- Frank B. Kelso II
Infobox Military Person
name=Frank B. Kelso II
born= birth year and age|1933
died=
placeofbirth=Fayetteville, Tennessee
placeofdeath=
placeofburial=
caption=Admiral Frank B. Kelso II in 1991
nickname=
allegiance= United States of America
branch=United States Navy
serviceyears=1956-1994
rank=Admiral
commands=Chief of Naval Operations
unit=
battles=
awards=Legion of Merit
relations=
laterwork=Frank Benton Kelso II (born
July 11 ,1933 inFayetteville, Tennessee ) is a former admiral of theUnited States Navy , who served asChief of Naval Operations (CNO) in the early 1990s.Kelso, a native of
Fayetteville, Tennessee , attended public school and theUniversity of the South inSewanee, Tennessee , prior to entering the U.S. Naval Academy in 1952. Following graduation in 1956, he served in the cargo ship USS "Oglethorpe" (AKA-100) before attendingSubmarine School in 1958.On completion of training, he was assigned to the
submarine "Sabalo" (SS-302) before returning to Submarine School for nuclear power training in January 1960. He then served one year in the Nuclear Power Department at the school. Subsequent tours included the precommissioning crew of "Pollack" (SSN-603), Engineering Officer aboard "Daniel Webster" (SSBN-626) and Executive Officer of "Sculpin" (SSN-590).From January 1969 to August 1971, he served as Commanding Officer, U.S. Naval Nuclear Power School in U.S. Naval Training Center Bainbridge,
Port Deposit ,Maryland . Following tours included Commanding Officer, "Finback" (SSN-670); Staff of Commander, Submarine Force,U.S. Atlantic Fleet ; and Commanding Officer, "Bluefish" (SSN-675). Kelso was then assigned as Executive Assistant to the Commander in Chief, U.S. Atlantic Command and U.S. Atlantic Fleet and Supreme Allied Commander Atlantic from September 1975 to July 1977.He served as Commander,
Submarine Squadron 7 until reporting as Division Director, Submarine Distribution Division in the Naval Military Personnel Command, and Section Head of the Submarine Programs Section in the Office of the Deputy Chief of Naval Operations (Manpower, Personnel and Training) in September 1978. He was selected for promotion to the rank of rear admiral in February 1980.Upon selection for
flag rank , Admiral Kelso served as Director, Strategic Submarine Division, Office of the Chief of Naval Operations, and then was assigned as Director, Office of Program Appraisal, Office of theSecretary of the Navy . OnFebruary 8 ,1985 , Admiral Kelso became Commander Sixth Fleet andNATO Commander Naval Striking Force and Support Forces Southern Europe. During this tour, forces under his command launched raids on Libya in defiance of Colonel/President Muammar Gaddafi's claim that Libya's territorial waters extended 200 miles into the Gulf of Sidra. OnJune 30 ,1986 , Kelso was promoted to admiral and assumed the duties of Commander in Chief, U.S. Atlantic Fleet. Kelso became Supreme Allied Commander Atlantic and Commander in Chief, U.S. Atlantic Command onNovember 22 ,1988 . In that capacity his forces were involved in the secondGulf of Sidra incident (1989) . He succeeded AdmiralCarlisle A.H. Trost to became the Navy's 24thChief of Naval Operations onJune 29 ,1990 . [ [http://www.navy.mil/navydata/navy_legacy_hr.asp?id=237 Navy biography of Frank B. Kelso] (Note this omits any mention of Tailhook.)]Kelso attended the 1991
Tailhook Association meeting in Las Vegas (his second time) at the urging of his senior aviation advisors to gain first-hand information from aviators who were part of Operation Desert Storm following Iraq's invasion of Kuwait. In the months following this meeting, allegations of sexual harassment of hotel guests and other sexual misconduct on the part of naval aviators surfaced. Following several lengthy investigations, more than 100 aviators were implicated in overt acts of sexual misconduct. None were court-martialed, though over half of those implicated were informally disciplined and the careers of several senior officers were essentially ended. Secretary of the Navy Lawrence Garrett ultimately resigned and Kelso was forced to retire two months early amid the scandal and aviator complaints that he had failed to ensure due process for accused personnel. [U.S. House Committee on Armed Services, hearing on Sexual Harassment of Military Women/Improving Military Compalint Systems, 103rd Congressional hearings held March 1994] Nonetheless, the Navy and its leadership were roundly criticized for minor punishments handed out to a few officers. It can be stated that Admiral Kelso offered his resignation to President Clinton during this time, but President Clinton rejected this offer. Kelso was succeeded by AdmiralJeremy M. Boorda onApril 23 ,1994 .Shortly before his retirement, Senator
Barbara Boxer attempted to punish Kelso by recommending areduction in rank from full admiral to rear admiral (upper half). Under Congressional law, all military promotions for flag officers to have three or four stars are at the behest of the Senate, and said promotions can be revoked, as was the case ofHusband Kimmel following the Pearl Harbor attack, who was demoted from a 4-star admiral to a 2-star. Boxer claimed Kelso was deserving of punishment on the grounds that as the Navy's top officer he bore ultimate responsibility for what happened at Tailhook. Boxer's attempt failed when more Senators agreed Admiral Kelso had taken the correct and proper actions in handling the affair, and he was allowed to retire at full rank. Kelso's supporters praised his overhaul of officer training that eliminated the separate officer candidate school for aviation candidates that had traditionally set aviators apart from their other officer peers, and for tough new policies on sexual harassment. [Barbara Starr, ABC News, 8/11/99, "Tailhook Fallout Still Felt"] Had Kelso been demoted, it would have been a significant loss in his military pension.Awards and decorations
Admiral Kelso has been awarded the
Defense Distinguished Service Medal , theNavy Distinguished Service Medal (three awards),Legion of Merit (four awards), Meritorious Service, Navy Commendation andNavy Achievement Medal s.References
*http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/VA-news/VA-Pilot/issues/1996/vp960907/09070177.htm
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