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This is a list of active duty United States senior enlisted leaders and advisors serving in the uniformed services of the United States. This list is intended to cover senior enlisted leaders and advisors attached to only three-star and four-star positions, with selected two-star [ a ] and civilian positions [ b ] included as well.
U.S. Army: 2: General George B. Crist (born 1931) 27 November 1985: 23 November 1988: 2 years, 362 days ... List of chiefs of staff of the United States Central Command
List of United States Army four-star generals; List of United States Army lieutenant generals from 1990 to 1999; List of United States Army lieutenant generals from 2000 to 2009; List of United States Army lieutenant generals from 2010 to 2019; List of United States Army lieutenant generals since 2020; List of female United States military ...
The Army of the US Historical Sketches of Staff and Line with Portraits of Generals-in-Chief. New York City: Maynard, Merrill & Co. pp. 1– 11 – via U.S. Army Center of Military History. Thian, Raphael Prosper (1901). Legislative History of the General Staff of the Army of the United States.
Deputy Chief of Staff, Operations and Plans, Army Staff/Senior Army Representative, U.N. Military Staff Committee (DCSOPS/Sr. Army Rep), 1994–1995. Deputy Chief of Staff, Operations and Plans, Army Staff (DCSOPS), 1995–1996. 2 1965 [m] 29 (1941– ) 52 Caryl G. Marsh: 1 Aug 1994 Commanding General, I Corps, 1994–1996. 2
Image Name Start End President(s) Kenneth Claiborne Royall: September 18, 1947: April 27, 1949: Harry S. Truman (1945–1953) Gordon Gray [1]: April 28, 1949
Chinese Army general [96] Ian Lyall Grant: 1915–2020: 104: British Army general [97] StanisÅ‚aw Maczek: 1892–1994: 102: Polish Army general [98] Branko Mamula: 1921–2021: 100: Yugoslav army officer and politician [99] John Manners: 1914–2020: 105: British Royal Navy officer and first-class cricketer [100] Leroy J. Manor: 1921–2021: 100
The following list of brigadier generals includes all officers appointed to that rank in the line or staff of the United States Regular Army prior to February 2, 1901. [8] It does not include officers who held that rank solely by brevet or in the non-permanent or non-federal establishments, such as brigadier generals of militia or volunteers.