Leadership of Space Operations Command U.S. Space Force field commander
SpOC emblem
The commander of Space Operations Command is a lieutenant general who leads the field command that provide space forces to the United States Space Command and supports other unified combatant commands . A senior leader in the Space Force, it is only one of three field commanders and, of which, only one of two held by a lieutenant general.
Space Operations Command (SpOC) was established by redesignating the Air Force Space Command as Space Operations Command, which was redesignated prior as Headquarters, United States Space Force to serve in transitional capacity as the new service's headquarters. The commander of SpOC, thus, can be traced back to 1 September 1982, when General James V. Hartinger served as the first commander of Space Command.[ 1]
Like any other three-star officer position in the U.S. Armed Forces, the commander of SpOC is nominated by the president of the United States and must be confirmed by the U.S. Senate . The current commander of SpOC is Lieutenant General David N. Miller .
List of commanders
Gen O'Malley (left) and Secretary Aldridge (right) looks on as Gen Hartinger signs as the first commander of Space Command, 1 September 1982
Left to right: Gen Kutyna , Gen Herres , Gen Hartinger , Maj Gen Padden, and Lt Gen Moorman , former and current Air Force Space Command commanders, gather in 1991
Lt Gen Whiting , the first commander of Space Operations Command , delivers remarks during the field command's activation ceremony, 21 October 2020
No.
Commander[ 2] [ 1]
Term
Portrait
Name
Took office
Left office
Duration
Space Command
1 GeneralJames V. Hartinger (1925–2000) 1 September 1982 20 July 1984 1 year, 323 days
2 GeneralRobert T. Herres (1932–2008) 30 July 1984 15 November 1985 1 year, 118 days
Air Force Space Command
1 GeneralRobert T. Herres (1932–2008) 15 November 1985 1 October 1986 320 days
2 Major GeneralMaurice C. Padden (1931–2015) 1 October 1986 29 October 1987 1 year, 28 days
3 Lieutenant GeneralDonald J. Kutyna (born 1933) 29 October 1987 29 March 1990 2 years, 151 days
4 Lieutenant GeneralThomas S. Moorman Jr. (1940–2020) 29 March 1990 23 March 1992 1 year, 360 days
5 GeneralDonald J. Kutyna (born 1933) 23 March 1992 30 June 1992 99 days
6 GeneralChuck Horner (born 1936) 30 June 1992 13 September 1994 2 years, 106 days
7 GeneralJoseph W. Ashy (born 1940) 13 September 1994 26 August 1996 1 year, 348 days
8 GeneralHowell M. Estes III (1941–2024) 26 August 1996 14 August 1998 1 year, 353 days
9 GeneralRichard Myers (born 1942) 14 August 1998 22 February 2000 1 year, 192 days
10 GeneralRalph Eberhart (born 1946) 22 February 2000 19 April 2002 2 years, 56 days
11 GeneralLance W. Lord (born 1946) 19 April 2002 1 April 2006 3 years, 347 days
– Lieutenant GeneralFrank Klotz (born 1950) Acting 1 April 2006 26 June 2006 86 days
12 GeneralKevin P. Chilton (born 1954) 26 June 2006 3 October 2007 1 year, 99 days
– Lieutenant GeneralMichael A. Hamel Acting 3 October 2007 12 October 2007 9 days
13 GeneralC. Robert Kehler (born 1952) 12 October 2007 5 January 2011 3 years, 85 days
14 GeneralWilliam L. Shelton (born 1954) 5 January 2011 15 August 2014 3 years, 222 days
15 GeneralJohn E. Hyten (born 1959) 15 August 2014 25 October 2016 2 years, 71 days
16 GeneralJohn W. Raymond (born 1962) 25 October 2016 20 December 2019 3 years, 56 days
United States Space Force
1 GeneralJohn W. Raymond (born 1962) 20 December 2019[ a] 21 October 2020 306 days
Space Operations Command
1 Lieutenant GeneralStephen Whiting (born 1967) 21 October 2020 9 January 2024 3 years, 80 days
2 Lieutenant GeneralDavid N. Miller (born c. 1971 ) 9 January 2024 Incumbent 1 year, 119 days
List of vice commanders
Gen Goldfein (left) administers the oath of office to Lt Gen Thompson (right) during the establishment of the Air Force Space Command's vice commander position, 4 April 2018
No.
Vice Commander
Term
Ref
Portrait
Name
Took office
Left office
Duration
1 Lieutenant GeneralDavid D. Thompson (born 1963) 4 April 2018 21 October 2020 2 years, 200 days[ 3]
2 Major GeneralJohn E. Shaw (born 1968) 21 October 2020 16 November 2020 26 days-
3 Major GeneralDeAnna Burt (born 1969) 16 November 2020 22 August 2022 1 year, 279 days[ 4]
4 Major GeneralDouglas Schiess (born 1970) 22 August 2022 6 December 2023 1 year, 106 days[ 5]
5 Brigadier GeneralDevin Pepper (born 1969) 6 December 2023 11 June 2024 ~ 188 days [ 6]
6 Brigadier GeneralChandler Atwood (born 1977/1978) 11 June 2024 Incumbent 331 days[ 7]
List of deputy commanders
No.
Deputy Commander
Term
Ref
Portrait
Name
Took office
Left office
Duration
1 Major GeneralMaurice C. Padden (1931–2015) July 1985 1 October 1986 ~ 1 year, 78 days [ 8]
2 Major GeneralRalph E. Spraker (1933–2020) 1 October 1986 June 1989 ~ 2 years, 257 days [ 9]
3 Major GeneralG. Wesley Clark (born 1932) June 1989 April 1990 ~ 304 days [ 10]
4 Major GeneralJay W. Kelley (born 1941) April 1990 March 1992 ~ 1 year, 335 days [ 11]
5 Lieutenant GeneralThomas S. Moorman Jr. (1940–2020) March 1992 July 1994 ~ 2 years, 122 days [ 12]
6 Lieutenant GeneralPatrick P. Caruana (born 1939) August 1994 August 1997 ~3 years [ 13]
7 Lieutenant GeneralLance W. Lord (born 1946) August 1997 June 1999 ~ 1 year, 304 days [ 13]
8 Lieutenant GeneralDonald G. Cook (born 1946) July 1999 June 2000 ~1 year [ 14]
9 Lieutenant GeneralRoger G. DeKok (1947–2003) June 2000 April 2002 ~ 1 year, 304 days [ 15]
10 Lieutenant GeneralRobert C. Hinson April 2002 August 2003 ~ 1 year, 122 days [ 16]
11 Lieutenant GeneralDaniel P. Leaf (born c. 1952 ) August 2003 September 2005 ~ 2 years, 31 days [ 17]
12 Lieutenant GeneralFrank Klotz (born 1950) October 2005 August 2007 ~ 1 year, 304 days [ 18]
13 Major GeneralThomas F. Deppe August 2007 August 2009 ~2 years [ 19]
14 Lieutenant GeneralMichael J. Basla August 2009 May 2012 ~ 2 years, 274 days [ 20]
15 Lieutenant GeneralJohn E. Hyten (born 1959) May 2012 August 2014 ~ 2 years, 92 days -
16 Major GeneralDavid J. Buck August 2014 August 2015 ~1 year [ 21]
17 Major GeneralDavid D. Thompson (born 1963) July 2015 July 2017 ~2 years -
18 Major GeneralRobert J. Skinner July 2017 July 2018 ~1 year [ 22]
19 Major GeneralJohn E. Shaw (born 1968) August 2018 20 November 2019 ~ 1 year, 97 days [ 23]
20 Major GeneralStephen Whiting (born 1967) 20 November 2019 21 October 2020 336 days[ 24]
List of senior enlisted leaders
No.
Senior Enlisted Leader
Term
Ref
Portrait
Name
Took office
Left office
Duration
1 Chief Master SergeantCharles P. Zimkas Jr. 1 September 1982 ~1984 ~ 1 year, 303 days [ 25]
2 Chief Master SergeantThomas J. Echols ~1984 October 1986 ~ 2 years, 107 days -
3 Chief Master SergeantJohn W. Wright (1942–2019) October 1986 ~1989 ~ 2 years, 258 days [ 26]
4 Chief Master SergeantDelamar T. Jones ~1989 December 1992 ~ 3 years, 168 days -
5 Chief Master SergeantRichard G. Griffis December 1992 November 1996 ~ 3 years, 336 days [ 27]
6 Chief Master SergeantRobert M. Clougherty November 1996 August 1998 ~ 1 year, 273 days [ 28]
7 Chief Master SergeantDennis L. Fritz August 1998 February 2000 ~ 1 year, 184 days [ 29]
8 Chief Master SergeantKevin D. Estrem February 2000 June 2002 ~ 2 years, 120 days [ 30]
9 Chief Master SergeantRonald G. Kriete June 2002 August 2006 ~ 4 years, 61 days [ 31]
10 Chief Master SergeantMichael T. Sullivan August 2006 14 February 2008 ~ 1 year, 183 days [ 32] [ 33]
11 Chief Master SergeantRichard T. Small 14 February 2008 September 2011 ~ 3 years, 212 days [ 34]
12 Chief Master SergeantLinus Jordan September 2011 May 2013 ~ 1 year, 242 days [ 35]
13 Chief Master SergeantDouglas McIntyre May 2013 6 August 2015 ~ 2 years, 83 days [ 36] [ 37]
14 Chief Master SergeantPatrick F. McMahon 6 August 2015 May 2016 ~ 283 days [ 38]
15 Chief Master SergeantBrendan I. Criswell July 2016 November 2018 ~ 2 years, 123 days [ 39]
16 Chief Master SergeantRoger A. Towberman (born 1966/1967) November 2018 21 October 2020 ~ 1 year, 341 days [ 40]
17 Chief Master SergeantJohn F. Bentivegna (born c. 1976 ) 21 October 2020 30 April 2022 1 year, 191 days[ 41]
18 Chief Master SergeantJacob C. Simmons (born c. 1974 ) 30 April 2022 7 August 2023 1 year, 99 days[ 41]
19 Chief Master SergeantCaleb M. Lloyd (born c. 1985 ) 7 August 2023 Incumbent 1 year, 274 days[ 42]
See also
References
Notes
^ With the creation of the Space Force, Air Force Space Command headquarters in Colorado remained working until the stand-up of Space Operations Command, serving in transitional capacity as Headquarters, United States Space Force.[ 1]
Citations
Leadership
Structure
Field commands Component Field Commands Deltas Squadrons Direct reporting units
Locations
Space Force Bases Space Bases Space Force Stations
Personnel and training History and traditions