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Ricardo Sanchez (born September 9, ... In a memo signed by General Sánchez and later acquired by the ACLU through a Freedom of Information Act request, ...
Lieutenant General Ricardo S. Sanchez was once the leading candidate to become commander of U.S. Southern Command in 2004. However, his name was never formally offered after members of the Senate Armed Services Committee took notice of his mismanagement of the Iraq War and the Abu Ghraib prison affair .
Lieutenant General Ricardo Sanchez, 14 June 2003 to 6 September 2006; Major General Fred Robinson, 6 September 2006 to 19 January 2007; Lieutenant General James Thurman, 19 January 2007 to 8 August 2007; Lieutenant General Kenneth Hunzeker, 8 August 2007 to 31 July 2009; Brigadier General Michael Ryan, 8 August 2009 to 3 November 2010
The commanding general of Multi-National Force – Iraq (MNF–I) began as a three-star's billet under Lieutenant General Ricardo Sanchez until 2004, when it was elevated to four-star grade, [67] with the newly established Multi-National Corps – Iraq and Multi-National Security Transition Command – Iraq (dual-hatted as commander of NATO ...
General Sanchez may refer to: Ricardo Sanchez (born 1953), U.S. Army lieutenant general; Fernando García Sánchez (born 1953), Spanish Navy admiral general; Otilio Montaño Sánchez (1887–1917), Zapatista general in the Mexican Revolution
General Gene Renuart chose the new force's number, 7, as that was the number his son had worn on his soccer uniform. Lieutenant General Ricardo Sanchez was selected to lead the new force, drawing on the V Corps staff with senior officer augmentation from across the army.
Ricardo Sanchez (born 1953) is a retired United States Army lieutenant general. Ricardo Sanchez or Sánchez may also refer to: Ricardo Sánchez (poet) (1941–1995), Chicano poet; Ricardo Sanchez (journalist) (born 1958), Cuban–American journalist, radio host, and author; Ricardo Sanchez (musician) (born 1967), American musician
Lieutenant General Ricardo Sanchez, the senior officer in Iraq, appointed Major General Antonio Taguba to open an Army Regulation 15-6 investigation into the conduct of the 800th Military Police Brigade. [2] [3] According to the report, the inquiry was initiated because: