List of United States Space Force lieutenant generals explained

This is a complete list of lieutenant generals in the United States Space Force. The rank of lieutenant general (or three-star general) is the second-highest rank achievable in the U.S. Space Force, and the first to have a specific number of authorized positions for it set by statute. It ranks above major general (two-star general) and below general (four-star general).

There have been 11 lieutenant generals in the United States Space Force, three of whom were promoted to four-star general. All achieved that rank while on active duty in the U.S. Space Force, and all were commissioned via identical paths to Air Force commissioned officers: seven via Air Force Reserve Officer Training Corps (AFROTC) at a civilian university, three via the U.S. Air Force Academy (USAFA), and one via the Academy of Military Science (AMS).

List of generals

Entries in the following list of lieutenant generals are indexed by the numerical order in which each officer was promoted to that rank while on active duty, or by an asterisk (*) if the officer did not serve in that rank while on active duty in the U.S. Space Force or was promoted to four-star rank while on active duty in the U.S. Space Force. Each entry lists the general's name, date of rank, active-duty positions held while serving at three-star rank, number of years of active-duty service at three-star rank (Yrs), year commissioned and source of commission, number of years in commission when promoted to three-star rank (YC), and other biographical notes (years of birth and death are shown in parentheses in the Notes column). Lieutenant generals of the U.S. Air Force who transferred to the Space Force in the equivalent grade or promoted to grade after transfer to the Space Force are included.

List of U.S. Space Force lieutenant generals
NamePhotoPositionYrsCommissionYCNotes
data-sort-value="saltzman" B. Chance Saltzman7 Aug 2020  
  • Deputy Chief of Space Operations, Operations, Cyber, and Nuclear (DCSO S3/4/6/7/10), 2020–2022.
21991 (AFROTC) 29 (1969–) Promoted to general, 2 Nov 2022. First lieutenant general in the Space Force and first general officer commissioned into the service.[1]
1data-sort-value="armagno" Nina M. Armagno7 Aug 2020   31988 (USAFA) 32 (1966–) First female general officer in the Space Force.
2data-sort-value="liquori" William J. Liquori Jr.7 Aug 2020  
  • Deputy Chief of Space Operations, Strategy, Plans, Programs, Requirements, and Analysis (DCSO S5/8/9), 2020–2022.
21991 (AFROTC) 29 (1969–)
data-sort-value="whiting" Stephen N. Whiting21 Oct 2020   41989 (USAFA) 31 (1967–) Promoted to general, 10 Jan 2024.
3data-sort-value="shaw" John E. Shaw23 Nov 2020   31990 (USAFA) 30 (1968–) First Space Force lieutenant general with a joint duty assignment.
data-sort-value="guetlein" Michael A. Guetlein13 Aug 2021   21991 (AFROTC) 30 (1967–) Promoted to general, 21 Dec 2023.
4data-sort-value="garrant" Philip A. Garrant2 Aug 2022   21991 (AFROTC) 31 (1969–)
5data-sort-value="burt" DeAnna M. Burt1 Dec 2022  
  • Deputy Chief of Space Operations, Operations, Cyber, and Nuclear (DCSO S3/4/6/7/10), 2022–present.
21991 (AFROTC) 31 (1969–)
6data-sort-value="schiess" Douglas A. Schiess6 Dec 2023   11992 (AFROTC) 31 (1970–)
7data-sort-value="bratton" Shawn N. Bratton22 Dec 2023  
  • Deputy Chief of Space Operations, Strategy, Plans, Programs, Requirements, and Analysis (DCSO S5/8), 2023–present.
01994 (AMS) 30 (1968–) Served seven years in the enlisted ranks before receiving his commission in 1994.
8data-sort-value="miller" David N. Miller Jr.9 Jan 2024   01993 (AFROTC) 31 (–)

Timeline

Overview

The rank of lieutenant general in the United States Space Force is identical to its equivalents in the Army, Marine Corps and Air Force in that it is strictly ex officio, tied to positions requiring the officeholder to hold said rank. As a result, upon vacating such a position, the officeholder is reduced to their highest permanent grade, but may retain their temporary grade outside of statutory limits for up to 60 days pending reassignment to a position of equal or higher importance.[2]

The first three-star general in the Space Force was B. Chance Saltzman, who was promoted on 14 August 2020 with date of rank on 7 August.[3]

Both initial general officer setups for the Space Force provided for six lieutenant generals in the new service.[4] In December 2022, the James M. Inhofe National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 codified five lieutenant general billets for the Space Force into Title 10 of the United States Code.[5]

Three-star generals

See also

References

Notes

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Richardson. James. U.S. Space Force promotes first general officer. Secretary of the Air Force Public Affairs. 14 August 2020. 6 June 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20211210153030/https://www.spaceforce.mil/News/Article/2314027/us-space-force-promotes-first-general-officer/. 10 December 2021. U.S. Space Force.
  2. - Positions of importance and responsibility: generals and lieutenant generals; admirals and vice admirals.
  3. Web site: Richardson. James. U.S. Space Force promotes first general officer. Secretary of the Air Force Public Affairs. 14 August 2020. 6 June 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20211210153030/https://www.spaceforce.mil/News/Article/2314027/us-space-force-promotes-first-general-officer/. 10 December 2021. U.S. Space Force.
  4. Web site: Spirtas. Michael. Kim. Yool. Camm. Frank. Ross. Shirley. Knopman. Debra. Morgan. Forrest. Base. Sebastian Joon. Bond. M. Scott. Crown. John. Simmons. Elaine. A Separate Space: Creating a Military Service for Space. 2020. 6 June 2022. RAND Corporation. RAND.
  5. Web site: H.R.7776 - James M. Inhofe National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023. 16 May 2022. 23 December 2022. U.S. Congress.