Ronald Keys

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Ronald Keys

General Ronald E. Keys
Allegiance United States of America
Service/branch United States Air Force
Years of service 1967 to 2007
Rank General
Battles/wars Vietnam War
Awards Defense Distinguished Service Medal
Defense Superior Service Medal
Legion of Merit
Distinguished Flying Cross

General Ronald E. Keys was Commander, Air Combat Command, with headquarters at Langley Air Force Base, Virginia, and Air Component Commander for U.S. Joint Forces Command and U.S. Northern Command.

General Keys was responsible for organizing, training, equipping and maintaining combat-ready forces for rapid deployment and employment while ensuring strategic air defense forces are ready to meet the challenges of peacetime air sovereignty and wartime defense. ACC operates more than 1,100 aircraft, 25 wings, 15 bases and more than 200 operating locations worldwide with 105,000 active-duty and civilian personnel. When mobilized, the Air National Guard and Air Force Reserve contribute more than 800 aircraft and 57,000 people to Air Combat Command.

As the Combat Air Forces lead agent, ACC develops strategy, doctrine, concepts, tactics and procedures for air and space power employment. The command provides conventional, nuclear and information warfare forces to all unified commands to ensure air, space and information superiority for warfighters and national decision-makers. ACC can also be called upon to assist national agencies with intelligence, surveillance and crisis response capabilities.

General Keys, a distinguished graduate of Kansas State University's ROTC program, was commissioned in 1967 and is an outstanding graduate of undergraduate pilot training. He has commanded a fighter squadron, the U.S. Air Force Fighter Weapons School, an F-15 wing, an A/OA-10 and F-16 wing, the Combat Air Forces Operational Test and Evaluation Wing, a numbered air force, and Allied Air Forces Southern Europe.

Additionally, General Keys was the first commander of the Air Force Doctrine Center, and he has served as an executive assistant to the Air Force Chief of Staff and to an Assistant Secretary of Defense. Prior to his current assignment, he was Deputy Chief of Staff for Air and Space Operations, Headquarters U.S. Air Force, Washington, D.C.

In 2002, Keys was Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Richard B. Myers' choice to succeed Lieutenant General Gregory S. Newbold as director of operations (J-3) for the Joint Staff. By long-standing tradition, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs had been allowed to select his own top subordinates, but Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld adopted a sharply different practice of personally interviewing all candidates for three- and four-star rank. Rumsfeld vetoed Keys' appointment after two interviews, forcing Myers to select Lieutenant General Norton A. Schwartz instead. The failure of Keys' nomination was subsequently recounted by senior military officers as an illustration of strained civilian-military relations at the Pentagon under Rumsfeld's leadership.[1]

General Keys is a command pilot with more than 4,000 flying hours, including more than 300 hours of combat time in Southeast Asia.

He is scheduled to retire effective November 1, 2007.

Contents

[edit] Education

[edit] Assignments

Gen. Ronald E. Keys, the commander of Air Combat Command, and Lt. Col. J.D. Lee fly an F-4 PhantomII aircraft over the Atlantic Ocean September 28, 2007, during the final flight of Key's military career.
Gen. Ronald E. Keys, the commander of Air Combat Command, and Lt. Col. J.D. Lee fly an F-4 PhantomII aircraft over the Atlantic Ocean September 28, 2007, during the final flight of Key's military career.
  1. June 1967 - July 1968, student, undergraduate pilot training, Reese AFB, Texas
  2. July 1968 - March 1969, student, F-4 training, Davis-Monthan AFB, Arizona
  3. April 1969 - May 1970, F-4 aircraft commander, 366th Tactical Fighter Wing, Da Nang Air Base, South Vietnam
  4. May 1970 - May 1971, F-4 aircraft commander, 475th Tactical Fighter Wing, Misawa AB, Japan
  5. May 1971 - April 1974, F-4 aircraft commander, flight examiner, later, chief, Wing Weapons and Tactics Division, 18th Tactical Fighter Wing, Kadena AB, Japan
  6. May 1974 - July 1979, F-4 instructor pilot and flight commander, U.S. Air Force Fighter Weapons School, Nellis AFB, Nevada
  7. July 1979 - July 1981, air operations officer, Operational Test and Evaluation Division, Directorate of Operations Readiness, Headquarters U.S. Air Force, Washington, D.C.
  8. July 1981 - December 1982, assistant executive officer to the Air Force Chief of Staff, Headquarters U.S. Air Force, Washington, D.C.
  9. December 1982 - March 1984, Chief, Operations Training Division, 1st Tactical Fighter Wing, Langley AFB, Virginia
  10. March 1984 - November 1985, Commander, 71st Tactical Fighter Squadron, Langley AFB, Virginia
  11. November 1985 - June 1986, special assistant to the Deputy Chief of Staff for Intelligence, Headquarters Tactical Air Command, Langley AFB, Virginia
  12. June 1986 - August 1987, Assistant Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations, Headquarters Air Force Reserve, Robins AFB, Georgia
  13. August 1987 - May 1988, student, Air War College, Maxwell AFB, Alabama
  14. June 1988 - July 1990, Commandant, U.S. Air Force Fighter Weapons School, Nellis AFB, Nevada
  15. July 1990 - August 1992, Vice Commander, later, Commander, 36th Fighter Wing, Bitburg AB, Germany
  16. August 1992 - February 1994, senior military assistant to the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Nuclear Security and Counterproliferation, Office of the Secretary of Defense, Washington, D.C.
  17. February 1994 - September 1995, Commander, 354th Fighter Wing, Eielson AFB, Alaska
  18. October 1995 - February 1997, Commander, 53rd Wing, Eglin AFB, Florida
  19. February 1997 - September 1998, Commander, Air Force Doctrine Center, Maxwell AFB, Alabama
  20. September 1998 - May 2000, Director of Operations, Headquarters U.S. European Command, Stuttgart, Germany
  21. May 2000 - November 2002, Commander, Allied Air Forces Southern Europe, Stabilization Forces Air Component and Kosovo Forces Air Component, Naples, Italy; and Commander, 16th Air Force and 16th Air and Space Expeditionary Task Force, Aviano AB, Italy
  22. November 2002 - May 2005, Deputy Chief of Staff for Air and Space Operations, Headquarters U.S. Air Force, Washington, D.C.
  23. May 2005 - October 2007, Commander, Air Combat Command, Langley AFB, Virginia, Air Component Commander for U.S. Joint Forces Command and for U.S. Northern Command

[edit] Flight information

  • Rating: Command pilot
  • Flight hours: More than 4,000
  • Aircraft flown: A-10, F-4, F-15 and F-16

[edit] Major awards and decorations

[edit] Effective dates of promotion

  • Second Lieutenant June 4, 1967
  • First Lieutenant Dec. 4, 1968
  • Captain June 4, 1970
  • Major March 1, 1979
  • Lieutenant Colonel Nov. 1, 1981
  • Colonel Nov. 1, 1986
  • Brigadier General July 15, 1994
  • Major General July 1, 1997
  • Lieutenant General July 1, 2000
  • General May 27, 2005

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Vernon Loeb and Thomas E. Ricks. "Rumsfeld's style, goals strain ties in Pentagon", Washington Post, October 16, 2002. Retrieved on 2007-07-12. 

This article incorporates text from [1], a public domain work of the United States Government.