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Lt. Gen Glenn A. Kent
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 LIEUTENANT GENERAL GLENN A. KENT
Air Force strategy legend dies at age 96

Posted 4/26/2012 Email story   Print story

    

4/26/2012 - WASHINGTON (AFNS) -- A retired Air Force general who was known as the father of "strategy to task," and was instrumental in the development and implementation of new weapon systems during the last half of the 20th Century passed away April 25, at the age of 96.

Retired Lt. Gen. Glenn A. Kent spent more than three decades as an Army Air Corps and Air Force officer, becoming influential in the development, analysis and implementation of new weapons systems for the Department of Defense. He retired from the Air Force in 1974 as the director of the Weapon Systems Evaluation Group, Office of the Director of Defense Research and Engineering, with the Office of the Secretary of Defense.

Kent was considered to be one of the premier analytical thinkers of all time and considered a visionary of defense analyses still in use today. In his memoir "Thinking about America's Defense," Kent provided a summary of national security issues he personally engaged over his career.

In addition to creating the concept of a single integrated operation plan, Kent also led DoD's official assessment of strategic defenses throughout the 1960s and helped bring new weapon systems to life. He also developed and analyzed strategic nuclear arms control agreements that did much to lead to the end of the Cold War.

Kent began his military career in 1941 when he joined the Army Air Corps as a cadet and completed training in meteorology at the California Institute of Technology in 1942. His first assignment took him to Goose Bay, Labrador, Canada, as a weather officer, and later during World War II was assigned to Greenland in a similar capacity.

Over a career spanning more than 33 years, Kent had numerous assignments in the weapons field with positions that ranged from research and development to planning, strategy and policy-making at the Headquarters, U.S. Air Force and Department of Defense levels.

After earning a bachelor's degree from Western State College of Colorado, Gunnison, in 1936, Kent went on to earn degrees from the Naval Post Graduate School in Annapolis, Md., and the University of California at Berkley.

After his retirement from the Air Force, Kent spent more than 20 years as a defense analyst for the Rand Corp.

Kent's legacy continues today with the Lt. Gen. Glenn A. Kent Leadership Award, which recognizes leadership for the analytic community.

According to a senior Air Force official, while our nation was facing the Cold War and the Vietnam conflict, General Kent contributed critical thought and sound analysis to help convince leaders that a single command with an integrated operations plan should be responsible to organize and employ our strategic forces. His visionary concepts laid the way to the end of the Cold War two decades later.

"General Kent compels us to think logically as well as to study the lessons experienced by those before us --how they prevailed, adapted and modernized. These insights can help us maintain a competitive edge over our foes now and in the future."



tabComments
5/15/2012 10:49:55 AM ET
Thank you Gen. Kent for your leadership your legend will never be forgotten.
SrA Addo, Pentagon
 
5/2/2012 12:01:59 PM ET
Kent was a quiet man. Many schools of analysis studied and taught his great lessons. Many people knew Kent without ever knowing the man. In the intelligence world it's not always best to drop names like it's done in the business world. We truly lost a Giant. Godspeed.
Michael D, Iowa
 
5/1/2012 12:57:57 AM ET
There is no doubt that Gen Rand provided exceptional insight and leadership especially after his retirement while working for RAND. You would never get that from his BIO on the AF page or this article. RAND papers show his influence and dominance in the SIOP and JSTPS. The sketchy info from the AF page shows no link to SAC or where his insight was used. He performed a great if invisible service. I served in SAC for 20 plus years and knew little of him.
BJB, TAFB
 
4/30/2012 9:41:24 AM ET
Thank you for your Legacy. Rest In Peace, General Kent.
Fernando Alejandro, Wisconsin
 
4/28/2012 2:14:30 PM ET
Glenn Kent would have known better than to generalize casually about a complex set of variables he was a giant of a thinker and his service was admirable. Many of today's generals have however served in direct or indirect combat roles which he appears not to have done. They still deal with the same kinds of critical constraints and responsibilities that he did. And just like Airmen throughout the history of the Air Force just like Chiefs SNCOs and others today's generals still have to earn their rank. Tom Carter's assertion otherwise seems petty and appears to come from a preconception not analysis. That's not in Glenn Kent's intellectual tradition and does not respect him or the Air Force that he worked hard to build and pass on to us. If that's a misreading I apologize. That said Greg Heller's and Robert Jorgensen's comments honor the General and were a lot closer to the mark in my view.
senior Airman, DC
 
4/27/2012 2:17:36 PM ET
I agree Back when BOLD leadership was condidered an asset Defintely one of the early pioneers who knew what it took to overcome conventional thinking to get the job done. Kent LeMay Arnold Spaatz. LEADERS of their caliber are long gone..
Deja Vu, AF
 
4/27/2012 8:35:12 AM ET
A REAL general from the era when rank had to be EARNED.
Tom Carter, NC
 
4/26/2012 5:58:27 PM ET
Thank you for your service General may you rest in peace.
Greg Heller, Atlanta GA
 
4/26/2012 4:23:41 PM ET
Thanks for Kent, for leadership and thinking outside the Box. God Bless America and all those who serve her. USAF Above All
Robert Jorgensen, JarvisburgNC
 
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