Col. (promotable) Curtis D.
Potts stood in front of U.S.
Army Operational Test Command
Headquarters Friday morning
wearing, of course, his Army
combat uniform.
He handed the command over to a
man wearing a uniform not often
seen leading an Army formation –
a crisp business suit.
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James Amato, Fort Hood’s only
Senior Executive Service member,
was chosen to replace Potts and
will serve as executive director
of the command.
The title of Senior Executive
Service is the equivalent of a
general officer. The command’s
headquarters, the U.S Army Test
and Evaluation Command, has
appointed members of the service
to lead commands only two
times. James B. Johnson was
selected as director of the U.S.
Army Developmental Test Command
at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md.,
on July 15.
Before taking command in June
2007, Potts served as the 4th
Infantry Division’s chief of
staff from June 2004 to January
2007.
The U.S. Army Operational Test
Command is an extraordinary
unit, Potts said. It is filled
by soldiers, civilians and
contractors, all patriots with a
“common thread that binds them
as a team” and has a common
goal: to provide soldiers with
operationally tested and
combat-ready equipment.
Unlike many units at Fort Hood,
soldiers and civilian employees
serve together.
“Over the last 18 months I have
learned that you don’t have to
wear a uniform to be a true
patriot,” Potts said. “(The
command) is not just a unit
doing its mission, but rather a
family that prides itself on
taking care of business and
taking care of each other.”
Maj. Gen. Roger A. Nadeau
credited Potts and the Fort
Hood-based command for doing
more to help transform his unit,
the U.S. Army Test and
Evaluation Command, than any
other. Nadeau said when he
needed an opinion, he’d call
Potts because he had faith and
confidence he’d hear what he
needed, not what he wanted.
Potts thanked U.S. Operational
Test Command for “taking in this
energetic warrior and teaching
me that it is possible to make a
difference while stopping to
smell the flowers along the
way.”
Potts and his wife, Susie, have
two children, Jessica and
Courtney.
Before coming to Central Texas,
Amato served as the director of
the Integrated Logistics Support
Evaluation Directorate of the
U.S. Army Evaluation Center,
U.S. Army Test and Evaluation
Command. He was promoted to the
Senior Executive Service on
Sept. 14 after 21 years as a
civilian in Army operations
research analysis, test and
evaluation.
Amato said he was excited to be
part of the test team at Fort
Hood and outlined three
priorities he set for the
command. He wants to continue
to build on the “relevance and
readiness,” grow the “quality
workforce that is the heart and
soul” and embrace and harness
change and new ideas.
Amato is the right person at the
right place at the right time,
Nadeau said.
Amato and his wife, Susan, have
two children, Nick and Claire.