WASHINGTON — The Director of the Joint Staff, Vice Adm. Fred Kacher, is returning to the Navy after only three months in the role, with no clear successor for a key inside-the-Pentagon job.
“We are deeply grateful for Vice Adm. Kacher’s dedicated service to the Joint Force and his contributions to the Joint Staff,” Gen. Dan Caine, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said in a brief statement to Breaking Defense. “Since graduating from the United States Naval Academy, Vice Adm. Kacher has answered the call for every kind of selfless service imaginable. The Navy will be glad to have him back and we thank him and them for the loan of his leadership.”
A source familiar with the situation told Breaking Defense that the decision to remove Kacher was Caine’s.
The three-star admiral, a graduate of the US Naval Academy and former commander of US Seventh Fleet, assumed the new role in December 2025. The Pentagon did not immediately provide additional information on why it was returning Kacher to the Navy or what role he might assume.
The Joint Staff director is a behind the scenes role, but one that wields heavy influence inside the Pentagon. In essence, the director manages the day in and day out of the Joint Staff and sits in on key meetings. The role is traditionally seen as a stepping stone for a three-star officer to head to a higher-level role in the future.
Kacher leaving after roughly 90 days on the job, with no clear next step, is historically unusual. No replacement was immediately named.