دوشنبه ۰۲ مهر ۰۳ | ۱۹:۴۱ ۹ بازديد
ada, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, New Zealand,
and the USA, where he has held visiting chairs at West
Point, Texas Christian University, and Stillman Col-
lege. A past Council member of the Royal Historical
Society, he is a Fellow of the Royal Society for the En-
couragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce,
and a Senior Fellow of the Foreign Policy Research
Institute. He was appointed to the Order of Member-
ship of the British Empire for services to stamp de-
sign. Dr. Black is, or has been, on a number of edito-
rial boards including the Journal of Military History, the
Journal of the Royal United Services Institute, and History
Today and was editor of Archives. His books include
War and World 1450-2000; The British Seaborne Empire;
Maps and History; George III; and European Warfare in
a Global Context, 1660-1815. Dr. Black is a graduate of
Cambridge University.
ANDREW J. BACEVICH is a professor of inter-
national relations and history at Boston University.
Before joining the faculty of Boston University in 1998,
he taught at West Point and at Johns Hopkins Univer-
sity. Dr. Bacevich is the author of The Limits of Power:
American Exceptionalism. His previous books include
American Empire: The Realities and Consequences of U. S.
Diplomacy; The Imperial Tense: Problems and Prospects of
American Empire (editor); The New American Militarism:
How Americans Are Seduced by War; and The Long War:
A New History of US National Security Policy since World
War II (editor). His essays and reviews have appeared
in a wide variety of scholarly and general interest pub-
lications including The Wilson Quarterly, The National
Interest, Foreign Affairs, Foreign Policy, The Nation, The
American Conservative, and The New Republic. In 2004,
Dr. Bacevich was a Berlin Prize Fellow at the Ameri-
can Academy in Berlin. He has also been a fellow of
the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International
Studies at Johns Hopkins University, the John F. Ken-
nedy School of Government at Harvard University,
and the Council on Foreign Relations in New York.
Dr. Bacevich is a graduate of the U.S. Military Acad-
emy (USMA), and holds a Ph.D. in American diplo-
matic history from Princeton University.
WILLIAM L. NASH served in the U.S. Army for
34 years with commands from platoon to division;
he is a veteran of Vietnam and Operation DESERT
STORM. He has extensive experience in peacekeeping
operations both as a military commander in Bosnia-
Herzegovina (1995-96) and as a civilian administra-
tor for the United Nations in *******ovo (2000). Since
his retirement in 1998, Major General Nash has been
a fellow and a visiting lecturer at Harvard’s John F.
Kennedy School of Government (1998); Director of
Civil-Military Programs at the National Democratic
Institute for International Affairs (1999-2000); a pro-
fessorial lecturer at Georgetown University (2000-09);
a Senior Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations
(2001-09); and a military consultant for ABC News
(2003-09). Today, he is a visiting lecturer at Princeton
University and an independent consultant on national
security issues, civil-military relations, and conflict
management.
Panel IV.
Moderator:
WILLIAM BRAUN III is the Deputy Director of
the Strategic Studies Institute, United States Army
War College. He is returning to this position after a
tour as Director, CJ-7 (Force Integration, Training, and
Education Directorate), Combined Security Transi-
tion Command-Afghanistan (CSTC-A). Previous as-
signments include Director of Requirements, Deputy
Chief of Staff G-3/5/7, the Pentagon; Aviation Bat-
talion Commander, Soto Cano Air Base, Honduras;
operational assignments at Fort Bragg, NC, Camp
Casey, Korea, and Fort Campbell, KY; and previous
institutional support assignments at the Pentagon,
Fort Rucker, AL, and the U.S. Army Recruiting Com-
mand. Colonel Braun holds a Bachelor of Arts in Ath-
letic Training and Coaching from Alfred University
and master’s degrees in strategic studies from the U.S.
Army War College, in military science from the School
of Advanced Military Science (SAMS), and in business
from Webster University.
ROBERT CASSIDY is a member of the Royal Unit-
ed Services Institute. He currently serves at the U.S.
Naval War College in Newport, RI. He has served in a
host of organizations as a special operations strategist,
a battalion commander, a special assistant to a four-
star general, a brigade operations officer, a division
cavalry executive officer, a West Point professor, an
airborne air cavalry troop commander, a support pla-
toon leader, and a scout platoon leader. Cassidy has
served on operational deployments to Afghanistan,
Iraq, the Persian Gulf, Egypt, and the Caribbean. Col-
onel Cassidy has written several articles on irregular
warfare in journals ranging from the RUSI Journal to
Parameters, and two books: Counterinsurgency and the
Global War on Terror and Peacekeeping in the Abyss. Most
recently, he published “The Virtue of Punishment:
The Enduring Salience of the Soviet War in Afghani-
stan” in the fall issue of Defense Concepts. Colonel Cas-
sidy holds master's degrees in international relations
and security from Boston University and the Fletcher
School of Law and Diplomacy, and a Ph.D. from the
Fletcher School. Colonel Cassidy also has received the
Diplôme d’Études Supérieures de Défense from the
French Joint Defense College at the École Militaire in
Paris.
PAUL R. KAN is an associate professor of nation-
al security studies at the U.S. Army War College. He is
the author of the recent book, Drugs and Contemporary
Warfare, for the research of which he was awarded the
General George C. Marshall Faculty Research Grant,
U.S. Army War College Foundation. He has also re-
ceived a Madigan Faculty Writing Award for his ar-
ticle, “Drugging Babylon: The Illegal Narcotics Trade
and Nation-Building in Iraq,” published in the June
2007 edition of Small Wars and Insurgencies. As an out-
side advisor to the Director of the Office on National
Drug Control Policy, he has provided expertise for
counternarcotics decisionmaking in a number of areas.
His research on Mexican cartel violence will be part
of an upcoming book on the subject and his research
on North Korea’s illicit international activities will be
published as a monograph by the Strategic Studies In-
stitute. He is a regular contributor to WarAndHealth.
com and is currently working on his next book, Whis-
key Rebellions, Opium Wars and Other Battles for Intoxi-
cation. Dr. Kan holds a Ph.D. in international studies
from the Graduate School of International Studies at
the University of Denver.
THOMAS X. HAMMES served at all levels in the
operating forces, include command of a rifle compa-
ny, weapons company, intelligence battalion, infantry
battalion, and the Chemical Biological Incident Re-
sponse Force, during his 30 years in the Marine Corps.
He participated in stabilization operations in Somalia
and Iraq. He is currently a Senior Research Fellow at
the Institute for National Strategic Studies, National
Defense University. Dr. Hammes is the author of The
Sling and the Stone: On War in the Twenty-First Century;
chapters in 10 books; and over 90 articles and opinion
pieces in the Washington Post, New York Times, Janes
Defence Weekly, and other professional journals. He
has lectured widely at U.S. and International Staff and
War Colleges. He has appeared on CNN, ABC, News
Hour, PBS Frontline, BBC, All Things Considered,
and numerous other media outlets. Dr. Hammes at-
tended The Basic School, U.S. Army Infantry Officers
Advanced Course, Marine Corps Command and Staff
College, and the Canadian National Defence College;
and holds a master’s degree in historical research and
a Ph.D. in modern history from Oxford University.
MICHAEL KLARE is professor of peace and world
security studies at Five College, and Director of the
Five College Program in Peace and World Security
Studies (PAWSS). He serves on the board of the Arms
Control Association and advises other organizations
in the field. Dr. Klare has written widely on U.S. mili-
tary policy, international peace and security affairs,
the global arms trade, and global resource politics.
His books include American Arms Supermarket; Low-
Intensity Warfare; Peace and World Security Studies: A
Curriculum Guide; World Security: Challenges for a New
Century; Rogue States and Nuclear Outlaws; Light Weap-
ons and Civil Conflict; Resource Wars; and Blood and Oil.
His articles have appeared in many journals, includ-
ing Arms Control Today, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists,
Current History, Foreign Affairs, Harper’s, The Nation,
Scientific American, and Technology Review. Dr. Klare
holds a B.A. and M.A. from Columbia University and
a Ph.D. from the Graduate School of the Union Insti-
tute.
Panel V.
Moderator:
DOUGLAS C. LOVELACE, JR., became the Di-
rector of the Strategic Studies Institute in May 2000.
Prior to that, he held the Douglas MacArthur Profes-
sor of Research Chair at the U.S. Army War College.
His Army career included a combat tour in Vietnam
and a number of command and staff assignments.
While serving in the Plans, Concepts and Assess-
ments Division and the Conventional War Plans Di-
vision of the Joint Staff, he collaborated in the devel-
opment of documents such as the National Military
Strategy, the Joint Strategic Capabilities Plan, the Joint
Military Net Assessment, national security directives,
and presidential decision directives. He is a member
of the Pennsylvania and New Jersey bars. Professor
Lovelace has published extensively in the areas of na-
tional security and military strategy formulation, fu-
ture military requirements and strategic planning. He
is a graduate of the U.S. Army Command and General
Staff College and the National War College, and holds
an MBA from Embry Riddle Aeronautical University
and a J.D. from the Widener University School of Law
ALBERT C. PIERCE is the first Director of the
Institute for National Security Ethics and Leadership
at the National Defense University (NDU) in Wash-
ington, DC. In February 2006, he became the first pro-
fessor of ethics and national security at NDU. He has
served as a member of the Editorial Advisory Board
of the Journal of Military Ethics and currently is on
the Editorial Board of Media, War, and Conflict. Dr.
Pierce co-authored The Armed Forces Officer; co-edited
Ethics and the Future of Conflict; authored Strategy, Eth-
ics, and the “War on Terrorism”; and A Model for Moral
Leadership: Contemporary Applications, Occasional Paper
No. 15. Dr. Pierce holds an M.A. and a Ph.D. in politi-
cal science from Tufts University.
MARTIN L. COOK is the Admiral James Bond
Stockdale Professor of Professional Military Ethics at
the United States Naval War College. He has previ-
ously served as professor of philosophy and Deputy
Department Head, Department of Philosophy at the
United States Air Force Academy, professor of ethics
and Elihu Root Chair of Military Studies at the United
States Army War College, and as a tenured member
of the faculty at Santa Clara University, California. He
has lectured on military ethics in the United Kingdom,
Australia, Singapore, and Norway. Dr. Cook serves as
an editor of The Journal of Military Ethics and as a mem-
ber of the editorial board of Parameters, the scholarly
journal of the U.S. Army War College. He is the author
of two books, co-author of a third, and of more than
35 scholarly articles. His most recent book is The Moral
Warrior: Ethics and Service in the US Military.
RICHARD PREGENT is currently the Chief of
the International and Operational Law Division at the
U.S. Army’s Office of The Judge Advocate General. In
July 2002, he became the senior legal advisor for all
NATO operations south of the Alps at Allied Forces
South, Naples, Italy. Shortly thereafter, he deployed
to Iraq and served as the Deputy General Counsel for
the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq until 2004.
From 2004 until 2008, he was the Staff Judge Advo-
cate for the U.S. Army Intelligence and Security Com-
mand. From 2008 to 2009, he served in Iraq first as the
Director of the Interagency Rule of Law Coordinating
Center and then as the Director of the Law and Order
Task Force. Colonel Pregent received a B.A. from Wil-
liams College in 1976, and his J.D. in 1979 from Albany
Law School at Union University, Albany, New York.
DEANE-PETER BAKER joined the U.S. Naval
Academy in January 2010, where he is an assistant
professor in the Department of Leadership, Ethics,
and Law, after retiring from the South African Army
Reserves as a major. Prior to that he was an associ-
ate professor of ethics at the University of KwaZulu-
Natal in South Africa, where he taught for 11 years.
Dr. Baker’s research focuses on military ethics and
strategic studies (the latter with particular reference
to Africa). He has served as Chairman of the Ethics
Society of South Africa. He also served as the first
Convenor of the South African Army Future Vision
Research Group. Dr. Baker is Editor-in-Chief of the
African Security Review, the journal of the Institute for
Security Studies. He has held visiting fellowships at
the Triangle Institute for Security Studies and the Stra-
tegic Studies Institute of the U.S. Army War College.
Representative publications include Just Warriors Inc:
Armed Contractors and the Ethics of War (Continuum,
forthcoming in 2010) and the co-edited volume, South
Africa and Contemporary Insurgency. Dr. Baker is cur-
rently working on an analysis of South Africa’s secu-
rity environment which will be published in Praeger’s
Global Security Watch series. Dr. Baker holds two re-
search master’s degrees in philosophy and political
science from the University
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