US President Barack Obama is choosing a widely respected, combat-hardened commander who led the Afghanistan war coalition during a key transitional period during as the next chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
US officials say he is nominating Marine General Joseph Dunford J. to the post to succeed Army General Martin Dempsey, who will have served four years as chairman.
Obama planned to make the announcement at the White House about noon yesterday, said officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly ahead of the announcement.
Dunford is expected to be easily confirmed by the US Senate.
Dunford’s service as the commandant of the US Marine Corps will be cut short after he began that job in October last year, but the rapid promotion is one of several that have marked Dunford’s fast-tracked military career, which saw him leap from a one-star general to four stars in about three years.
Officials also said Obama is tapping General Paul Selva, a top US Air Force officer and pilot, to serve as vice chairman. Selva, who has clocked more than 3,100 hours piloting transport and refueling aircraft, is currently the head of US Transportation Command at Scott Air Force Base in Illinois.
Dunford began his career as an infantry officer and has commanded at all levels. He served nearly two years in Iraq, including as head of the Marines’ 5th Regimental Combat Team during the 2003 invasion, where he earned the nickname “Fighting Joe.”
He is well-connected internationally, often meeting with NATO and other coalition leaders, particularly during his Afghanistan command.
His selection signals that even as the US puts more focus on Asia and looks ahead to high-tech cyber and space threats, the administration still believes a strong ground force commander is needed to work through the ongoing conflicts in Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria and across the Middle East and Africa.
If confirmed, Dunford would be only the second marine to serve as chairman. General Peter Pace, the first Marine chosen as chairman, served one two-year term from 2005 to 2007, but was not renominated by then-US secretary of defense Robert Gates because the Pentagon chief feared a long, difficult Senate hearing focusing on the sharp divisions over the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.
Senator John McCain, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, would not confirm the selection on Monday, but he gave the choice a thumbs-up — a critical factor for an administration that does not want to go through a drawn-out Senate confirmation process.
Dunford’s most visible role came in 2013 when he was chosen to take over the job as top US military commander in Afghanistan.
During his 18 months there, Dunford oversaw the ongoing drawdown of US troops, the transition to Afghan military lead in combat operations, and the tumultuous Afghan elections that dragged on and stalled efforts to reach an agreement on the US military’s future presence in the country.
He left Afghanistan in August last year, preparing to take on his new role as commandant.
Dunford, 59, is a Boston native and holds master’s degrees in government from Georgetown University and international relations from Tufts University’s Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy.
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