Chief of Naval Operations: Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Chris Day
imported>Howard C. Berkowitz
(Trying to straighten out 3 org charts, one to be uploaded, and then clarify relationship among Dept. of Navy, CNO, and Commandant of Marine Corps)
Line 5: Line 5:


The CNO reports to the [[Secretary of the Navy]], especially in matters such as Congressional relations, but has complex relationships with the [[Joint Chiefs of Staff]] and Secretary of Defense. While he does not have operational command over naval forces, he has enormous influence.
The CNO reports to the [[Secretary of the Navy]], especially in matters such as Congressional relations, but has complex relationships with the [[Joint Chiefs of Staff]] and Secretary of Defense. While he does not have operational command over naval forces, he has enormous influence.
==CNO Staff==
==Navy Organizations involving the CNO==
For the non-JCS activities of the CNO, there is a Shore establishment, an immediate office of the CNO, and the Navy Staff.
===Shore Establishment===
In practice, the CNO either directs, or strongly influences, those activities that are not part of [[Unified Combatant Command]]s, or are traditionally activities supporting the CNO or staff rather than the field.
<imagemap>
<imagemap>
Image:CNO Staff.gif|thumb|432px|Navy professional staff under the CNO
Image:CNO Staff.gif|thumb|432px|Navy Shore Establishment generally under the CNO
default [[:Image:CNO Staff.gif]]
default [[:Image:CNO Staff.gif]]
rect 172 6 260 50 [[Chief of Naval Operations]]
rect 172 6 260 50 [[Chief of Naval Operations]]
Line 30: Line 33:
desc none
desc none
</imagemap>
</imagemap>
There is some overlap among the Shore Establishment, Office of the CNO, and Navy Staff. Remember that the CNO "wears two hats", and the JCS role of the CNO is separate from the pure Navy roles.
===Office of the CNO===
The Vice Chief of Naval Operations acts for the CNO in his absence. Each CNO and VCNO work out their particular responsibilities, but the CNO is often more concerned with JCS, White House, and Congressional relations, so the VCNO may be closer to the day-to-day naval structure.
For obscure historical reasons, the immediate staff is also called '''OpNav'''. It is a common impression that among the U.S. military services, the organizational designations can be the most obscure, although often tracing to a tradition.  At the start of [[World War II]], for example, Admiral [[Chester Nimitz]] took over the Pacific Command, coming from heading the "Bureau of Navigation".  One might innocently think that the head of that office is the master navigator and shiphandler of the Navy, but, at the time, that Bureau was the Navy personnel office.
[[Image:CNO Office Org.gif|left |thumb|432px|Immediate office of the CNO]]
There is an overlap between the personal office of the CNO and the Navy Staff.


The Vice Chief of Naval Operations acts for the CNO in his absence. Each CNO and VCNO work out their particular responsibilities, but the CNO is often more concerned with JCS, White House, and Congressional relations, so the VCNO may be closer to the day-to-day naval structure.


===Navy Staff===
A large staff organization, headed by the Director of Navy Staff, does report to the CNO, and he has a major role in developing naval doctrine, planning the navy of the future, preparing its budget, etc.
A large staff organization, headed by the Director of Navy Staff, does report to the CNO, and he has a major role in developing naval doctrine, planning the navy of the future, preparing its budget, etc.
{{-}}

Revision as of 06:40, 29 May 2008

This article is a stub and thus not approved.
Main Article
Discussion
Related Articles  [?]
Bibliography  [?]
External Links  [?]
Citable Version  [?]
CNOs [?]
 
This editable Main Article is under development and subject to a disclaimer.

The Chief of Naval Operations (CNO) is the senior officer of the United States Navy unless the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff or the Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff is a naval officer. He is appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate, currently for a four-year term, and usually retires after that single term. Admiral Arleigh Burke, however, served three terms, then of two years each.

A member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS), he does not directly command operational forces of the Navy, which are under Unified Combatant Commands that report to the Secretary of Defense and the President of the United States; the latter two constitute the National Command Authority.

The CNO reports to the Secretary of the Navy, especially in matters such as Congressional relations, but has complex relationships with the Joint Chiefs of Staff and Secretary of Defense. While he does not have operational command over naval forces, he has enormous influence.

Navy Organizations involving the CNO

For the non-JCS activities of the CNO, there is a Shore establishment, an immediate office of the CNO, and the Navy Staff.

Shore Establishment

In practice, the CNO either directs, or strongly influences, those activities that are not part of Unified Combatant Commands, or are traditionally activities supporting the CNO or staff rather than the field.

Chief of Naval OperationsOffice of the Chief of Naval OperationsBureau of Naval PersonnelBureau of Medicine and SurgeryNaval Sea Systems CommandNaval Air Systems CommandNaval Facilities Engineering CommandNaval Supply Systems CommandSpace and Naval Warfare Systems CommandStrategic Systems ProgramsUnited States Naval AcademyNaval Education and Training CommandNaval Meteorology and Oceanography CommandOffice of Naval IntelligenceNaval Strike and Air Warfare CenterNaval Security Group CommandNaval Legal Service CommandUnited States Naval ObservatoryNaval Safety Center
Navy Shore Establishment generally under the CNO

There is some overlap among the Shore Establishment, Office of the CNO, and Navy Staff. Remember that the CNO "wears two hats", and the JCS role of the CNO is separate from the pure Navy roles.

Office of the CNO

The Vice Chief of Naval Operations acts for the CNO in his absence. Each CNO and VCNO work out their particular responsibilities, but the CNO is often more concerned with JCS, White House, and Congressional relations, so the VCNO may be closer to the day-to-day naval structure.

For obscure historical reasons, the immediate staff is also called OpNav. It is a common impression that among the U.S. military services, the organizational designations can be the most obscure, although often tracing to a tradition. At the start of World War II, for example, Admiral Chester Nimitz took over the Pacific Command, coming from heading the "Bureau of Navigation". One might innocently think that the head of that office is the master navigator and shiphandler of the Navy, but, at the time, that Bureau was the Navy personnel office.

Immediate office of the CNO

There is an overlap between the personal office of the CNO and the Navy Staff.


Navy Staff

A large staff organization, headed by the Director of Navy Staff, does report to the CNO, and he has a major role in developing naval doctrine, planning the navy of the future, preparing its budget, etc.