ^ "Gen. Paul J. Selva > Joint Chiefs of Staff > Article View". www.jcs.mil.
  9. ^ Army Regulation 840-10, paragraph 3-14 (2 Apr. 1992).

External links[]

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