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LTG Mary Legere 2020 And Beyond
LTG Mary Legereis one of the highest-ranking women in the United States Army. She was promoted to the rank of Three Star General in April 2012 and has served her country for more than thirty years.
She is the Senior Army Representative in the U.S. Intelligence Community, and one of seventeen Senior Intelligence Officers in the United States Intelligence Community.
“In this role,” she explains, “I have been responsible for assisting the Army in driving the transformation of it’s Intelligence Corps from a focus on operations in Afghanistan and Iraq toward meeting the emerging threats of our Globally Engaged and Regionally Aligned Army around the globe.”
Key elements of the strategic plan, she said, which is called the U.S. Army intelligence 2020 and beyond, include: • Strengthening and Modernizing the Army’s Global Intelligence Information Foundational Layer • Shepherding the Army’s Distributed Common Ground Station through its evolution and global deployment, ensuring it remains responsive to soldier needs, and capable of leveraging the technological opportunities of the Intelligence Community Cloud
Driving the Army-wide effort to modernize and consolidate the Army’s Global Processing, Exploitation and Dissemination • Expanding the Army’s investment in Human Intelligence, Counterintelligence, Open Source Intelligence and multidiscipline intelligence support to Cyber Operations
Consolidating, Modernizing and Expanding the Army’s Aerial ISR Fleet to provide greater global responsiveness to support for Army and Joint Commanders • Introducing new Army Intelligence formations to increase the national to tactical and multidiscipline intelligence capabilities and capacity, including 10 additional brigade sized organizations
Now in the fourth year of an extensive modernization effort, Army Intelligence is continuing to demonstrate exceptional agility in supporting Army operations in multiple theaters, while also developing and rapidly on-boarding state of the art capabilities to better support the Army’s many emerging and urgent needs.
As Legere noted in a recent address to industry, “As the Army’s Senior Intelligence Officer, it has been my responsibility to work with the Army, the Intelligence Community and Congress , to ensure the Army continues to field the best possible MI Force, with the most responsive and adaptive expeditionary capabilities and formations we can resource, ensuring we have the regionally expert multi-discipline Intelligence Force our Army requires, while introducing advanced technologies, skill sets and formations to improve the intelligence support we provide to our forces across the globe. “
Selected in 2012 to be the Army’s Senior Intelligence Officer, she was responsible for the operations, readiness and modernization of the Army’s 58,000 person Intelligence Corps. She served in this position from April 2012 to March 2016, the longest serving General Officer in this position’s history.