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United States Atlantic Command

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United States Atlantic Command
Active1947–1999
CountryUnited States of America
TypeUnified Combatant Command
Nickname(s)USLANTCOM

The United States Atlantic Command (acronym from 1947-1993 USLANTCOM, after 1993 USACOM) was a Unified Combatant Command of the United States Department of Defense. In 1999, U.S. Atlantic Command was renamed and given a new mission as United States Joint Forces Command.

USLANTCOM was active from the 1947 to 1993 as a primarily U.S. Navy command, focused upon the wartime defense of the Atlantic sea lanes against Soviet attack, with the U.S. Atlantic Fleet and other subunified commands such as the Iceland Defense Force under its authority. The Navy's leading place within the command had been marked by having Commander-in-Chief U.S. Atlantic Fleet, CINCLANTFLT acting also as the Commander-in-Chief United States Atlantic Command between 1947 and 1985. CINCLANTFLT, in addition to the LANTCOM post, also held the position of NATO's Supreme Allied Commander Atlantic (SACLANT). There were also Army and Air Force components, CINCARLANT and CINCAFLANT; these posts were allocated to Commanding General, CONARC, and Commander, Tactical Air Command, during the Cuban Missile Crisis.[1]

The beginning of the Congo Crisis in mid 1960 shift planners' attention to potential tasks in Central Africa. In November 1960, the Secretary of Defense gave CINCLANT the responsibility for sub-Saharan Africa plans and operations, and instructed CINCLANT to establish a small headquarters, Joint Task Force 4, under an Army lieutenant general.[2] Lieutenant General Louis W. Truman served as Commander JTF-4. Several months later, in response to a JCS request, Secretary Robert S. McNamara changed the Unified Command Plan's wording so that CINCLANT no longer bore responsibility for "routine" matters in sub-Saharan Africa but was, instead, responsible for contingency planning and for commanding any JCS-directed operations. In July 1961 Secretary McNamara apportioned sub-Saharan responsibilities as follows: Military Assistance Program (MAP) to USCINCEUR and the Secretary of the Army, Congo air evacuation to USCINCEUR, and the Congo sea evacuation to CINCLANT.[3]

After the end of the Cold War, a 1993 reorganization gave the Command a new acronym, USACOM, and brought United States Army Forces Command and Air Combat Command under its authority.[4] In 1999, USACOM was renamed and given a new mission as United States Joint Forces Command (USJFCOM). USJFCOM was closed in 2011.

List of Combatant Commanders

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No. Image Name Start of Term End of Term Notes
1. Adm. William H. P. Blandy, USN 3 February 1947 1 February 1950 [5]
2. Adm. William M. Fechteler, USN 1 February 1950 15 August 1951
3. Adm. Lynde D. McCormick, USN 15 August 1951 12 April 1954
4. Adm. Jerauld Wright, USN 12 April 1954 28 February 1960
5. Adm. Robert L. Dennison, USN 28 February 1960 30 April 1963
6. Adm. Harold P. Smith, USN 30 April 1963 30 April 1965
7. Adm. Thomas H. Moorer, USN 30 April 1965 17 June 1967
8. Adm. Ephraim P. Holmes, USN 17 June 1967 30 September 1970
9. Adm. Charles K. Duncan, USN 30 September 1970 31 October 1972
10. Adm. Ralph W. Cousins, USN 31 October 1972 30 May 1975
11. Adm. Isaac C. Kidd Jr., USN 30 May 1975 30 September 1978
12. Adm. Harry D. Train II, USN 30 September 1978 30 September 1982
13. Adm. Wesley L. McDonald, USN 30 September 1982 27 November 1985
14. Adm. Lee Baggett Jr., USN 27 November 1985 22 November 1988
15. Adm. Frank B. Kelso II, USN 22 November 1988 18 May 1990
16. Adm. Leon A. Edney, USN 18 May 1990 13 July 1992
17. Adm. Paul D. Miller, USN 13 July 1992 31 October 1994
18. Gen. John J. Sheehan, USMC 31 October 1994 24 September 1997
19. Adm. Harold W. Gehman Jr., USN 24 September 1997 7 October 1999 continued to serve as Commander of U.S. Joint Forces Command until 5 September 2000

References

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  1. ^ History of the Unified Command Plan; Blaine Pardoe, The Fires of October: The Planned Invasion of Cuba During the Missile Crisis of 1962, 2014; House, A Military History of the Cold War, 1944-62.
  2. ^ History of the Unified Command Plan, 1946-2012
  3. ^ History of the Unified Command Plan, including note 51.
  4. ^ Findarticles.com, U.S. Atlantic Command, Now USACOM, Assumes New Role U.S. Navy Press Releases
  5. ^ Air Force Almanac 2011, Leaders through the years, Accessed 2011-09-11