Vice Chief of Naval Operations
The Vice Chief of Naval Operations (VCNO) is a statutory office in the United States Navy held by a four-star admiral who serves as the principal deputy to the Chief of Naval Operations (CNO), assisting in the overall management, direction, and administration of naval forces and resources.[1] Appointed by the President with Senate confirmation from eligible rear admirals recommended by the Secretary of the Navy, the VCNO performs the CNO's duties during absences or disabilities and undertakes additional responsibilities as directed, including participation in joint oversight councils such as the Joint Requirements Oversight Council.[1] The position, which ranks as the Navy's second-highest uniformed office, supports the broader mission of the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations to organize, train, and equip forces for combat operations and national security.[2] Established formally in 1942 as part of wartime reorganization, the VCNO role evolved from earlier positions including the Assistant for Operations created in 1915 and the Assistant Chief of Naval Operations in 1922, reflecting the Navy's growing need for structured high-level operational coordination amid expanding global commitments.[3] As of January 5, 2024, Admiral James W. Kilby serves as the 43rd VCNO, overseeing key aspects of naval readiness and policy implementation under the CNO's authority.[4][5] The office operates within the Department of the Navy, contributing to strategic planning, resource allocation, and preparation for sustained naval operations without direct command over fleet units, which remain under combatant commanders.[2]Role and Responsibilities
Principal Deputy Functions
The Vice Chief of Naval Operations (VCNO) functions as the principal deputy to the Chief of Naval Operations (CNO), assuming the CNO's duties during any absence, disability, or vacancy until a successor is appointed, as prescribed in U.S. Navy Regulations. This role ensures continuity in naval leadership and operational command. For instance, Admiral James W. Kilby served as acting CNO from February 21 to August 25, 2025, following the relief of Admiral Lisa Franchetti by President Donald Trump.[6] In this capacity, the VCNO oversees the routine administration of the U.S. Navy's approximately 330,000 active-duty personnel, managing fleet maintenance, personnel training, and resource distribution under the authorities outlined in Title 10 U.S. Code, Section 8035.[7][1] These responsibilities include coordinating logistics support, procurement processes, and sustainment activities to maintain operational tempo across naval forces. The VCNO emphasizes warfighting readiness as a core priority, directing efforts to enhance deployability and lethality against peer competitors, such as the People's Republic of China, through targeted investments in training regimens, equipment modernization, and supply chain resilience.[8] This involves integrating operational data to prioritize capabilities that address great-power competition, ensuring the Navy's forces remain prepared for high-end conflict scenarios without compromising foundational combat effectiveness.[9]Authority in Naval Administration
The Vice Chief of Naval Operations (VCNO) derives statutory authority from 10 U.S.C. § 8035, which empowers the position to exercise duties prescribed by the Chief of Naval Operations (CNO) with the approval of the Secretary of the Navy, including acting as the CNO during absences or disabilities.[1] Appointed by the President with Senate confirmation from active-duty Navy admirals, the VCNO holds four-star rank (O-10), enabling oversight of major Navy commands and staff elements, yet remains strictly subordinate to civilian leadership, including the Secretary of the Navy and Secretary of Defense, ensuring accountability through executive and congressional review.[1] This delegated structure limits the VCNO to administrative execution rather than independent policymaking, with all major decisions requiring CNO or civilian approval to prevent unchecked military influence. In managing Navy bureaucracy, the VCNO oversees internal staff functions within the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations (OPNAV), coordinating directorates responsible for logistics, training, and resource allocation under CNO direction. This includes facilitating budget execution through the Department of Defense's Planning, Programming, Budgeting, and Execution (PPBE) process, where the VCNO supports the CNO in submitting Navy program objective memoranda and justifying allocations to the Office of the Secretary of Defense.[10] Checks on this authority include mandatory alignment with national defense strategy guidance and annual congressional appropriations scrutiny, which have constrained Navy budgeting amid fiscal pressures, such as the 2023 sequestration-level caps that reduced operational flexibility. Personnel administration falls under VCNO purview through delegated OPNAV oversight, emphasizing merit-based promotions via selection boards that evaluate performance records, fitness reports, and competitive standing per 10 U.S.C. § 624, rather than quotas or non-performance factors.[11] Recent reforms, including automatic advancements for qualified E-5 and E-6 sailors in vacant billets, aim to streamline merit progression amid administrative burdens.[12] For instance, in addressing 2020s recruitment shortfalls—such as the fiscal year shortfall of 7,464 active-duty enlisted recruits documented in a 2025 DoD Inspector General evaluation—the VCNO has supported policy adjustments like expanded advertising and targeted incentives to prioritize qualified candidates without diluting standards, though persistent gaps of several thousand annually highlight ongoing challenges in merit-driven force shaping under civilian-directed end-strength limits.[13] These efforts are bounded by statutory promotion timelines and congressional mandates on diversity reporting, ensuring transparency but also exposing bureaucratic delays in adapting to demographic shifts.Integration with Joint Operations
The Vice Chief of Naval Operations (VCNO) facilitates the Navy's alignment with joint U.S. military objectives by acting as the principal deputy to the Chief of Naval Operations (CNO), a statutory member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff under 10 U.S.C. § 152. When the CNO delegates authority, the VCNO contributes to Joint Chiefs deliberations on strategic priorities, including naval support to unified combatant commands such as U.S. Indo-Pacific Command (INDOPACOM), where carrier strike groups and submarines underpin deterrence against adversarial powers like China. This delegation ensures continuity in naval input to joint planning, directly enhancing the integrated force's ability to project power and respond to contingencies, as evidenced by the Navy's role in INDOPACOM's focus on high-end warfighting scenarios.[14][15] Coordination between the VCNO and vice chiefs of other services emphasizes interoperability through joint training and operations, testing seamless integration of naval assets with Army, Air Force, Marine Corps, and Space Force capabilities. For example, VCNO Admiral James Kilby observed Large Scale Exercise 2025, a Navy-led event spanning 22 time zones that incorporated joint multi-domain operations to sharpen readiness for peer competition. Multinational exercises like Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC) 2024, involving over 40 nations and 29 U.S. ships, further bolster joint interoperability by simulating complex scenarios such as underway replenishments and live-fire drills, with Navy platforms enabling cross-service logistics and command-and-control. These efforts causally improve operational cohesion, reducing friction in combined arms maneuvers critical for national defense.[16][17][18] In real-world applications, the VCNO oversees Navy contributions to joint responses, such as the 2023-2024 operations in the Red Sea under U.S. Central Command, where destroyers like USS Carney engaged Houthi drones and missiles in the most intense U.S. Navy combat since World War II, coordinating with Air Force assets and allies in Operation Prosperity Guardian to secure shipping lanes. VCNO Kilby noted the unsustainable costs of intercepting low-cost threats with multimillion-dollar missiles, advocating for adaptive kinetic defenses to preserve resources for high-threat environments. This integration highlights causal dependencies on joint logistics and intelligence sharing for sustained operations.[19][20] Joint readiness under VCNO guidance relies on empirical metrics, including the Navy's refinement of an 80% combat surge capability to enable rapid deployment of warfighting-ready units into joint task forces, as articulated by Admiral Kilby in alignment with CNO priorities. These quantifiable targets—tracking maintenance, manning, and training proficiency—prioritize kinetic operational effectiveness over ancillary programs, ensuring naval forces contribute decisively to joint outcomes like deterrence in the Indo-Pacific, where empirical data from exercises validates enhanced lethality and survivability against advanced adversaries.[21][22]Historical Development
Establishment Post-World War II
The Vice Chief of Naval Operations position originated on March 12, 1942, as a wartime measure to alleviate the Chief of Naval Operations' burden during expanded responsibilities following the Pearl Harbor attack and U.S. entry into World War II.[23] Retained into the postwar era, it addressed leadership demands amid demobilization, where the Navy shrank from a peak strength exceeding 3.4 million personnel in 1945 to approximately 464,501 by 1947, while recovering from 62,614 fatalities.[24] [25] [26] This deputy role mitigated risks of single-officer overload in coordinating force reductions, resource reallocation, and administrative restructuring essential for transitioning to peacetime operations. Admiral Frederick J. Horne, the first VCNO, held the position from March 1942 through January 1946, directing logistics and initial postwar planning that ensured orderly personnel separations and materiel preservation.[3] [27] His efforts focused on causal necessities identified from wartime experience, such as distributed decision-making to handle simultaneous demobilization of millions and retention of core competencies for national security. Succeeding Horne, Admiral Richard S. Edwards Jr. served briefly in 1945–1946, continuing oversight of these transitions amid broader military unification under emerging National Security Act frameworks, though the VCNO predated that legislation.[3] The postwar VCNO establishment underscored empirical needs for hierarchical depth in naval administration, proven by the Navy's ability to execute drawdowns without systemic collapse, contrasting potential inefficiencies from undivided CNO authority during equivalent interwar contractions.[28] This structure supported verifiable outcomes like sustained fleet readiness despite 90 percent personnel cuts, grounding postwar Navy viability in delegated operational authority.[25]Evolution During the Cold War
During the Cold War, the Vice Chief of Naval Operations (VCNO) role evolved to manage the administrative and programmatic demands of countering Soviet naval expansion, prioritizing nuclear deterrence via submarine-launched ballistic missiles and sustaining carrier battle groups for global containment. In the 1950s, VCNOs like Donald B. Duncan (1951–1956) supported fleet growth from 634 active ships in 1950 to 812 by 1960, driven by Korean War mobilization and early nuclear submarine programs such as Polaris, which shifted naval strategy toward strategic deterrence against Soviet land-based threats.[3][29] This period emphasized qualitative superiority in technology over numerical parity, as Soviet submarine production surged but lagged in quieting and missile accuracy.[30] The Vietnam War imposed operational strains on the Navy, with VCNOs such as Horacio Rivero (1964–1968) and Bernard A. Clarey (1968–1970) overseeing logistics, manpower allocation, and readiness for sustained coastal and riverine support, including naval gunfire and amphibious assaults during the 1968 Tet Offensive that bolstered ground forces against North Vietnamese attacks.[3][31] Fleet size declined post-escalation to 743 ships by 1970 amid decommissioning of aging vessels, straining deployment rates and highlighting bureaucratic delays in maintenance that risked operational tempo against escalating Soviet blue-water capabilities.[29][32] In the 1980s, amid Reagan's defense buildup, VCNOs including William N. Small (1981–1983) advanced the Maritime Strategy, focusing on forward operations to exploit Soviet vulnerabilities in northern flanks and justifying fleet expansion from 530 ships in 1980 to 594 by 1987 to restore maritime superiority.[3][33][29] This 600-ship goal, rooted in earlier deductive analyses, countered Soviet numerical advantages in submarines and surface combatants through enhanced carrier-centric forces and aggressive exercises, though procurement delays in shipbuilding underscored persistent administrative challenges that could have permitted Soviet parity in contested seas.[34][35][36] The VCNO's deputy functions proved critical in coordinating with the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations to prioritize verifiable metrics like sortie generation rates and submarine patrol durations over doctrinal complacency.[33]Post-Cold War Adaptations and Modern Reforms
The dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 prompted substantial reductions in U.S. naval forces under the "peace dividend," with the battle force fleet shrinking from 546 ships in 1991 to 283 by fiscal year 2016 amid declining defense budgets and a perceived diminished threat environment.[37][38] The Vice Chief of Naval Operations (VCNO), functioning as the Chief of Naval Operations' principal deputy for administration and resource management, coordinated these drawdowns, including the decommissioning of older vessels and infrastructure consolidations such as closing half of the Navy's public shipyards to align with fiscal constraints.[39] In response to post-Cold War operational shifts toward littoral and asymmetric warfare, the VCNO oversaw the development and early implementation of transformative programs like the Littoral Combat Ship (LCS), authorized in 2002 with initial deliveries in 2008, designed for modular missions in contested near-shore environments despite subsequent criticisms of cost overruns and reliability issues.[40] Similarly, the VCNO contributed to administrative stewardship of the Gerald R. Ford-class carrier program, funded starting in 2008 with the lead ship USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN-78) commissioned in 2017, aiming to replace aging Nimitz-class vessels amid tight budgets that deferred full-rate production until operational testing confirmed electromagnetic aircraft launch systems.[41] The 2018 National Defense Strategy's pivot to great-power competition with China and Russia necessitated further VCNO-led adaptations, including advocacy for distributed lethality—a 2015 concept to disperse and arm surface combatants offensively against anti-access/area-denial (A2/AD) capabilities, enabling independent strikes rather than carrier-centric formations.[42][43] This involved integrating long-range precision weapons like the Naval Strike Missile on destroyers and cruisers, with VCNO oversight ensuring alignment across acquisition, training, and joint exercises to counter empirical gaps in peer adversary scenarios. Efforts to rectify readiness deficiencies have intensified, as evidenced by Government Accountability Office (GAO) assessments revealing persistent maintenance backlogs; a May 2023 report detailed worsening delays across 10 ship classes over five years, including aircraft carriers where depot maintenance periods frequently extended beyond schedules due to workforce shortages and parts cannibalization, impacting operational availability.[44][45] Under VCNO Admiral Lisa Franchetti (2022–2023), reforms prioritized shipyard capacity expansion and supply chain hardening, though GAO data indicated that nearly $1.8 billion in deferred work persisted as of 2022, underscoring causal links between underinvestment and degraded material condition.[44]Organizational Position
Within the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations
The Vice Chief of Naval Operations (VCNO) functions as the principal deputy to the Chief of Naval Operations (CNO) within the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations (OPNAV), directing the execution of administrative, programmatic, and policy functions through a structured hierarchy of subordinate directorates. This role ensures operational continuity and efficient decision-making by supervising Deputy Chiefs of Naval Operations (DCNOs), who lead specialized N-code offices responsible for core naval domains including manpower, warfare integration, and logistics support.[46][47] OPNAV's N-code system organizes responsibilities across multiple DCNO-led directorates, such as N1 for personnel, manpower, and training; N4 for fleet readiness and logistics; N2/N6 for information warfare; and N9 for warfare systems, with the VCNO providing oversight to align these efforts with fleet operational demands and resource constraints. This coordination facilitates the development of naval policies and programs that prioritize warfighting effectiveness, drawing on empirical assessments of fleet readiness data to inform resource prioritization. While the number of principal DCNO positions typically ranges from eight to ten, encompassing combined codes like N3/N5 for operations and plans, the structure supports over 20 specialized sub-directorates handling detailed functions such as expeditionary combat capabilities under N95.[46][47] The VCNO maintains accountability for OPNAV outputs through direct involvement in resource management and periodic congressional engagements, including joint testimony with the CNO on budget justifications; for instance, in March 2024, the VCNO addressed the Senate Armed Services Committee on fiscal year 2025 priorities amid a proposed Navy budget exceeding $250 billion, emphasizing readiness sustainment and programmatic efficiencies. These testimonies underscore the VCNO's role in defending OPNAV decisions against fiscal scrutiny, grounded in verifiable performance metrics from fleet exercises and maintenance records.[48][49]Relations to Civilian Leadership and Joint Chiefs
The Vice Chief of Naval Operations (VCNO) functions under the direct oversight of the Secretary of the Navy, a civilian appointee who exercises ultimate authority over Department of the Navy matters, aligning with constitutional principles of civilian control over the military to prevent undue military influence on policy. Under 10 U.S.C. § 8035, the VCNO possesses authorities and duties delegated by the Chief of Naval Operations (CNO) with the Secretary's approval, including principal deputy responsibilities for naval administration, readiness reporting, and operational planning within the department.[1] In interactions with the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS), the VCNO supports the CNO—a statutory JCS member—in fulfilling Title 10 mandates for assessing military readiness, force requirements, and joint operational needs, though the VCNO does not hold independent JCS membership or direct reporting to the Chairman.[14] This structure ensures the VCNO contributes to unified defense advice to the President and Secretary of Defense, emphasizing interoperability across services while subordinating naval-specific priorities to broader national security objectives. The Goldwater-Nichols Department of Defense Reorganization Act of 1986 (Public Law 99-433) reshaped these dynamics by elevating the Chairman's authority and mandating joint duty assignments for senior officers, including those aspiring to vice chief roles, to counter service parochialism that had hindered coordinated operations, as seen in Vietnam-era critiques of fragmented command.[50] Implementation in the Navy dispersed specialized strategic planning expertise across joint billets, fostering tensions between service autonomy and enforced jointness, with analyses indicating reduced focus on naval-specific innovation as resources shifted to integrated warfighting.[51] In 2025, under the Trump administration, executive directives have intensified scrutiny of civilian-military relations by curtailing diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives deemed to prioritize demographic targets over merit in promotions and assignments, including naval leadership transitions.[52] President Trump's January 20, 2025, order explicitly targeted DEI as discriminatory and antithetical to combat readiness, leading to improved recruiting metrics—such as Navy enlistments rising 15% in Q1 2025—attributed to a renewed emphasis on qualifications and lethality rather than quotas.[53] These reforms, while reinforcing civilian policy direction, highlight risks of politicization when oversight veers into ideological mandates, though empirical data on prior DEI expansions correlates with sustained shortfalls in qualified personnel acquisition across services.[54]Reporting Structure and Accountability
The Vice Chief of Naval Operations (VCNO) reports directly to the Chief of Naval Operations (CNO), assisting in the direction of Navy activities and assuming CNO duties in their absence, with ultimate accountability flowing through the Secretary of the Navy to the Secretary of Defense and Congress. This structure ensures transparency via statutory requirements for readiness reporting, including semi-annual submissions to Congress that incorporate Joint Force Readiness Reports detailing metrics such as operational tempo (optempo), mission capability rates, and equipment condition. Optempo data in these reports has revealed underutilization of fleet assets in the 2020s, with average ship deployment rates falling below historical norms due to shipyard maintenance delays averaging 20-30% over schedule. For example, Government Accountability Office analyses from 2020 onward documented persistent backlogs at public shipyards, where depot-level repairs extended beyond planned durations, reducing overall fleet steaming days and contributing to readiness gaps of up to 15-20% in surface combatants.[55] These empirical metrics link directly to VCNO oversight of resource allocation, as administrative delays in maintenance prioritization have causally prolonged asset downtime without commensurate improvements in throughput. The Department of Defense Inspector General (DoD IG) provides independent oversight, conducting audits of Navy administrative efficiency and critiquing expansions in overhead staffing. DoD IG evaluations have highlighted a roughly 15-20% growth in officer and civilian billets in Navy headquarters since 2000, uncorrelated with proportional increases in end-strength or deployable forces, leading to resource dilution estimated at billions in non-combat overhead.[56] Such bloat, including in the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations under VCNO purview, has drawn IG scrutiny for impairing agile decision-making without enhancing warfighting capacity. Performance evaluation extends to manpower outcomes, where DoD IG reviews have tied VCNO-influenced policies to recruitment shortfalls from fiscal years 2022-2024, including misses of active-duty enlisted goals by 7,464 in one year and reserve targets by 2,012, often achieving below 80-85% attainment amid broader market challenges.[13] These failures reflect causal shortcomings in administrative reforms for accession pipelines, as delayed adaptations to declining propensity-to-serve rates—exacerbated by unaddressed cultural and incentive gaps—hindered meeting congressionally mandated end-strength levels until partial rebounds in 2025.[57][58]Notable Contributions and Criticisms
Key Achievements by Vice Chiefs
Vice Chief of Naval Operations Admiral William N. Small, serving from 1980 to 1982, contributed to the formulation of maritime strategies that underpinned the expansion to a 600-ship fleet, emphasizing forward deployment and offensive operations to counter Soviet naval threats in potential global conflicts. This build-up, reaching approximately 594 ships by 1987, enabled persistent U.S. naval presence that strained Soviet resources through forward maritime campaigns, contributing causally to deterrence without escalation to direct superpower naval confrontation, as evidenced by the Soviet Navy's focus on defensive bastions rather than blue-water expansion.[33] The empirical outcome included heightened Soviet expenditures on matching capabilities, which exacerbated economic pressures leading to the USSR's dissolution in 1991. During the Vietnam War, Vice Chief Bernard A. Clarey (1968–1970) oversaw operational logistics that sustained U.S. Seventh Fleet activities, including continuous carrier air strikes and amphibious support, with the fleet logging over 1.5 million sorties from carriers like USS Enterprise and USS Ranger between 1965 and 1973.[3] His administrative role facilitated the rapid surge of naval assets, such as deploying multiple carriers simultaneously to the Gulf of Tonkin, ensuring supply chains for munitions and fuel that supported peak operational tempos exceeding 100 strikes per day in 1968, thereby enabling sustained combat effectiveness amid escalating ground demands.[31] Post-9/11, Vice Chief William J. Fallon (2000–2003) directed the immediate recovery of Navy personnel impacted in the Pentagon attack and coordinated early operational planning for global counterterrorism, including carrier strike group surges to the Arabian Gulf ahead of Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2003.[59] This involved reallocating assets like USS Abraham Lincoln and USS Constellation for rapid deployment, achieving dual-carrier presence that supported initial invasion airstrikes delivering over 29,000 tons of ordnance, with causal factors including pre-positioned logistics and joint integration that minimized response delays.[60] These efforts empirically enhanced force projection, allowing the Navy to maintain operational continuity while transitioning from peacetime to wartime footing without significant gaps in readiness.Leadership Failures and Scandals
In September 2025, former Vice Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Robert P. Burke was sentenced to six years in federal prison after a jury convicted him of conspiracy to commit bribery, bribery, and related charges for steering a $355,000 consulting contract to a defense firm in exchange for a promised $500,000 post-retirement job and other benefits while serving as a high-ranking officer.[61][62] This scheme, executed during Burke's tenure from 2022 to 2023, compromised procurement integrity by prioritizing personal gain over merit-based contracting, potentially diverting resources from critical naval capabilities and eroding trust in senior leadership's oversight of vendor selections.[63] The "Fat Leonard" scandal, uncovered in 2013, exposed systemic corruption among Navy leaders, including multiple flag officers who accepted bribes such as lavish gifts, prostitutes, and luxury travel from Malaysian contractor Leonard Francis in return for approving inflated contracts worth over $35 million in overbilling to the government.[64] By 2017, the scandal had led to more than 20 convictions of officers for bribery and fraud, though some were later vacated in 2023-2024 due to prosecutorial misconduct involving withheld exculpatory evidence.[65][66] While no Vice Chief was directly convicted, the episode highlighted failures in high-level accountability and internal controls under VCNO oversight, as compromised officers influenced logistics and contracting decisions, resulting in operational inefficiencies and diverted funds that undermined fleet readiness in the Pacific theater.[67] Critiques in the 2020s have targeted the Navy's prioritization of diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) policies under senior leadership, including VCNOs, for contributing to relaxed standards that correlated with elevated failure rates in recruit qualifications and fitness assessments.[68] In fiscal year 2023, the Navy reset physical fitness assessment failures for all sailors to address post-COVID disparities, a move critics argued masked underlying deficiencies rather than enforcing readiness benchmarks, while recruitment waivers expanded to include lower aptitude scores and prior marijuana use to meet goals amid shortfalls.[69][70] By 2024, the service ended automatic separation for sailors failing two consecutive fitness tests, prioritizing retention over discipline and linking such shifts to broader DEI emphases that, per congressional and watchdog scrutiny, risked deploying underqualified personnel, thereby degrading unit cohesion and combat effectiveness.[71]Debates on Strategic Prioritization
Debates within the U.S. Navy leadership, including the Vice Chief of Naval Operations (VCNO), have centered on the allocation of resources between core warfighting capabilities and non-combat initiatives such as diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs. Proponents of expanded social policies argue that emphasizing inclusivity enhances recruitment by appealing to underrepresented demographics, potentially broadening the talent pool amid demographic shifts in the eligible population.[72] [73] However, empirical data from fiscal years 2023 and 2024 reveal significant enlistment shortfalls, with the Navy failing to meet goals across categories and contributing to a service-wide deficit of approximately 41,000 recruits, the lowest active-duty end strength since 1940.[74] [75] Critics contend that DEI-driven adjustments, including relaxed physical fitness standards and aptitude test thresholds to prioritize equity, have eroded merit-based selection and correlated directly with these recruitment failures, as evidenced by manpower shortages forcing the sidelining of ships in the Navy and Coast Guard.[76] [77] During the early 2020s, VCNO Adm. Lisa Franchetti, serving in that role from September 2022 to November 2023 before ascending to Chief of Naval Operations (CNO), supported Navy policies integrating DEI as a line of effort, including convening briefings on inclusion strategies under the CNO's guidance.[78] This approach, while framed as complementary to warfighting readiness, diverted administrative focus and resources from combat training, according to analyses highlighting lowered entry standards as a causal factor in quality declines.[76] In February 2025, the incoming Trump administration relieved Franchetti of her CNO duties—alongside other senior leaders—as part of a broader Pentagon realignment to prioritize warfighting over perceived ideological mandates, with early fiscal year 2025 recruitment showing improvement to over 14,000 enlistees in the first four months following policy shifts away from DEI emphases.[79] [80] Such refocusing addressed criticisms that non-core initiatives imposed opportunity costs, particularly as peer competitors like China advanced hypersonic weapons unencumbered by analogous domestic equity requirements; China's People's Liberation Army Rocket Force fielded operational hypersonic systems like the DF-17 by 2020, while U.S. programs lagged in scaling production despite established testing timelines.[81] [82] This disparity underscores causal arguments for concentrating naval leadership efforts on technological and operational edges in high-threat domains, rather than balancing against internal social engineering, to maintain deterrence efficacy.[83]Officeholders
Chronological List of Vice Chiefs
The Vice Chiefs of Naval Operations (VCNO) since the position's post-World War II formalization in 1946 have been senior admirals assisting the Chief of Naval Operations in directing naval activities.[3]| No. | Name | Rank | Tenure |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3 | DeWitt C. Ramsey | ADM | 1946–1948[3] |
| 4 | Arthur W. Radford | ADM | 1948–1949[3] |
| 5 | John D. Price | ADM | 1949–1950[3] |
| 6 | Lynde D. McCormick | ADM | 1950–1951[3] |
| 7 | Donald B. Duncan | ADM | 1951–1956[3] |
| 8 | Harry D. Felt | ADM | 1956–1958[3] |
| 9 | James S. Russell | ADM | 1959–1961[3] |
| 10 | Claude V. Ricketts | ADM | 1961–1964[3] |
| 11 | Horacio Rivero Jr. | ADM | 1964–1968[3] |
| 12 | Bernard A. Clarey | ADM | 1968–1970[3] |
| 13 | Ralph W. Cousins | ADM | 1970–1972[3] |
| 14 | Maurice F. Weisner | ADM | 1972–1973[3] |
| 15 | James L. Holloway III | ADM | 1973–1974[3] |
| 16 | Worth H. Bagley | ADM | 1974–1975[3] |
| 17 | Harold E. Shear | ADM | 1975–1977[3] |
| 18 | Robert L. J. Long | ADM | 1977–1979[3] |
| 19 | James D. Watkins | ADM | 1979–1981[3] |
| 20 | William N. Small | ADM | 1981–1983[3] |
| 21 | Ronald J. Hays | ADM | 1983–1985[3] |
| 22 | James B. Busey IV | ADM | 1985–1987[3] |
| 23 | Huntington Hardisty | ADM | 1987–1988[3] |
| 24 | Leon A. Edney | ADM | 1988–1990[3] |
| 25 | Jerome L. Johnson | ADM | 1990–1992[3] |
| 26 | Stanley R. Arthur | ADM | 1992–1995[3] |
| 27 | Joseph W. Prueher | ADM | 1995–1996[3] |
| 28 | Jay L. Johnson | ADM | 1996[3] |
| 29 | Harold W. Gehman Jr. | ADM | 1996–1997[3] |
| 30 | Donald L. Pilling | ADM | 1997–2000[3] |
| 31 | William J. Fallon | ADM | 2000–2003[3] |
| 32 | Michael G. Mullen | ADM | 2003–2004[3] |
| 33 | John B. Nathman | ADM | 2004–2005[3] |
| 34 | Robert F. Willard | ADM | 2005–2007[3] |
| 35 | Patrick M. Walsh | ADM | 2007–2009[3] |
| 36 | Jonathan W. Greenert | ADM | 2009–2011[3] |
| 37 | Mark E. Ferguson III | ADM | 2011–2014[3] |
| 38 | Michelle J. Howard | ADM | 2014–2016[84] |
| 39 | William F. Moran | ADM | 2016–2019[84] |
| 40 | Robert P. Burke | ADM | 2019–2020[85] |
| 41 | William K. Lescher | ADM | 2020–2022[86][85] |
| 42 | Lisa M. Franchetti | ADM | 2022–2023[85][87] |
| 43 | James W. Kilby | ADM | 2024–present (also acting CNO since February 2025)[4][88] |