Air Force Gen. CQ Brown Confirmed as 1st African American Military Service Chief
U.S. Air Force Gen. CQ Brown Jr. |
The Senate on Tuesday confirmed Brown, currently the head of Pacific Air Forces, in a unanimous 98-0 vote to be the service's 22nd chief of staff.
"The U.S. Air Force, Space Force and I congratulate Gen. Brown & his wife, Sharene, on his confirmation as #CSAF!" Air Force Secretary Barbara Barrett tweeted after the vote. "Gen. Brown's unrivaled leadership, operational experience & global perspective will prove crucial to modernizing the #USAF to meet tomorrow's national security challenges."
Though the vote had yet to take place, President Donald Trump tweeted, "My decision to appoint @usairforce General Charles Brown as the USA's first-ever African American military service chief has now been approved by the Senate.
"A historic day for America!" he added. "Excited to work even more closely with Gen. Brown, who is a Patriot and Great Leader!"
Last week, Brown spoke out about a life in which he has tried to fit in as an African American man in everyday life, as well as in uniform.
"I'm thinking about how full I am with emotion, not just for George Floyd, but the many African Americans that have suffered the same fate as George Floyd," he said in a passionate video posted on social media.
Brown, an F-16 Fighting Falcon pilot, described his military experience as "living in two worlds," with some questioning whether he even belonged in the ranks.
"I'm thinking about having to represent by working twice as hard to prove [that my supervisors'] perceptions and expectations of African Americans were invalid," he said in the video. "I'm thinking about the airmen who don't have a life similar to mine, and don't have to navigate through two worlds. I'm thinking about how these airmen see racism, where they don't see it as a problem because it doesn't happen to them, or whether they're empathetic."
While leaders across the branches have spoken out since the May 25 death of Floyd, a black man, at the hands of police officers in Minneapolis, the Air Force has stood out on the issue.
The White House in March put forth Brown's nomination. He follows Gen. David Goldfein, who is set to retire this summer after four years in the position.
Brown will also be the first black officer to sit on the Joint Chiefs of Staff since Army Gen. Colin Powell, now retired, served as chairman between 1989 and 1993.
Before his post at PACAF, Brown was the deputy commander of U.S. Central Command at MacDill Air Force Base, Florida. He also served as the head of Air Forces Central Command between 2015 and 2016, during the height of the air campaign against Islamic State fighters in Iraq and Syria.
The highly decorated commander commissioned in 1984 and has accumulated more than 2,900 flight hours, including 130 combat hours in various aircraft, according to his biography.
Prior to his historic confirmation, Brown last week called airmen's attention to openly discussing disparities in the ranks.
"I want to know what you're thinking about," he said. "I want to hear what you're thinking about, and how together, we can make a difference."
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Oriana Pawlyk @Oriana0214 writes for Military.com. More F-16 Articles.
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