Ricardo Aponte
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Ricardo Aponte | |
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born c. 1950 | |
Brigadier General Ricardo Aponte |
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Nickname | Rico |
Place of birth | San Juan, Puerto Rico |
Allegiance | United States |
Service/branch | United States Air Force |
Years of service | 1972-present |
Rank | Brigadier General |
Commands | United States Southern Command |
Awards | Legion of Merit Meritorious Service Medal Air Force Commendation Medal |
Brigadier General Ricardo "Rico" Aponte (born c. 1950) is a United States Air Force officer who is currently the Director, J-7, of the United States Southern Command, located in Miami, Florida.
Aponte was raised and educated in San Juan, the capital of Puerto Rico. After receiving his primary and secondary education, he enrolled in the University of Puerto Rico and joined the campus ROTC program. On December 29, 1972, he earned a Bachelor of Science degree in civil engineering and was commissioned a Second Lieutenant in the United States Air Force.[1]
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[edit] Assignments
Aponte was assigned to Moody Air Force Base in the state of Georgia and completed his pilot training in August 1974. He was then reassigned to the 27th Tactical Fighter Wing at Cannon Air Force Base, New Mexico as weapons system officer and aircraft commander F-111D. He was promoted to First Lieutenant on May 1, 1975. At Cannon Air Base, Aponte flew the F-111 F and D models, the 02-A and T-38 aircraft.
Aponte became a Captain on May 1, 1977 and served as aircraft commander and instructor pilot of the F-111F aircraft of the 48th Tactical Fighter Wing, Royal Air Force Lakenheath in the United Kingdom from August 1978 to May 1981. During this period, he earned his Master of Science degree in management science from Troy State University.
In May 1981, he returned to the United States and served as instructor pilot of the 0-2A aircraft, assigned to the 549th Tactical Air Support Training Squadron at Patrick Air Force Base in Florida. During this period, Aponte attended the United States Marine Corps Weapons and Tactics Instructor School in Marine Corps Air Station Yuma located in Arizona, the United States Air Force Squadron Officer's School and United States Air Force Air Command and Staff College (the latter two by correspondence). He served at Patrick Air Force Base until May 1984, when he was sent to Howard Air Force Base in Panama. Aponte was promoted to Major on October 1, 1984 and was the chief of the Latin American Political Military Affairs Division and deputy director for Latin American Affairs.
On June 1988, Aponte was reassigned to Cannon Air Force Base in New Mexico where he served as aircraft commander F111-D, 523rd Tactical Fighter Squadron and from 1989 to December 1989 as chief, Quality Assurance of 27th Tactical Fighter Group.[2]
[edit] Air Force Reserve
In January 1990, Aponte was named international political military affairs officer of MacDill Air Force Base in Florida.
In August 1990, Aponte joined the Air Force Reserve and was assigned to Deputy Chief of Staff for Air and Space Operations Western Hemisphere Division in the Pentagon in Washington, D.C.. At the Pentagon, Aponte was the international political officer who led the reserve officers assigned to the Western Hemisphere, European and Defense Attached Directorates. In 1992, the U.S. Air Force Demonstration Squadron, The Thunderbirds, selected him as the Spanish Language Narrator for their highly successful Latin America Tour. He was promoted to Lieutenant Colonel in June 18, 1993 and attended a seminar at the Air War College in 1994. From November 1999 to January 2001, he served as individual mobilization augmentee to Deputy Under Secretary International Affairs. He was promoted to the rank of Colonel on August 1, 1997.
In January 2001, he was assigned as a mobilization assistant to the deputy to the Chief Air Force Reserve. There he led transformation efforts and was a tiger team member in response to frequent mobilization and demobilization issues resulting from Operations Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom.
[edit] United States Southern Command
In April 2003, Aponte became the Deputy Director for Operations, Headquarters United States Southern Command in Miami, Florida. Aponte was promoted to Brigadier General on March 1, 2003. In October 2004, he was named Director, J-7, of the United States Southern Command, a position which he currently holds.
His directorate is the focal point for transformation initiatives, knowledge management, experimentation and gaming within the U. S. Southern Command. The directorate seeks out new concepts and rigorously tests them both in simulation and as part of operational experiments. The first transformation initiative was the startup of the Secretary of Defense mandated Standing Joint Force Headquarters (SJFHQ). The SJFHQ, consists of planning, operations, knowledge management, and information superiority experts who form the backbone of the Joint Task Force command structure in the event of contingency operations.
[edit] Awards and decorations
Among Aponte's military decorations are the following:
- Legion of Merit
- Meritorious Service Medal with three oak leaf clusters
- Air Force Commendation Medal with oak leaf cluster
- Distinguished Presidential Unit Citation
- Joint Meritorious Unit Award
- Air Force Outstanding Unit Award with three oak leaf clusters
- Air Force Organizational Excellence Award
- Combat Readiness Medal
- National Defense Service Medal with oak leaf cluster
Badges: