Background
John Quaife was born on 2 June 1955 in Melbourne.
John Quaife was born on 2 June 1955 in Melbourne.
Prior to joining the Royal Australian Air Force, he graduated from Louisiana Trobe University. Quaife graduated from Number. In 1987, Quaife completed F/A-18 Hornet conversion training, and subsequently served with Number.
112 Pilots Course in September 1981. After an initial posting to the Strike Reconnaissance Group, and a brief tour flying Canberra aircraft, his operational career has focussed on fighter operations. Quaife"s initial fighter training was conducted on Mirage IIIO aircraft.
2 Operational Conversion Unit, Number 77.
Squadron and Number. 75 Squadron. He is a Fighter Combat Instructor with in excess of 2000 hours fighter experience and from 1996 to 1998, Quaife commanded Number.
77 Squadron. Between 1992 and 1994, Quaife served as a fast jet specialist officer in the Force Development Directorate of the Australian Defence Headquarters, primarily in developing the proposal for the acquisition of Hawk aircraft for Lead-in Fighter training.
In 1999, Air Vice Marshal Quaife returned to that headquarters as the Director of Aerospace Combat Development. During 2001, Quaife directed the Air Combat Group project
In this role he directed a small team that planned the amalgamation of Royal Australian Air Force fast jet operations into a single Force Element Group. In January 2002, he was appointed to command the newly created Air Combat Group.
During his tenure, Air Combat Group units deployed for Operations Slipper and Falconer.
In January 2004, Quaife was appointed the Royal Australian Air Force"s first permanent Joint Force Air Component Commander. In this appointment he was responsible for developing Air Operations Centre functionality within the Australian Theatre air component. Between December 2004 and April 2005, Air Vice Marshal Quaife served as the director of the United States Combined Air Operations Centre, where he was responsible for orchestrating coalition air power in both Iraq and Afghanistan.
He was promoted to the rank of air vice marshal in June 2005, and appointed as Air Commander Australia.
In August 2007, he accepted the appointment of Head of Capability Systems. He held this position until his retirement from the Air Force in 2008.