aboard . Following her commissioning in 1977, Pottenger was one of the first women selected for sea duty. Pottenger reported aboard as engineering division officer and completed a Mediterranean deployment. Following her first shore duty tour, she transitioned to the
Naval Reserve as a full-time active duty officer in the Training and Administration of the Reserve program, now known as the Full-Time Support program. Subsequent sea tours included assignment as operations officer aboard and executive officer aboard . Pottenger assumed command of in 1996, completing several deployments to the western Pacific, Arabian Sea, and the
Persian Gulf in support of the
United States Fifth Fleet and
United States Seventh Fleet commanders. She took command of in 2001, and during an extended deployment in support of
Operation Enduring Freedom, provided at-sea logistics support to ten aircraft carrier battle groups, amphibious groups and dozens of coalition ships. As a result of her inspired leadership, USS
Bridge was awarded the
Battle E and the 2002 Arleigh Burke Fleet Trophy. Ashore, Pottenger has been assigned to commander, Service Group 2 as staff communications officer; the
United States Naval Academy as the 25th company officer; commanding officer of two Navy Operational Support Centers in
Mare Island, and
San Diego, California. She also served as the Naval Surface Reserve Force deputy chief of staff for manpower, where she institutionalized manpower and personnel best practices across a force of 65,000 Reservists. During her tours in the
Pentagon, Pottenger served as executive assistant for director,
Surface Warfare (OPNAV N86); executive assistant to deputy chief of naval operations (Resources, Requirements & Assessments) (OPNAV N8); and executive assistant to vice chief of naval operations. Following her selection to flag rank, she was assigned as the deputy chief of Navy Reserve. In this role, she served as the primary advisor to the commander of a force encompassing over 80,000 Sailors and executing an annual appropriation exceeding $1 billion. In November 2005, Pottenger was assigned to the
Military Sealift Command. There she established a new Navy command,
Military Sealift Fleet Support Command and served as the type commander for over 40 combat logistics and special mission ships that supported naval, joint, and coalition forces on a global scale. As commander, Pottenger provided executive leadership, management, and control of $2 billion in annual funding and over 5400 highly trained, cross-functional personnel, comprising a mix of civilian mariners, professional engineers, and human resources and training staff. In November 2006, Pottenger became the first female admiral to command a strike group when she assumed command of
Amphibious Force 7th Fleet/Expeditionary Strike Group Seven at White Beach,
Okinawa, aboard . Pottenger led, prepared, and deployed amphibious and expeditionary naval forces consisting of eight ships and over 6000 Sailors through over 80 distinct, strategic engagements across the western Pacific area of operations in support of the
United States Seventh Fleet commander. Additionally, Pottenger served as a formal spokesperson and diplomatic representative during United States efforts to provide humanitarian assistance and disaster relief in several Asian countries. In September 2008, Pottenger became the third commander of
Navy Expeditionary Combat Command, charged with the mission of preparing and deploying expeditionary forces to conduct combat and security assistance missions to all military theaters globally. Pottenger served as the enterprise director for the Navy's expeditionary forces consisting of 40,000 Sailors in eight distinct warfare disciplines: logistics, explosive ordnance disposal, diving and salvage, maritime security, riverine, maritime civil affairs, expeditionary training, and intelligence. Pottenger provided full P&L accountability of $3 billion in annual expenditures, while ensuring visibility, standardization, procurement efficiency, maintenance management, and continuous force modernization. From 2010 to 2013, Pottenger was deputy chief of staff for capability and development at NATO Headquarters,
Supreme Allied Commander Transformation,
Norfolk, Virginia. She facilitated efforts to guide, influence and support NATO and its 28 allied nations and partners in military capability transformation. She led a diverse international staff of 300, spanning North America and Europe, serving as a catalyst in NATO planning, while administering a $40 million enterprise funding budget. ==Awards and decorations==