2. LTG mary legere was promoted to the rank of three star
general in the spring of 2012, becoming only the fourth
woman to attain that rank in the history of the U.S. Army.
3. She has enjoyed a long and distinguished military career.
She became a three star general in her twenty-ninth year of
service to her country and has been a senior intelligence
office and a principal advisor on intelligence and security
policy, programs and operations for the secretary of the
army and chief of staff.
4. She sponsored cross-cutting experiments in big data, fusion
and multi-discipline integration, providing solutions to
guide the army into the IC cloud and into a common
command post environment.
In a march 2015 report, army analysts wrote that the
ability to connect to cloud capabilities ensures that army
computing and communications resources, authoritative
data sources, services and information are available,
accessible and safeguarded.
5. LTG mary legere is one of only nineteen women general
officers in the army. Her army career began with a
commission to ROTC at the university of new Hampshire.
She has since had tours of duty in Germany, Bosnia, Iraq
and Korea.
A new England native, she remains an avid fan of the
Boston red sox, Celtics and bruins, and the new England
patriots. She says that she has stuck with the teams
through good years and bad.
6. LTG mary legere is one of only nineteen women general
officers in the army. Her army career began with a
commission to ROTC at the university of new Hampshire.
She has since had tours of duty in Germany, Bosnia, Iraq
and Korea.
A new England native, she remains an avid fan of the
Boston red sox, Celtics and bruins, and the new England
patriots. She says that she has stuck with the teams
through good years and bad.