Army Chief Information Officer/G-6
In September 2020, the Army realigned the previously consolidated CIO/G-6 function into two separate roles, Office of the Chief Information Officer and Deputy Chief of Staff, G-6, that report to the secretary of the Army and chief of staff of the Army, respectively. The realignment came after several months of planning and coordination. Lt. Gen. John Mor
G-6
- Advise chief of staff of the Army and the Chief Information Officer on planning, fielding, and execution of C4IT worldwide Army operations
- Develop and execute the plan for the Unified Network
- Implement Army information assurance
- Supervise C4IT, Signal support, Information security, Force structure and equipping activities in support of warfighting operations
- Oversee management of the Signal forces
Planned realignment
On June 11, 2020, the Army announced that the two roles of CIO and Deputy Chief of Staff, G-6 would be realigned no later than August 31, 2020, with separate individuals responsible for each position. With the realignment:- CIO core functions will be policy, governance, and oversight. Focus areas include: Information Environment, Cybersecurity, Enterprise Architecture, and Data Policy/Oversight/Governance, Enterprise Architecture, Enterprise Cloud Management and IT Spend/Category Management.
- DCS, G-6 core functions will be planning, strategy, and implementation. Focus areas include: Information Environment/Network, Planning and Integration, Theater Synchronization, Architecture Integration, Enterprise Information Environment Mission Area Portfolio Management and Mission Decision Packet Management.
- * In order to support multi-domain operations, the Army will have to connect Enterprise networks and tactical networks. —LTG Morrison, DCS, G-6
- * DCS G-6 released the Army Unified Network Plan under the Army Digital Transformation Strategy, to help the Army to establish a Multi-Domain Operations capable force by 2028. The Unified Network will enable Army formations, as part of the Joint Force, to operate in highly contested and congested operational environments with the speed and global range to achieve decision dominance and maintain overmatch. The plan shapes, synchronizes, integrates and governs Unified Network efforts and aligns the personnel, organizational structure and capabilities required to enable MDO at all echelons.
Chief signal officers and their successors
Chief signal officers- Maj. Albert J. Myer 1860–1863
- Lt. Col. William J. L. Nicodemus 1863–1864
- Col. Benjamin F. Fisher 1864–1866
- Col. Albert J. Myer 1866–1880
- Brig. Gen. William B. Hazen 1880–1887
- Brig. Gen. Adolphus W. Greely 1887–1906
- Brig. Gen. James Allen 1906–1913
- Brig. Gen. George P. Scriven 1913–1917
- Brig. Gen. George O. Squier 1917–1923
- Maj. Gen. Charles McK. Saltzman 1924–1928
- Maj. Gen. George Sabin Gibbs 1928–1931
- Maj. Gen. Irving J. Carr 1931–1934
- Maj. Gen. James B. Allison 1935–1937
- Maj. Gen. Joseph O. Mauborgne 1937–1941
- Maj. Gen. Dawson Olmstead 1941–1943
- Maj. Gen. Harry C. Ingles 1943–1947
- Maj. Gen. Spencer B. Akin 1947–1951
- Maj. Gen. George I. Back 1951–1955
- Lt. Gen. James D. O’Connell 1955–1959
- Maj. Gen. Ralph T. Nelson 1959–1962
- Maj. Gen. Earle F. Cook 1962–1963
- Maj. Gen. David Parker Gibbs 1963–1964
- Maj. Gen. David Parker Gibbs 1964–1966
- Maj. Gen. Walter E. Lotz, Jr. 1966–1967
- Maj. Gen. Walter E. Lotz, Jr. 1967–1968
- Maj. Gen. George E. Pickett 1968–1972
- Lt. Gen. Thomas Rienzi 1972–1974
- Lt. Gen. Thomas Rienzi 1974–1977
- Lt. Gen. Charles R. Myer 1977–1978
- Lt. Gen. Charles R. Myer 1978–1979
- Maj. Gen. Clay T. Buckingham 1979–1981
- Maj. Gen. Clay T. Buckingham 1981–1982
- Maj. Gen. James M. Rockwell 1982–1984
- Lt. Gen. David K. Doyle 1984–1986
- Lt. Gen. Thurman D. Rodgers 1986–1987
- Lt. Gen. Thurman D. Rodgers 1987–1988
- Lt. Gen. Bruce R. Harris 1988–1990
- Lt. Gen. Jerome B. Hilmes 1990–1992
- Lt. Gen. Peter A. Kind 1992–1994
- Lt. Gen. Otto J. Guenther 1995–1997
- Lt. Gen. William H. Campbell
- Lt. Gen. William H. Campbell 1997–2000