General
John L. Piotrowski is a
retired
United States Air
Force four star general who
served as
Vice Chief
of Staff, U.S. Air Force (VCSAF), from
1985 to 1987; and Commander in Chief, North
American Aerospace Defense Command
/Commander in Chief, U.S. Space Command (CINCNORAD/USCINCSPACE),
from 1987 to 1990.
Piotrowski
was born in 1934, in Detroit
and
graduated from Henry Ford Trade School in Dearborn,
Michigan
, in 1951. He attended Arizona State
University
and Florida State University
, and graduated from the University of
Nebraska at Omaha
in 1965 with a bachelor of science degree.
He did
postgraduate work at the University of
Southern California
and Auburn University
, and attended the program for management
development at Harvard
University
. He completed Squadron Officer School in 1956,
Air Command
and Staff College
in 1965, Armed Forces Staff College in
1968 and the Royal Air Force College
of Air Warfare, Royal
Air Force Station Manby, England, in 1971.
He enlisted in the U.S. Air Force in September 1952.
After basic training
at Lackland Air
Force Base
, Texas, he was assigned to Keesler Air
Force Base
, Mississippi, as a student in basic electronics and
ground radar.
In July
1953 Piotrowski transferred to Harlingen Air Force Base
, Texas, for navigator and observer training in the
aviation cadet program. After graduating as a distinguished
graduate, he was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Air Force
in August 1954. He then returned to Keesler Air Force Base for
advanced training in electronic countermeasures. In January 1955 he
received the electronic warfare rating and was assigned to the
67th Tactical
Reconnaissance Wing in South Korea and Japan as an electronic
warfare officer and
RB-26 navigator.
Piotrowski
returned to the United States in May 1957 for pilot training at
Marana Air
Base
, Arizona; Bainbridge Air Base
, Georgia; and Bryan
Air Force Base, Texas. He then attended F-86F advanced gunnery training at Williams Air
Force Base
, Arizona. After graduation he was assigned as
armament and electronics maintenance officer at Williams and,
later, at Luke Air
Force Base
, Arizona. In May 1961 he moved to Eglin Air
Force Auxiliary Field 9
, Florida, and joined the initial cadre of Project
Jungle Jim, which became the 1st
Air Commando Wing. While assigned to Eglin, he served in
Southeast Asia, from November 1961 to May 1963, as a munitions
maintenance officer, and
T-28 and B-26
combat aircrew member.
In August
1965 Piotrowski joined the Air Force Fighter Weapons
School at Nellis Air Force Base
, Nevada, and served as an F-4C
instructor pilot, chief of academics, an academic instructor and
project officer for the Air Force operational test and evaluation
of the Walleye missile
program. Upon completion of testing in the United
States, he introduced the Walleye into combat with the
8th Tactical Fighter Wing in
Southeast Asia. After graduation from the Armed Forces Staff
College in August 1968, he was assigned to Headquarters U.S. Air
Force, Washington, D.C., as an action officer under the deputy
director of plans for force development.
From December 1970 to July 1971 he attended the Royal Air Force
College of Air Warfare.
He was then assigned to Bitburg Air
Base
, West Germany, as assistant and, subsequently,
deputy commander for operations, 36th Tactical Fighter
Wing. In January 1972 he took command of the 40th
Tactical Group, Aviano
Air Base
,
Italy.
In April
1974 Piotrowski became chief of the Air Force Six-Man Group,
located at Maxwell
Air Force Base
, directly responsible to the chief of staff.
He became vice commander of
Keesler Technical Training
Center, Keesler Air Force Base, in March 1975.
He took
command of the reactivated 552nd Airborne Warning
and Control Wing at Tinker Air Force Base
, Oklahoma, in July 1976 and was instrumental in
establishing the E-3A Sentry Airborne
Warning and Control System aircraft as an operational Air Force
weapon system. While Congress debated the E-3 future (due to
huge cost over-runs), General Piotrowski took the planes on
continuous road shows. Especially Europe, and Korea. He filled the
planes with observers who would benefit, or could appreciate the
capability to project tactical forces anywhere in the world, in
less than 24 hours. It should be noted, he was not only an
effective leader, he was very personable and warm hearted. Before
Piotrowski, the E-3 was going to be a system that would orbit
America in defense, and after he arrived he changed the system to
deploy to where the war was, and bring tankers and fighters along.
A true tactical mission, with troops who could live out of an A-3
bag for 200 days a year.
Piotrowski was named deputy commander for
air defense, Tactical Air
Command, Peterson Air Force Base
, in September 1979. In April 1981 he
became Tactical Air Command's deputy chief of staff for operations
at Langley Air
Force Base
, Virginia, and in August 1982 was assigned as the
command's vice commander. He served as commander of 9th Air Force, Shaw Air Force Base
, South Carolina, from October 1982 to July 1985,
when he became vice chief of staff of the Air Force, Washington,
D.C. He assumed command of NORAD in February 1987.
Piotrowski was a
command pilot with
more than 5,000 flying hours, including 100 combat missions and 210
combat flying hours. His military decorations and awards include
the
Defense
Distinguished Service Medal, Air Force Distinguished Service
Medal,
Legion of Merit,
Meritorious Service
Medal with two
oak leaf
clusters,
Air Medal with two oak leaf
clusters, Air Force Commendation Medal with oak leaf cluster,
Presidential Unit
Citation and
Air
Force Outstanding Unit Award with three oak leaf clusters. He
received the Eugene M. Zuckert Management Award for 1979.
References