United States Deputy Secretary of Defense
The deputy secretary of defense (acronym: DepSecDef) is a statutory office (10 U.S.C. § 132) and the second-highest-ranking official in the Department of Defense of the United States of America.
United States Deputy Secretary of Defense | |
---|---|
Seal of the Department | |
Flag of the Deputy Secretary | |
United States Department of Defense Office of the Secretary of Defense | |
Style | Mr. Deputy Secretary |
Status | Chief operating officer |
Reports to | Secretary of Defense |
Seat | The Pentagon, Arlington County, Virginia |
Appointer | The President with Senate advice and consent |
Term length | No fixed term |
Constituting instrument | 10 U.S.C. § 132 |
Formation | 1949[1] |
First holder | Stephen Early[1] May 2, 1949 |
Succession | 1st in SecDef succession |
Salary | Executive Schedule, level II[2] |
Website | www.defense.gov |
The deputy secretary is the principal civilian deputy to the secretary of defense, and is appointed by the president, with the advice and consent of the Senate. The deputy secretary, by statute, is designated as the DoD chief management officer and must be a civilian, at least seven years removed from service as a commissioned officer on active-duty at the date of appointment.[3]
The current deputy secretary of defense is David Norquist, effective July 31, 2019.[4]
President Joe Biden has nominated Kathleen Hicks to be Deputy Secretary of Defense. Hicks formerly served as Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Strategy, Plans, and Forces and Principal Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Policy. She would be the first woman to be confirmed to that role.[5]
History
Public Law 81–36, April 2, 1949, originally established this position as the under secretary of defense, however Public Law 81-2 16, August 10, 1949, a.k.a. the 1949 Amendments to the National Security Act of 1947, changed the title to Deputy Secretary of Defense. Former assistant to President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Stephen Early, became the first officer holder when he was sworn-in on May 2, 1949.[1]
Public Law 92-596, October 27, 1972, established a second deputy secretary of defense position, with both deputies performing duties as prescribed by the secretary of defense. The second deputy position was not filled until December 1975. Robert F. Ellsworth, serving from December 23, 1975, until January 10, 1977, was the only one to ever hold that office. Public Law 95-140, October 21, 1977, established two under secretaries of defense and abolished the second deputy position.[1]
Responsibilities
By delegation, the deputy secretary of defense has full power and authority to act for the secretary of defense and to exercise the powers of the secretary of defense on any and all matters for which the secretary is authorized to act pursuant to statute or executive order.[1] The deputy secretary is first in the line of succession to the secretary of defense.
The typical role of the deputy secretary of defense is to oversee the day-to-day business and lead the internal management processes of the $500-billion-plus Department of Defense budget, that is as its chief operating officer; while the secretary of defense as the chief executive officer focuses on the big issues of the day, ongoing military operations, high-profile congressional hearings, attending meetings of the National Security Council, and directly advising the president on defense issues.
Prior to February 1, 2018, the deputy secretary of defense also served as the department's chief management officer, to whom the deputy chief management officer reported, but those responsibilities were split into a new chief management officer of the Department of Defense position.[6]
The deputy secretary, among the office's many responsibilities, chairs the Senior Level Review Group (SLRG), before 2005 known as Defense Resources Board (DRB), which provides department-wide budgetary allocation recommendations to the Secretary and the President. Traditionally, the deputy secretary has been the civilian official guiding the process of the Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR).
The deputy secretary of defense chairs the Special Access Program Oversight Committee (SAPOC), which has oversight responsibilities and provides recommendations with respect to changes in status of the Department's Special Access Programs, for either the deputy secretary defense or the secretary of defense to make.
List of deputy secretaries of defense
No. | Image | Name | Term of office | Secretaries of Defense serving under: | President appointed by: | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Began | Ended | Days of service | |||||
1 | Stephen Early | May 2, 1949 August 10, 1949[1] |
August 9, 1949[lower-alpha 1] September 30, 1950[lower-alpha 2][1] |
516 | Louis A. Johnson George Marshall |
Harry S. Truman | |
2 | Robert A. Lovett | October 4, 1950 | September 16, 1951 | 316 | George Marshall | ||
3 | William Chapman Foster | September 24, 1951 | January 20, 1953 | 484 | Robert A. Lovett | ||
4 | Roger M. Kyes | February 2, 1953 | May 1, 1954 | 453 | Charles E. Wilson | Dwight D. Eisenhower | |
5 | Robert B. Anderson | May 3, 1954 | August 4, 1955 | 458 | |||
6 | Reuben B. Robertson Jr. | August 5, 1955 | April 25, 1957 | 629 | |||
7 | Donald A. Quarles | May 1, 1957 | May 8, 1959 | 737 | Charles E. Wilson Neil H. McElroy | ||
8 | Thomas S. Gates | June 8, 1959 | December 1, 1959 | 176 | Neil H. McElroy | ||
9 | James H. Douglas Jr. | December 11, 1959 | January 24, 1961 | 410 | Thomas S. Gates Robert McNamara | ||
10 | Roswell Gilpatric | January 24, 1961 | January 20, 1964 | 1091 | Robert McNamara | John F. Kennedy | |
11 | Cyrus Vance | January 28, 1964 | June 30, 1967 | 1249 | Lyndon B. Johnson | ||
12 | Paul Nitze | July 1, 1967 | January 20, 1969 | 569 | Robert McNamara Clark Clifford | ||
13 | David Packard | January 24, 1969 | December 13, 1971 | 1053 | Melvin R. Laird | Richard Nixon | |
14 | Kenneth Rush | February 23, 1972 | January 29, 1973 | 341 | |||
15 | Bill Clements | January 30, 1973 | January 20, 1977 | 1451 | Elliot Richardson James R. Schlesinger Donald Rumsfeld | ||
16 | Robert Ellsworth | December 23, 1975[7] | January 10, 1977[7] | 384 | Donald Rumsfeld | Gerald Ford | |
17 | Charles Duncan Jr. | January 31, 1977 | July 26, 1979 | 906 | Harold Brown | Jimmy Carter | |
18 | W. Graham Claytor Jr. | August 24, 1979 | January 16, 1981 | 511 | |||
19 | Frank Carlucci | February 4, 1981 | December 31, 1982 | 695 | Caspar Weinberger | Ronald Reagan | |
20 | W. Paul Thayer | January 12, 1983 | January 4, 1984 | 357 | |||
21 | William Howard Taft IV | February 3, 1984 | April 22, 1989 | 1905 | Caspar Weinberger Frank Carlucci Dick Cheney | ||
22 | Donald J. Atwood Jr. | April 24, 1989 | January 20, 1993 | 1367 | Dick Cheney | George H. W. Bush | |
23 | William J. Perry | March 5, 1993 | February 3, 1994 | 335 | Les Aspin | Bill Clinton | |
24 | John M. Deutch | March 11, 1994 | May 10, 1995 | 425 | William J. Perry | ||
25 | John P. White | June 22, 1995 | July 15, 1997 | 754 | William J. Perry William Cohen | ||
26 | John Hamre | July 29, 1997 | March 31, 2000 | 976 | William Cohen | ||
27 | Rudy de Leon | March 31, 2000[8] | March 1, 2001[8] | 335 | William Cohen Donald Rumsfeld | ||
28 | Paul Wolfowitz | March 2, 2001[9] | May 13, 2005[9] | 1533 | Donald Rumsfeld | George W. Bush | |
29 | Gordon R. England | May 13, 2005 January 4, 2006[9] |
January 3, 2006[lower-alpha 3] February 11, 2009[9] |
236 1134 |
Donald Rumsfeld Robert Gates | ||
30 | William J. Lynn III | February 12, 2009[9] | October 5, 2011[9] | 965 | Robert Gates Leon Panetta |
Barack Obama | |
31 | Ash Carter | October 6, 2011[9] | December 4, 2013[9] | 789 | Leon Panetta Chuck Hagel | ||
Acting | Christine Fox | December 5, 2013[9] | May 1, 2014[9] | 149 | Chuck Hagel | ||
32 | Robert O. Work | May 1, 2014 | July 14, 2017 | 1170 | Chuck Hagel Ash Carter Jim Mattis | ||
33 | Patrick M. Shanahan | July 19, 2017 | June 23, 2019[10] | 704 | Jim Mattis Himself (Acting) |
Donald Trump | |
Acting | David Norquist | January 1, 2019 | July 23, 2019 | 203 | Patrick M. Shanahan (Acting) Mark Esper (Acting) Richard V. Spencer (Acting) | ||
Acting | Richard V. Spencer | July 23, 2019 | July 31, 2019 | 8 | Mark Esper | ||
34 | David Norquist | July 31, 2019 | Incumbent | 550 | Mark Esper | ||
35* | Kathleen Hicks | Nominee | — | — | Lloyd Austin | Joe Biden |
See also
- Defense Acquisition Board
- Defense Policy Board Advisory Committee
- Deputy's Advisory Working Group, a panel chaired by the Deputy Secretary of Defense
- Packard Commission
Notes
- As "Under Secretary of Defense"
- As "Deputy Secretary of Defense"
- Served as Acting Deputy Secretary of Defense
References
Citations
- Department of Defense Key Officials 1947–2015: p. 15.
- 5 U.S.C. § 5313.
- 10 U.S.C. § 132.
- "Deputy Secretary of Defense". US Dept of Defense. Retrieved July 31, 2019.
- Seligman, Lara. "Kathleen Hicks is Biden's pick to be first female deputy Defense secretary". POLITICO. Retrieved December 30, 2020.
- "Report to Congress: Restructuring the Department of Defense Acquisition, Technology and Logistics Organization and Chief Management Officer Organization" (PDF). August 1, 2017. Retrieved February 22, 2018.
- Department of Defense Key Officials 1947–2015: p. 16.
- Department of Defense Key Officials 1947–2015: p. 17.
- Department of Defense Key Officials 1947–2015: p. 18.
- "Acting Secretary of Defense will Resign as Deputy Secretary of Defense". United States Department of Defense. June 18, 2019. Retrieved June 24, 2019.
Sources
- Department of Defense Directive 5100.1: Functions of the Department of Defense and Its Major Components (PDF). Department of Defense Directive. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Defense. December 21, 2010.
- Department of Defense Key Officials 1947–2015 (PDF). Washington, D.C.: Office of the Secretary of Defense, Historical Office. 2015.
- Deputy Secretary of Defense position profile at Prunes Online