Leadership of the United States Cyber Command

This is a list of all commanders, deputy commanders, senior enlisted leaders, and chiefs of staff of the United States Cyber Command.

Emblem of the United States Cyber Command

Current headquarters staff

edit

List of commanders of the United States Cyber Command

edit
Commander of the United States Cyber Command
 
Emblem of the United States Cyber Command
since 2 February 2024
United States Department of Defense
TypeUnified combatant commander
AbbreviationCDRUSCYBERCOM[5]
Reports toPresident of the United States
Secretary of Defense
NominatorSecretary of Defense
AppointerThe President
with Senate advice and consent
Term length2–3 years
(approx.)
Constituting instrument10 U.S.C. § 167b
Formation21 May 2010[6]
First holderKeith B. Alexander
DeputyDeputy Commander, United States Cyber Command
No. Commander Term Service branch
Portrait Name Took office Left office Term length
1Alexander, Keith B.General
Keith B. Alexander
(born 1951)
21 May 201028 March 20143 years, 311 days 
U.S. Army
-Davis, Jon M.Lieutenant General
Jon M. Davis
Acting
29 March 20142 April 20144 days 
U.S. Marine Corps
2Rogers, Michael S.Admiral
Michael S. Rogers
(born 1959)
3 April 20144 May 20184 years, 31 days 
U.S. Navy
3Nakasone Paul M.General
Paul M. Nakasone
(born 1963)
4 May 20182 February 20245 years, 270 days 
U.S. Army
4Haugh, Timothy D.General
Timothy D. Haugh
(born 1969)
2 February 2024Incumbent263 days 
U.S. Air Force

List of deputy commanders of the United States Cyber Command

edit
No. Deputy Commander Term Service branch
Portrait Name Took office Left office Term length
1Lieutenant General
Robert E. Schmidle Jr.[7]
August 2010May 2012~1 year, 274 days 
U.S. Marine Corps
2Lieutenant General
Jon M. Davis
May 2012June 2014~2 years, 31 days 
U.S. Marine Corps
3Lieutenant General
James K. McLaughlin[8]
August 2014~September 2017~3 years, 31 days 
U.S. Air Force
4Lieutenant General
William C. Mayville Jr.[9][a]
~July 2017March 2018~243 days 
U.S. Army
5Lieutenant General
Vincent Stewart[b]
(1958–2023)
~3 October 2017~May 2019~1 year, 210 days 
U.S. Marine Corps
6Vice Admiral
Ross A. Myers
May 2019~18 September 2020~1 year, 140 days 
U.S. Navy
7Lieutenant General
Charles L. Moore
~18 September 202026 July 2022~1 year, 311 days 
U.S. Air Force
8Lieutenant General
Timothy D. Haugh
26 July 202216 January 20241 year, 174 days 
U.S. Air Force
9Lieutenant General
William J. Hartman
16 January 2024Incumbent280 days 
U.S. Army

List of senior enlisted leaders of the United States Cyber Command

edit
No. Senior enlisted leader Term Service branch
Portrait Name Took office Left office Term length
-Chief Master Sergeant
Kevin Slater[10]
April 2012March 20152 years, 334 days 
U.S. Air Force
-Command Sergeant Major
David C. Redmond[11]
March 2015~16 March 20183 years, 15 days 
U.S. Army
-Master Gunnery Sergeant
Scott H. Stalker
16 March 201828 August 20202 years, 165 days 
U.S. Marine Corps
-Command Sergeant Major
Sheryl D. Lyon[12]
25 September 20208 September 20232 years, 348 days 
U.S. Army
-Chief Master Sergeant
Kenneth M. Bruce
8 September 2023Incumbent1 year, 44 days 
U.S. Air Force

List of chiefs of staff of the United States Cyber Command since 2013

edit
No. Chief of Staff Term Service branch
Portrait Name Took office Left office Term length
-Major General
Jim H. Keffer[13]
September 2013~1 November 2015~2 years, 61 days 
U.S. Air Force
-Major General
Joseph A. Brendler
~1 November 2015~August 2016~274 days 
U.S. Army
-Major General
Stephen Fogarty
August 2016[14]~11 May 2018~1 year, 283 days 
U.S. Army
-Rear Admiral
Ross A. Myers
~11 May 2018~May 2019~1 year 
U.S. Navy
-Major General
John B. Morrison
~6 June 2019[15]~15 July 2020~1 year, 39 days 
U.S. Army
-Major General
David Isaacson[16]
15 July 20209 June 20221 year, 329 days 
U.S. Army
-Major General
Bradley L. Pyburn
9 June 202214 June 20242 years, 5 days 
U.S. Air Force
-Rear Admiral
Dennis Velez
14 June 2024Incumbent130 days 
U.S. Navy

Notes

edit
  1. ^ Assignment not publicly announced by U.S. Department of Defense. Mayville's deputy position was concerned with the elevation of USCYBERCOM to a fully autonomous command separate from the National Security Agency. Mayville retired in 2018
  2. ^ Assignment publicly announced by U.S. Department of Defense. Stewart's deputy position was concerned with day-to-day operations of USCYBERCOM.

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ https://www.linkedin.com/in/ahmed-will-williamson-3a79721a/ [bare URL]
  2. ^ "Brigadier General Brian D. Vile - General Officer Management Office".
  3. ^ "Rear Admiral Joseph R. Buzzella".
  4. ^ "Brigadier General Kenneth J. Burgess - General Officer Management Office".
  5. ^ "DOD Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms, January 2021" (PDF). jcs.mil. Retrieved 15 May 2021.
  6. ^ Gates establishes U.S. Cyber Command, names first commander. Af.mil. Retrieved on June 30, 2013.
  7. ^ "CYBERCOM deputy commander visits 24th AF". 16th Air Force (Air Forces Cyber). 9 June 2019.
  8. ^ "LIEUTENANT GENERAL JAMES K. "KEVIN" MCLAUGHLIN". U.S. Air Force. Retrieved 16 June 2021.
  9. ^ "New deputy at Cyber Command to retire". Fifth Domain. 28 March 2018.
  10. ^ "Command Senior Enlisted Leader Assignment".
  11. ^ "Redmond Assigned to U.S. Cyber Command". 12 January 2015.
  12. ^ "Sheryl D. Lyon". www.nsa.gov.
  13. ^ "MAJOR GENERAL JIM H. KEFFER". www.af.mil.
  14. ^ "Lieutenant General Stephen G. Fogarty - General Officer Management Office".
  15. ^ "Fort Gordon welcomes new leadership".
  16. ^ "Chief of Staff, USCYBERCOM". www.cybercom.mil.