Lieutenant General (Australia)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- See Lieutenant General for other countries which use this rank
Lieutenant General (abbreviated LTGEN) is the second-highest active rank of the Australian Army and was created as a direct equivalent of the British military rank of Lieutenant General. It is also considered a 3 star rank.
The rank of Lieutenant General is held by the Chief of Army. The rank is also held when an army officer is the Vice Chief of the Defence Force, the Chief of Joint Operations Australia, or the Chief of Capability Development.
Lieutenant General is a higher rank than Major General, but lower than General. Lieutenant General is the equivalent of Vice Admiral in the Royal Australian Navy and Air Marshal in the Royal Australian Air Force
The insignia for a Lieutenant General is the crown of St Edward above a crossed sword and baton.[1]
[edit] Current Australian Lieutenant Generals
There are currently three Lieutenant Generals in the Australian Defence Force:
- Peter Leahy - Chief of Army[2]
- Ken Gillespie - Vice Chief of the Defence Force
- David Hurley - Chief of Joint Operations (CJOPS)
From July 2008:
- Ken Gillespie - Chief of Army
- David Hurley - Vice Chief of the Defence Force
- Mark Evans - Chief of Joint Operations (CJOPS)
[edit] References and notes
- ^ Australian Army officer rank insignia are identical to British Army officer rank insignia, with the difference that Australian insignia have the word "Australia" below them.
- ^ LTGEN Leahy is retiring in July 2008 and will be succeded as Chief of Army by LTGEN Ken Gillespie.
[edit] See also
This Australian Military article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
|