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Contact Info
Home Town Los Angeles, Calif.
Last Address Murrieta, California,
Date of Passing Feb 12, 2016
Location of Interment Miramar National Cemetery (VA) - San Diego, California
Jack Keene joined the Navy in January 1954 and was designated a naval aviator in May, 1955. A veteran at the zenith of the Cold War, he began his naval career as a fighter pilot flying both the F9F8 Cougar and the FJ-4B Fury jet aircraft. Jack accumulated 140 aircraft carrier landings on board the USS Shangri-La (CV-38), USS Oriskany (CV-34), and USS Midway (CV-41) aircraft carriers. He proudly served in the 1958 Taiwan Strait Crisis and other Southeast Asia operations as a fighter pilot in VF-63, VA-63, and VA-22 Navy squadrons. Transitioning to the land based mission of maritime patrol, Jack then flew the P-2V Neptune in Patrol Squadron TWO (VP-2) and deployed to Kodiak and Adak in Alaska, and Iwakuni Island in Japan. During the later deployment, he participated in the initial establishment of the Market Time air barrier and Yankee Teams operations in support of the Vietnam War in 1965.
In 1965, Jack was “hand-selected” to serve the Secretary of Defense, Robert McNamara, on his staff in the Pentagon until 1967, and then moved out west to Fleet Air Wing 10 at Moffett Field, California, where he deployed to Sangley Point, the Republic of the Philippines. It was during this period that Jack transitioned to the Navy P-3 Orion combat patrol aircraft equipped to hunt Soviet Union submarines. Competitively selected by the Chief of Naval Operations, Jack was ordered to take operational command of Patrol Squadron TWENTY-TWO (VP-22) in Barbers Point, Hawaii. Reporting as the squadron’s Executive Officer in March 1970, Jack took command in July 1971 and served as the squadron’s ‘skipper’ until June 1972. While in command, VP-22 deployed to Naha, Okinawa and conducted extensive operations throughout Southeast Asia and Vietnam. VP-22 also was awarded the Chief of Naval Operations “Safety Award” for operating for more than 150,000 hours of accident free hours. In accepting the award, Jack remarked, “The CNO Safety Award is an honor but more than that, it is recognition of the hard work and long hours each of you have contributed to make the “Blue Geese” the most effective and safest squadron in the VP Navy.”
In August of 1978, Jack was selected for major aviation command and became the Commander of all Naval Forces, Iceland. Commensurate with this assignment, he was dual-hatted as the Commanding Officer of Naval Station, Keflavik. He served in Iceland until 1980 when he then moved back to the West Coast and was assigned as the Chief of Staff, Patrol Wings Pacific at Moffett Field, California. In January 1983, Jack earned his third and final command tour as the Commanding Officer of Fleet Aviation Specialized Operational Training Group, Pacific Fleet (FASOTRAGRUPAC). During this command tour, he was responsible for over 1,000 personnel and multiple detachment sites assigned to deliver essential fleet aviation training in the operation and tactical employment of aviation systems and equipment for Navy and Marine Corps aircrew.
In addition to all his operational tours, Jack was a graduate and student at the US Naval War College (where he also completed a Master of Arts from Salve Regina University, Newport, Rhode Island), US Navy Postgraduate School, the Foreign Service Institute in Washington D.C., and the Royal Norwegian Defense College.
Jack retired from the United States Navy in June 1984 after a 30 year remarkable and illustrious career of service to our nation. During his career, Jack earned and was awarded the Legion of Merit (the Navy’s 6th most highest precedence award for exceptionally meritorious conduct in the performance of outstanding services and achievements), the Meritorious Service Medal (given in recognition of Jack’s superlative command tour in VP-22), the Joint Service Commendation Medal (given for his exceptional service on the Secretary of Defense staff), the National Defense Service Medal, the Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal, the Vietnam Service Medal, and the Republic of Vietnam Campaign Medal among other unit citations and letters of commendation. Jack’s deeply rooted patriotism and sense of selfless service would echo the sentiment within President Kennedy’s famous quote – “And any man who may be asked in this century what he did to make his life worth-while, I think can respond with a good deal of pride and satisfaction: ‘I served in the United States Navy.’”
Chain of Command In addition to all his operational tours, Jack was a graduate and student at the US Naval War College (where he also completed a Master of Arts from Salve Regina University, Newport, Rhode Island), US Navy Postgraduate School, the Foreign Service Institute in Washington D.C., and the Royal Norwegian Defense College.