General Of The Air Force

In the United States Air Force, General of the Air Force is the highest rank, equivalent to a five star General. The rank has only been held by one person in history: Henry H. Arnold. The insignia for General of the Air Force was originally the same as General of the Army, and was slightly modified in the 1950s for wear on the new blue Air Force dress uniform. General of the Air Force, however, has never been worn by an officer of the modern Air Force; all photographs of General Arnold, wearing the insignia for General of the Air Force, show the insignia on an Army Air Corps brown uniform. During the Cold War, with the rise of the Strategic Air Command, it was proposed that General of the Air Force be reestablised and granted to senior Air Force generals, such as the commander of NORAD. As a result, General of the Air Force can still be seen on modern insignia charts and it is still considered an official rank of the United States Air Force. To date, however, no one except Henry Arnold has ever held the rank General of the Air Force. The United States Navy equivalent of General of the Air Force is Fleet Admiral

See also

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
french union
chiang rai
sacred heart
uss south dakota (bb 57)
leslie morshead
souvanna phomma
phra bang
jack russell terrier
francis bacon (painter)
via della vittoria
new york world telegram
eric dorman smith
matilda tank
cdr
sonic adventure
hot tube ignitor
commentary magazine
gotland municipality
arun shourie
discrete hartley transform
lawrence summers
black and tan coonhound
jennifer knapp
horizontal integration
pelecaniformes
smart 1
brigadier general
henry h. arnold
coonhound
analytical society
realm of sweden
list of japanese prefectures by population
iranian monarchy
differential (mechanics)
biocoenosis
abolished monarchy
dominions of sweden
theodahad
mare australe
mare cognitum
media imperialism
vertical integration
mare fecunditatis
ecoregion conservation status