The President of the United States of America takes pleasure in presenting a Second Gold Star in lieu of a Third Award of the Navy Distinguished Service Medal to Admiral Sylvester Robert Foley, Jr., United States Navy, for exceptionally meritorious and distinguished service in a position of great responsibility to the Government of the United States as Commander in Chief, United States Pacific Fleet, Pearl Harbor, Hawaii from May 1982 through August 1985. Admiral Foley served with conspicuous success and singular dedication during a career which spanned the spectrum from sustained combat leadership in Southeast Asia during wartime to policy-making at the highest Navy, joint service, and interagency levels in Washington. Under his command, the Fleet maintained the highest levels of combat readiness in four decades, while sustaining an operating tempo equivalent to that expected in war. Admiral Foley commanded the Pacific Fleet during a period of great change in the region, including dramatic growth in the size and capabilities of the Soviet Navy in the Pacific, profound instability in Southeast and Southwest Asia, and the fashioning of new bilateral political relationships in East Asia. His leadership was instrumental in enhancing the readiness of the Fleet during these turbulent times, wisely balancing operational commitments driven by policy objective imperatives with material support requirements and morale considerations. Admiral Foley was brilliantly effective in establishing especially close and effective ties with his Japanese and Korean counterparts, contributing in important ways to strengthened mutual defense in Northeast Asia through allied interoperability. By his distinguished service, innovative initiative, and unflagging devotion to duty, Admiral Foley reflected great credit upon himself and upheld the highest traditions of the United States Naval Service.