Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Carl Edward Vuono (born October 18, 1934) is a retired United States Army general who served as the Chief of Staff of the United States Army from 1987 to 1991. Early life and career. Army portrait of Vuono painted by Ned Bittinger. Vuono was born on October 18, 1934, in Monongahela, Pennsylvania. He is of Italian ancestry.

    • 1957–1991
    • General
  2. Nach mehreren Einsätzen in der United States Army Training and Doctrine Command, wurde er 1986 deren Kommandierender General. Anschließend war er vom 23. Juni 1987 bis zum 21. Juni 1991 als General Chief of Staff of the Army und damit der ranghöchste Offizier der United States Army.

  3. He served as Chief of Staff of the Army from 23 June 1987 to 21 July 1991. Vuono saw increasingly friendly relations with the Soviet Union, and an end to the Cold War, during his tenure as Chief of Staff. He also oversaw operations in Panama, and the Gulf War to liberate Kuwait from Iraqi occupation. Vuono retired from active duty in 1991.

  4. 2. Apr. 1987 · Gen. Carl E. Vuono, who has been nominated by President Reagan to be the Army Chief of Staff, is something of a rarity. At the age of 52 he is the Army's youngest four-star general. And he...

  5. General Carl E. Vuono is Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army. 50 FOREIGN AFFAIRS. conventional forces. U.S. strategic thought in the early years of the nuclear age was dominated by the widespread view that the sole utility of military power lay in its ability to deter conflict. This school of thought was reinforced by the perception that.

  6. He is a retired United States Army General who served as the Chief of Staff of the United States Army from 1987 to 1991. After graduating from the United States Military Academy in West Point, New York, in 1957, he began his career as a field artillery officer.

  7. GEN Carl Edward Vuono ID: 350. Biography. Awards, Medals, Badges. Photos. Remembrances. Tributes. Mementō Semper. Military Hall of Honor, a virtual Military Hall of Honor. Remembrances and tributes to all those who have honorably served in the US Armed Forces.