Chief of Joint Operations (CJOPS) Australia |
|
---|---|
Style |
Vice Admiral / Lieutenant General / Air Marshal |
Term length | Three years (renewable) |
Inaugural holder |
Lieutenant General David Hurley |
The Chief of Joint Operations (CJOPS) is a three-star role within the Australian Defence Force (ADF), responsible the Joint Operations Command and joint operational deployments, such as United Nations peacekeeping and joint task groups. Until 2007, the Vice Chief of the Defence Force (VCDF) was double hatted, additionally exercising the responsibilities of CJOPS. However, in September 2007 the Minister of Defence, Brendan Nelson announced the formation of a separate CJOPS position based at the Headquarters Joint Operations Command (HQJOC) at Bungendore, New South Wales.
The Joint Operations Command consists of Headquarters Joint Operations Command, Northern Command, and Australian Defence Force elements of the Border Protection Command. Chief of Joint Operations is a joint position, and in theory the incumbent can be appointed from any of the ADF components.
On 28 Match 2014, the Department of Defence announced Rear Admiral David Johnston will be promoted vice admiral and succeed Lieutenant General Ash Power as CJOPS on 20 May 2014.