ITINERARY FOR MR. WILLIAM J. CASEY
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP86M00886R002900020011-0
Release Decision:
RIFPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
7
Document Creation Date:
December 21, 2016
Document Release Date:
November 5, 2008
Sequence Number:
11
Case Number:
Publication Date:
July 25, 1984
Content Type:
MISC
File:
Attachment | Size |
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Body:
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U. S. ATLANTIC COMMAND
HEADQUARTERS OF THE COMMANDER IN CHIEF
NORFOLK. VIRGINIA 2351 1
ITINERARY FOR MR. WILLIAM J. CASEY
25 July 1984
ARRIVE NAS NORFOLK VIA NAVAL AIRCRAFT
MET BY VADM CARR AND CAPTAIN BROOKS
1145 DEPART NAS NORFOLK FOR CINCLANTFLT COMPOUND
1205 ARRIVE HQ CINCLANTFLT
1215 CALL ON VADM CARR
1230-1330 LUNCHEON HOSTED BY VADM CARR
1330-1345 DEPART FOR USS INDENPENDENCE VISIT VIA NAVY SEDAN
1345-1430 VISIT/TOUR USS IDENPENDENCE (CV 62)
1430-1445 DEPART CARRIER; PROCEED VIA NAVY SEDAN TO
CINCLANTFLT
1515-1545 COMMANDER, OCEANOGRAPHIC SYSTEM ATLANTIC
(COSL) BRIEF IN ROOM 202. WALK THROUGH COSL.
1545-1600 CINCLANTFLT COMMAND CENTER AND FOSIC BRIEFING/TOUR.
1600 DEPART CINCLANTFLT COMPOUND FOR NAS NORFOLK.
1615 ARRIVE NAS NORFOLK.
1620 DEPART NAS NORFOLK VIA NAVAL AIRCRAFT FOR NAF ANDREWS.
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BIOGRAPHY
UNITED STATES ATLANTIC COMMAND
UNITED STATES ATLANTIC FLEET
Vice Admiral Kenneth M. Carr was
born in Mayfield, Kentucky, on March
17, 1925 and graduated from high school
in San Bernardino, California in 1941.
After attending San Bernardino Valley
College for two years, VADM Carr en-
listed in the Navy as a seaman.
He was a crewman on an assault
landing craft attached to the USS
PRESIDENT JACKSON (APA 18), in late
1943, and participated in the landings
at Bougainville, Solomon Islands, and
the initial landing in February 1944 at
Green Island, Bismarck Archipelago. In
May 1944, he was promoted to Coxswain,
and in June 1944 entered the University
of Louisville in Kentucky as a selectee
in the V-12 Officer Program. Prior to
being commissioned in 1945, he was appointed to the U.S. Naval
Academy as a member of the Class of 1949. After graduation in
1949, he served as Assistant Gunnery Officer of USS EVERSOLE
(DD 789) and then entered Submarine School in New London, Con-
necticut in 1950.
He served in USS FLYING FISH (SS 229) in 1950 and then re-
commissioned USS BLACKFIN (SS 322) in 1951 and served in her
until September 1953.
In 1953 he was assigned to the precommissioning detail of
USS NAUTILUS (SSN 571) and was a member of her commissioning
crew as Gunnery Officer. With the exception of a twelve month
period from June 1956 to May 1957 when he attended Nuclear
Power Training, Vice Admiral Carr served in NAUTILUS until
December 1960 in various capacities. He was Electrical officer
during the 1958 Polar crossing and served as her Engineer Offi-
cer throughout her first overhaul, (the first overhaul of a
nuclear powered ship) in 1960.
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In December 1960, he was assigned as Executive Officer of
USS SCORPION (SSN 589). VADM Carr was next assigned as Execu-
tive Officer of USS JAMES MONROE (SSBN 622) from March 1962
until February 1964. He then reported as prospective Command-
ing Officer of USS FLASHER (SSN 613), taking command when the
ship was commissioned on July 22, 1966, until July 1967. He
became Commanding Officer of USS JOHN ADAMS (SSBN 620) (GOLD)
in August 1967, serving until August 1968.
He was next assigned to the Office of the Chief of Naval
Operations (Research and Development) for two years, and then
to the staff of the Commander in Chief U.S. Atlantic Fleet for
duty as Senior Member, Naval Nuclear Propulsion Examining Board
in August 1970.
In 1972, VADM Carr was assigned as Chief of Staff to the
Commander Submarine Force, U.S. Atlantic Fleet. In March 1973,
he was ordered to duty as Military Assistant to the Deputy Sec-
retary of Defense. Vice Admiral Carr commanded the Submarine
Force, U.S. Atlantic Fleet from June 20, 1977 to May 30, 1980.
Before assuming his present duties as Deputy and Chief of
Staff to the Commander in Chief U.S. Atlantic Fleet on April 1,
1983, Vice Admiral Carr served as Vice Director of Strategic
Target Planning at Offutt Air Force Base, Nebraska.
Vice Admiral Carr's decorations include among others, De-
fense Distinguished Service Medal; Distinguished Service Medal;
Defense Superior Service Medal; Legion of Merit with one Gold
Star; Meritorious Service Medal; Presidential Unit Commenda-
tion; Navy Unit Commendation; Meritorious Unit Commendation;
American Campaign; Asiatic and Pacific Campaign with two En-
gagement Stars; World War II Victory Medal; National Defense
with one Bronze Star; Korean Service; Korean Presidential; and
United Nations Service.
He is married to Molly Pace of Burkesville, Kentucky.
April 21, 1983
CINCLANTFLT
Public Affairs Office
Norfolk, Virginia 23511
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BIOGRAPHY
OF
CAPTAIN THOMAS A. BROOKS
UNITED STATES NAVY
ASSISTANT CHIEF OF STAFF FOR INTELLIGENCE,
COMMANDER IN CHIEF, U.S. ATLANTIC COMMAND
Captain Thomas A. Brooks was born in New York City and
attended various schools in the New York City area, obtaining
his Bachelors Degree from Fordham University and a Masters
Degree from Fairleigh Dickinson University.
Captain Brooks joined the Navy in 1958 and was commissioned
via Officer Candidate School in March 1959 as an Intelligence
Specialist officer. His first tour of duty was as an analyst
with Navy Field Operational Intelligence Office from 1959
through 1961. Subsequent tours included duty on an Amphibious
Group Staff; Army Language School; Defense Intelligence School;
Assistant Naval Attache, Turkey (Istanbul); Central Intelligence
Agency; Commanding Officer, Naval Investigative Service Office,
Viet Nam; Bureau of Naval Personnel; Chief of Naval Operations
(CNO) Executive Panel; Head, CNO Intelligence Plot/Undersea
Warfare Plot; Chief of Staff for Intelligence, Commander SECOND
Fleet; Officer in Charge, Fleet Ocean Surveillance Information
Center Detachment, CINCLANTFLT; and Commanding Officer, Navy
Field Operational Intelligence Office, Fort Meade, Maryland.
He is currently Assistant Chief of Staff for Intelligence,
Commander in Chief, U.S. Atlantic Command.
Captain Brooks' personal decorations include Legion of
Merit (2), Bronze Star with "V", Meritorious Service Medal,
Army Commendation Medal (2) with "V", Navy Commendation Medal,
and Navy Achievement Medal (2).
Captain Brooks is married to the former Clare Codyre, also
from the New York City area. They have three sons.
Captain Brooks served as President of the National Military
Intelligence Association 1981 - 1982.
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Fact Sheet ~k-
Atlantic Command
The Armed Forces of the United States are organized under a chain of command that leads from the
President through the Chairman and the Joint Chiefs of Staff to the commanders of unified commands.
Each of the unified commanders exercises command responsibility for the joint operations of the armed
forces in a designated area.
The ATLANTIC COMMAND was established December 1, 1947. Its area of responsibility is all of the
Atlantic from the North Pole to the South Pole; the Caribbean Sea and waters around Central and South
America extending to 92 degrees west longitude in the Pacific; the Norwegian, Greenland, and Barents
Seas; and the waters around Africa extending to the Cape of Good Hope.
The Commander in Chief Atlantic, with headquarters in Norfolk, Virginia, has a joint staff of Army,
Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard personnel.
The mission of the ATLANTIC COMMAND is first to deter military attack against the United States,
and second to protect our most vital interests, which includes support for our allies; access to
resources and markets; and access to critical areas for political, economic and military reasons. Offen-
sively oriented sea control is the mission once fighting starts.
The ATLANTIC COMMAND is organized into component commands, subordinate commands and
special commands.
The three component commands provide the forces of the ATLANTIC COMMAND. While the only per-
manently assigned forces are those of the U.S. Atlantic Fleet, the other components, U.S. Army Forces
Atlantic and U.S. Air Force Forces Atlantic, provide forces for operations, exercises, and emergencies
when directed by the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Army and Air Force components actively develop and coor-
dinate joint plans with the Atlantic Command staff.
Subordinate unified commands of the ATLANTIC COMMAND are Commander U.S. Forces Caribbean, a
Navy rear admiral with headquarters at Key West, Florida; Commander U.S. Forces Azores, an Air Force
brigadier general with headquarters at Lajes in the Azores; and Commander Iceland Defense Force, a
Navy rear admiral with headquarters at Keflavik, Iceland.
Joint Task Force 120, a special command, assists in planning and conducting operations in specific
areas designated by Commander in Chief Atlantic and the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Commander Joint Task
Force 120 is also Commander U.S. SECOND Fleet.
The strategic deterrent force of fleet ballistic missile (FBM) submarines is under the direct com-
mand of the Commander in Chief Atlantic when operating in his area of command. The submarines are
supported by tenders in Charleston, South Carolina; Holy Loch, Scotland; and Kings Bay, Georgia.
Revised: September 1983
CINCLANT
Public Affairs Office
Norfolk, Virginia 23511
(804) 444-6294
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Fact Sheet
U.S. Atlantic Fleet
The U.S. ATLANTIC FLEET numbers about 287 active ships, 2068 active aircraft and 221,981 per-
sonnel -- including some 453 aircraft and 50,000 men of the Fleet Marine Force, Atlantic. It provides
the forces for the Second Fleet in the Atlantic, the Sixth Fleet in the Mediterranean, and the Middle East
Force in the Indian Ocean.
The ATLANTIC FLEET periodically provides naval forces for joint operations and exercises with Army
and Air Force components of the unified Atlantic Command. ATLANTIC FLEET forces join those from
other nations in forming NATO's Striking Fleet Atlantic and exercise regularly with other NATO navies.
The ATLANTIC FLEET area of responsibility is all of the Atlantic from the North Pole to the South
Pole; the Caribbean Sea and the waters around Central and South America extending to 92 degrees west
longitude in the Pacific; the Norwegian, Greenland, and Barents Seas; and the waters around Africa ex-
tending to the Cape of Good Hope.
The mission of the ATLANTIC FLEET is to be prepared to deter and resist aggression in the area of
responsibility assigned to the Fleet. This mission includes conducting operations to ensure control of
the sea and air, providing combat-ready naval forces, maintaining the security of the Atlantic Command,
and supporting the operations of allied and other national commanders.
Within the ATLANTIC FLEET there is only one major operational command -- U.S. Second Fleet -- and
there are five type commands: Naval Surface Force, Naval Air Force, Submarine Force, Fleet Marine
Force, and Atlantic Training Command.
The Commander U.S. Second Fleet directs the employment of armed forces which have a mission to
engage in combat or to provide integral support to a combat operation. Type commanders provide ad-
ministrative and logistic support and readiness training for their respective units.
In addition, three special commands -- Operational Test and Evaluation Force; Commander Naval
Base, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba; and U.S. Naval Forces Caribbean -- provide support and training for the
Fleet.
The ATLANTIC FLEET continues to provide training, readiness, administrative and logistic support to
its ships during extended operations in the Mediterranean when they are under the operational control of
the Commander in Chief U.S. Naval Forces Europe.
Revised: September 1983
CINCLANTFLT
Public Affairs Office
Norfolk, Virginia 23511
(804) 444-6294
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