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VICE ADMIRAL ROBERT R. MONROE, U.S. NAVY
DIRECTOR, DEFENSE NUCLEAR AGENCY

Vice Admiral Monroe is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert A.

Monroe of knoxville, Tennessee.
1945 as a seaman,

training.

He enlisted in the Navy in

and shortly thereafter began electronics

In 1946 he entered the U.S. Naval Academy on a

fleet appointment.

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- Graduating from Annapolis in 1950, Ensign Monroe spent his
first four years at sea in the destroyers USS Forrest Royal
(DD-372) and USS Strong (DD-758), where he served primarily

in operations department billets.
Eoth ships operated extensively in the Korean theater.
From 1954 to 1956 he
commanded the minesweeper USS Reedbird (MSC(0)-51) operating
off the East Coast of the United States.

Lieutenant Monroe's first tour ashore, from 1956 to 195%,
was in the Officer Planning Section of the Bureau of Naval
Personnel in Washington.
He returned to sea as Secondary
Battery Officer and the Missile
Officer of the cruiser USS
Boston (CAG-1)-- then the world's only guided missile ship.
After two years' postgraduate study at Stanford University,
for which he received a Master's degree in International

Relations, Lieutenant Commander Monroe in 1962 was ordered

to the guided missile frigate USS Farragut (DLG-6) as Execu-

tive Officer.

From 1964 to 1966 Commander Monroe commanded the guided

missile destroyer USS Charles F. Adams (DDG-2}.
During this
period the ship operated frequently in the Mediterranean ang
Northern European waters, as had the previous two snips.
He
subsequently was assigned to the Office of the Assistant
Secretary of Defense (Systems Analysis) in the Pentagon for
a three-year tour.
In 1969 Captain Monroe placed the amphibious assault ship

USS Juneau (LPD-10) in commission, and served as Commanding

_Officer through 1970, engaged in Southeast Asia operations.
During 1971-72 he served in Washington as Executive Secretary
of the CNO Executive Board.
Selected for promotion to Flag rank 1972, Rear Admiral Monroe
was immediately assigned as Director of Systems Analysis for
the Chief of Naval Operations, and served for a year in that

billet.
He went to sea as Commander, South Atlantic Force,
U.S. Atlantic Fleet from 1973 until early 1974, commanding

Task Force 86 throughout UNITAS XIV.

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