Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group provides its clientele access to the nation’s foremost experts in foreign policy, national security, and regional instability. Our military-trained advisors have served at the highest levels in previous administrations and maintain strong relationships with current government and military leaders, providing relevant and reliable geopolitical and cyber-risk perspectives.
Regions of Interests
- East Asia/China
- South Asia
- South China Seas
- Middle East/North Africa
- Sub-Saharan Africa
- Latin America
- European Union
- Russia
- The Arctic
Topics of Discussion
- Cybersecurity and Cyberwarfare
- Supply Chain Risk
- Chinese Military Expansion
- Escalation on the Korean Peninsula
- Counter-terrorism
- Alliance Challenges
- Aerospace Defense
- Government Procurement/FEDRAMP
- Great Power Competition
- Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear Warfare
- Space Warfare
Deliverables include: monthly Around the World risk analysis and other opinion pieces, podcasts, speaker presentations, webinars, one-on-one meetings, client dinners, and immediate analysis and insights on geopolitical events.
Major General (Ret.) James A. “Spider” Marks is Head of Geopolitical Strategy and Academy Senior Advisory Board Member.
General Marks is the Founder and President of The Marks Collaborative, an advisory for corporate leader development, education and training and has led entrepreneurial efforts in global primary research and national security. He served over 30 years in the Army holding every command position from infantry platoon leader to commanding general and was the senior intelligence officer in the LA Riots, the Balkans, Korea, and Operation Iraqi Freedom. He culminated his career as the Commanding General of the US Army Intelligence Center and School at Fort Huachuca, Arizona.
He has been awarded the Distinguished Service Medal, the Defense Superior Service Medal, Legion of Merit with Oak Leaf cluster, Bronze Star, and multiple combat, expeditionary and service ribbons. General Marks is a Master parachutist, authorized to wear Korean and Canadian Airborne wings, Air Assault qualified, and Honor Graduate of the US Army Ranger School. General Marks is a national security contributor to CNN and member of the Military Intelligence Hall of Fame.
Janie L. Mines is an Academy Advisory Board Member and Academy’s Head of Inclusion and Innovation.
Ms. Mines is a former naval officer who was the first African-American woman to graduate from the U.S. Naval Academy, where she earned a Bachelor of Science in General Engineering. She graduated in 1980 after serving in several leadership positions in the Brigade of Midshipmen. She was later selected to participate in the prestigious Sloan Fellows Program, where she earned an MBA from the Alfred P. Sloan School of Business Management, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Ms. Mines held positions of increasing responsibility, as a Navy Supply Corps officer and in several corporations including Procter & Gamble, Pepsi (Frito-Lay), Hershey Foods, and Bank of America negotiating deals in excess of $10B. She is currently an independent executive management consultant focusing on Strategic Planning, Change Management, Quality and Productivity, Integrated Business Transformation, and Program Management serving nonprofits, government and Fortune 500 corporations.
Ms. Mines served as the Sr. Advisor, Business Process, Senior Executive Service (HQE-SES) in the Office of the Secretary of the Navy. She facilitated Flag Officers and Senior Executive Service leadership in the implementation of Lean Six Sigma (LSS) and the resulting transformational programs across the Department of the Navy. She currently serves on the Defense Advisory Committee on Women in the Services (DACOWITS).
Ms. Mines founded and managed a non-profit organization for over 10 years, Boyz to Men Club, Inc, after observing the needs of adolescent boys in the community. Her awards include National Women of Color in Business Award winner, Olympic Torchbearer, Civic Volunteer of the Year, 9 Who Care Award winner for the Charlotte Metropolitan Area, and a South Carolina Black History Honoree. She received a Congressional Record Proclamation for her service. Ms. Mines has served as a member of the Rotary Club International, the Board of Directors of the Founders Federal Credit Union, and the Board of the Springs Close Foundation. She is the author of No Coincidences – Reflections of the First Black Female Graduate of the United States Naval Academy.
Ms. Mines has maintained her relationship with the Naval Academy throughout the decades. She continues to positively impact the lives of midshipmen and naval officers through her mentorship and ongoing support.
Brigadier General (Ret.) Leslie A. Beavers is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Ms. Leslie A. Beavers is a career member of the Senior Executive Service and the DoD acting CIO. In this capacity, she will assist the CIO in advising the Secretary of Defense on Information Management / Information Technology (IT) and Information Assurance, as well as non-intelligence space systems; critical satellite communications, navigation, and timing programs; spectrum; and telecommunications matters. Ms. Beavers will also lead engagement with the Defense Agencies and Field Activities CIOs and drive strategic resource planning across the IT and cybersecurity domains.
Prior to joining the CIO, Ms. Beavers served as the Director of Intelligence Surveillance and Reconnaissance Enterprise Capabilities (ISREC). In this capacity she led OUSD(I&S)’s Defense Intelligence Digital Transformation Campaign Plan, known as Project Herald.
Wendy B. Lawrence is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Ms. Lawrence is a former NASA astronaut who has logged over 1225 hours in space as a mission specialist and was a veteran of four space flights. A retired United States Navy Captain, Ms. Lawrence was a helicopter pilot with more than 1,500 hours of flight time in six different types of helicopters and made more than 800 shipboard landings. She is the first female graduate of the United States Naval Academy to fly into space after being selected by NASA in March 1992. While an astronaut, she visited the Russian Space Station Mir and was a mission specialist on STS-114, the first Space Shuttle flight after the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster.
Ms. Lawrence received a Bachelor of Science degree in ocean engineering from the U.S. Naval Academy in 1981. She also received a Master of Science degree in ocean engineering from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) in 1988. She was awarded the Defense Superior Service Medal, the Defense Meritorious Service Medal, and the NASA Space Flight Medal.
Major General (Ret.) Clarence K.K. Chinn is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Major General Chinn brings decades of experience to Academy’s Advisory Board, having served in the U.S. Army for over 36 years. He most recently served as Commander, U.S. Army South, where he was responsible for the conduct and support of multinational operations and security operations in the U.S. Southern Command area of responsibility (31 countries and 15 areas of special sovereignty in Central/South America and the Caribbean) in order to counter transregional transnational threat networks and strengthen regional security in defense of the homeland. Prior to this assignment, Major General Chinn served as the Deputy Commander for United States Army Special Operations Command, as the Senior Commander at Fort Bragg, a $32 billion dollar industry for North Carolina annually, and Commanding General at Fort Polk, LA.
Major General Chinn is a 1981 graduate of the United States Military Academy and holds a master’s degree in strategic studies from the U.S. Army War College. He has served as an Infantry officer, commanding at every level, with extensive time serving with Airborne / Ranger units. Currently residing in Aiea, Hawaii, Major General Chinn has been assisting United States Army Pacific with their Regional Leader Development Program – Pacific.
Lieutenant General (Ret.) Robert S. Walsh is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Lieutenant General Walsh served in the Marine Corps for over 35 years, completing his career as the Commanding General of the Marine Corps Combat Development Command and the Deputy Commandant for Combat Development & Integration. In his last assignment, he was responsible for strategic planning and executing the reorganization of the Marine Corps to meet the new National Defense Strategy roles and missions. His responsibilities included integrating multiple warfighting functions and domains across all military services and the Department of Defense.
Previously, he served as the Assistant Deputy Commandant for Aviation, the Assistant Deputy Commandant for Combat Development & Integration, and the Director of Expeditionary Warfare, Office of the Chief of Naval Operations. In these assignments he was responsible for managing numerous vital warfare systems. Lieutenant General Walsh’s operational and joint assignments included serving as the Commanding General, 2d Marine Aircraft Wing (Forward) Iraq and the Director of Operations, United States Northern Command.
Lieutenant General Walsh has served as the Co-Chairman of both the Navy-Marine Corps and Army-Marine Corps Boards along with being Co-Chairman of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) – Marine Corps Investment Board and the Office of Naval Research – Marine Corps Investment Board.
A native of Chicago, Illinois, Lieutenant General Walsh is a graduate of the United States Naval Academy and holds a Master of Science in National Security Studies from the National War College. He served as an F/A-18 pilot at all levels to include commanding Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 115, Marine Aircraft Group 31, and 2d Marine Aircraft Wing (Forward) during Operation IRAQI FREEDOM. He was an instructor at the Navy Fighter Weapons School, also known as TOPGUN. He has received several writing awards. Additionally, Lieutenant General Walsh has testified before Congress on subjects such as modernization, acquisition, readiness and training of the Navy and Marine Corps.
Rear Admiral (Ret.) Mark Heinrich is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Rear Admiral Mark Heinrich is a General Manager at Microsoft, where he leads a supply chain and logistics effort which is building Microsoft’s Intelligent Cloud. Prior to joining Microsoft, Admiral Heinrich was the CEO of AAMSI, an aerospace manufacturing & repair firm located in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Additionally, he was a Managing Director with Alvarez & Marsal, a global performance improvement and turnaround firm, where he led the public sector business unit.
Admiral Heinrich is a 1979 graduate of the Naval Academy with a BS in Engineering. Admiral Heinrich also holds an MBA from the University of Kansas, as well as a Master of Science in Petroleum Management. Following graduation from the Naval Academy, he served for over 30 years as a Supply Corps Officer. In his final assignment in the Navy, he served as the Commander of the Naval Supply Systems Command (NAVSUP) and the 46th Chief of Supply Corps.
In addition, Heinrich commanded the Defense Logistics Agency’s aviation center of excellence in Richmond, Virginia, and served as the Director of Operations (J-3) of the Defense Logistics Agency in Fort Belvoir, Virginia. In 2008, Heinrich deployed to the Middle East as Director of the United States Central Command’s Deployment and Distribution Operations Center in Kuwait, where he applied deployment and distribution expertise to plan and execute joint & combined force military operations.
Lieutenant General (Ret.) David A. Deptula is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Lieutenant General Deptula served in the United States Air Force for more than 34 years where he took part in operations, planning, and command leadership at the most senior levels. He was the principal attack planner for the 1991 Operation Desert Storm air campaign, commander of no-fly-zone operations over Iraq in the late 1990s, and director of the air campaign over Afghanistan in 2001. Additionally, Lieutenant General Deptula was twice a joint task force commander and was the air commander for the 2005 South Asia tsunami relief operations. His last assignment was as the Air Force’s first deputy chief of staff for intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR), where he transformed America’s military ISR and drone enterprises.
Lieutenant General Deptula serves as the Dean of the Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies in Arlington, Virginia, and is a Senior Military Scholar at the U.S. Air Force Academy. He is a fighter pilot with more than 3,000 flying hours (400 in combat) including multiple command assignments in the F-15. Defense News Magazine named him one of the 100 most influential people in U.S. defense in 2014.
Major General (Ret.) Mastin M. Robeson is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Major General (Ret.) Mastin M. Robeson is a native of the Carolinas. Mastin was commissioned in 1975 and served over 34 years on active duty in the United States Marine Corps, during which time he served in more than 60 countries. He retired from the Marine Corps in February 2010. Major General Robeson served in combat zones in Liberia, Desert Storm, Somalia, Bosnia, Horn of Africa, Southern Philippines, Iraq and Afghanistan. He commanded at every operational level in the Marine Corps, including a counter terrorism task force in combat, the 3d and 4th Marine Expeditionary Brigades, the 2d and 3d Marine Divisions, and the Marine Corps Forces Special Operations Command. He served as Military Assistant to Secretary of Defense William S. Cohen and as General Dave Petraeus’ Director of Strategy, Plans, and Assessments in Iraq, where he was responsible for writing and assessing the 2007 Crocker/Petraeus Surge Campaign Plan.
Mastin is currently serving Chairman of the Board of Upstate Warrior Solutions (non-profit assisting veterans and their families in the Upstate of South Carolina), as well as CEO/President of Woodford Solutions Group (block chain technology), senior advisor to Advanced Ground Information Systems (AGIS), AirWise Advisory Board, and several non-profit Board of Directors.
He frequently speaks on leadership and corporate culture transformation. Mastin, previously, served as CEO of Advanced Drone Fusion, President of UASidekick, CEO/President of Imperatis Corp, senior advisor to Prisma Health System, on multiple Board of Directors and Board of Advisors, and on a college Board of Trustees. Mastin is married to his college sweetheart of 48 years and has four children and eleven grandchildren.
Lieutenant General (Ret.) Rhett Hernandez is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Lieutenant General Hernandez served in the United States Army for 39 Years and was the first Commander of Army Cyber Command (ARCYBER), where he was responsible for the daily operations, defense and risk management of all Army networks with 1.2 million users. As the Army’s lead for all cyberspace activity, Lieutenant General Hernandez built a cyber force of more than 17,000 people and led the development of a wide range of concepts, plans and programs to minimize cyber risk and ensure Army operations. Lieutenant General Hernandez previously served as the Deputy Chief of Staff, Army Operations; Chief, U.S. Military Training Mission, Saudi Arabia; and Commanding General, Human Resources Command. In all three positions, he was involved in key issues and decisions at the highest levels.
Lieutenant General Hernandez serves as the West Point Cyber Chair to the Army Cyber Institute, as well as President of CyberLens, LLC. He holds a Bachelor of Science degree from the United States Military Academy, West Point, a Master of Science degree in Systems Engineering from the University of Virginia and a Masters of National Security Strategy from the National War College where he was named a distinguished graduate. He was an Assistant Professor for Probability and Statistics at the United States Military Academy and has published articles on leadership and cyber topics.
Brigadier General (Ret.) Anthony J. Tata is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Brigadier General Anthony J. Tata (U.S. Army, retired) is a cross functional leader involved in an array of successful business ventures including aviation cargo, cold supply chain and home medical care. Previously, he performed the duties of Undersecretary of Defense for Policy, the #3 position in the United States Department of Defense. His leadership in DoD included implementing the National Defense Strategy and working closely with allies and partners to achieve strategic defense goals globally. His distinguished military career includes commands in the 82nd Airborne and 101st Airborne Divisions and the 10th Mountain Division as well as operations in Afghanistan, Bosnia, Croatia, North Macedonia, Kosovo, Panama, and Haiti. He served as the deputy director of the Joint Improvised Device Defeat Organization leading the effort to find creative solutions to defeat IED networks in Iraq, Syria, and Afghanistan while also training the force to fight on a complex battlefield. In his civilian life, Mr. Tata has served as Secretary of Transportation for the state of North Carolina with its 62 airports, 2 seaports, 22 ferries, 88,000 miles of highway, and 3 railroads. He also led Wake County Public School System to unprecedented gains as superintendent in charge of 150,000 students and 170 schools and served as chief operating officer of Washington, DC Public Schools. In addition to supply chain and medical technology, Mr. Tata is also focused on maritime real estate, asset management software solutions, special needs education software, cybersecurity, and oil/gas infrastructure. He is also the bestselling author of 14 novels and a frequent guest commentator on a variety of cable news channels regarding foreign policy. Tony presently serves on the board of advisors of Academy, and recently served on the boards of the North Carolina Heroes Fund, Spectacular Solar (publicly traded), and Sabrewing Aircraft Company in addition to the North Carolina Ports Authority, Global TransPark, and Turnpike Boards. He has two amazing adult children and resides in North Palm Beach, Florida, with his wife Laura and their dogs Snowy and Bandit.
Rear Admiral (Ret.) Julius Caesar is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Rear Adm. (Ret.) Caesar is a Surface Warfare Officer who earned his commission from the U.S. Naval Academy in 1977. He also holds a Master of Business Administration Degree from the College of William & Mary. Admiral Caesar is a Massachusetts Institute of Technology Seminar XXI Fellow in Foreign Politics, International Relations, and the National Interest. During Admiral Caesar’s period of initial active service, his sea duty assignments included USS Dale (CG 19) and USS John F. Kennedy (CV 67) where he served in the Engineering, Weapons, and Operations Departments.
Admiral Caesar transitioned to the Reserve Component in 1983. He has held a variety of assignments including battle watch director for Commander, U.S. 2nd Fleet; area air defense commander, Atlantic; and deputy commander, Navy Reserve Readiness Command, Mid-Atlantic. He has commanded four Reserve units including, Personnel Mobilization Team 3106; Surface Warfare Development Group; OPNAV Surface Warfare Division; and, Naval Inspector General Detachment 106.
Active duty assignments include Office of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, U.S. Joint Forces Command; Chief of Naval Operations Transition Team; Commander, Navy Installations Command; Commander, U.S. 2nd Fleet; Naval War College; OPNAV Surface Warfare Division; Fleet Anti-Submarine Warfare Training Center Atlantic; and, NATO exercises in the European and Pacific theatres.
Admiral Caesar’s first Flag assignment was Reserve deputy, Commander Navy Installations Command, Washington, D.C.
Before his final assignment as the Reserve deputy director, J7, Joint and Coalition Warfighting, Caesar served as vice director, Joint Concept Development and Experimentation, J9, U.S. Joint Forces Command, in Suffolk, Va.
Admiral Caesar’s personal decorations include the Legion of Merit (two awards), Meritorious Service Medal (two awards), Navy and Marine Corps Commendation Medal (three awards), and Navy and Marine Corps Achievement Medal. Caesar was awarded the Blacks in Government Meritorious Service Award. He is also a member of the Secretary of Defense Reserve Forces Policy Board.
Vice Admiral (Ret.) Edward M. Straw is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Edward M. Straw is the founder and managing partner of Osprey Venture Partners—a firm that finds investment capital and assists with business development for startup entrepreneurs. He is the retired President, Global Operations of The Estee Lauder Companies, and currently sits on the boards of the following companies: Performance Equity Management, Odyssey Logistics, Helius Medical Technologies, Capital Teas and Document Capture Technologies. He is the Chairman of Odyssey Logistics. As President, Global Operations for Estee Lauder, Mr. Straw centralized and led Lauder’s R&D, package engineering, acquisition, manufacturing, distribution, inventory management, and information systems organizations which supported 20 Estee Lauder Companies around the world. In his five years at Estee Lauder, he is credited with directing significant improvements in their global supply chain and driving major stock price impactful savings to the bottom line.
Prior to joining the Estee Lauder Companies, he was Senior Vice President, Global Manufacturing and Supply Chain Management at the $40 billion Compaq Computer Corporation in Houston.
Before joining Compaq in late 1998, Mr. Straw was President of Miami-based Ryder Integrated Logistics—then the leading provider of third party supply chain services in North America.
Prior to joining the private sector, Mr. Straw had a distinguished career in the U.S. Navy, retiring as a three-star admiral in 1996. Vice Admiral Straw culminated his military service from 1992-1996 as the Director of the Defense Logistics Agency, the nation’s only combat logistics support agency and primary provider of global supply chain material and services support for America’s armed forces. He reported directly to the Under Secretary of Defense (AT&L), Dr. Paul Kaminski, and General Colin Powell, Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Admiral Straw also held numerous operational and policy leadership positions at the Navy’s major logistics commands—and was Navy’s lead for logistics planning and execution of material and ordnance support to Navy and Marine Corps forces during Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm in 1990-91.
Admiral Straw received multiple awards throughout his career, including Defense, Navy/Marine Corps and Air Force Distinguished Service Medals, the Ford Foundation’s Innovations in American Government Award and the Society of Logistics Engineers’ Founders Medal. He is a distinguished graduate of the United States Navy Supply Corps School and recipient of the Navy Supply Corps’ Lifetime Achievement Award.
Admiral Straw holds a Master of Business Administration degree from The George Washington University, a Bachelor of Science degree from the U.S. Naval Academy, and is a graduate of the National War College.
In addition to the boards listed above, he is a Trustee of the U.S. Naval Academy Foundation, a member of the Department of Defense Science Board, and has served on the Board of Directors of Eddie Bauer, MeadWestvaco, Panther Expedited Services, the Navy Federal Credit Union, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, and the Boy Scouts of America. He has also served in an advisory role to the IBM Federal Group and PRTM Management Consultants.
Admiral Straw is currently working with a group of patriots to regain medical benefits for “Blue Water” Vietnam veterans suffering from Agent Orange related diseases.
Admiral Straw has three daughters—Silvana, Meg and Katie. He resides in New York City and Annapolis, Maryland with his wife, Christine.
Vice Admiral (Ret.) Robert S. Harward is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Vice Admiral Robert S. Harward, Jr. is Executive Vice President for International Business and Strategy at Shield AI, where he is responsible for expanding the company’s international business operations and strategy on every continent. Prior to joining Shield AI, he was a chief executive at Lockheed Martin (United Arab Emirates) for eight years and was responsible for all aspects of the company’s business interests in the UAE, including strategy, operations, and growth of Lockheed Martin programs, as well as successful execution of all ongoing business. A National Security Expert, in both theory and application, he served on the National Security Council for the Bush administration, commissioned the National Counter Terrorism Center, and has extensive combat experience as a US Navy SEAL, in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Somalia, Yemen and Bosnia. A US Naval Academy alumni, Vice Admiral Harward holds a Masters degree in International Security Affairs, and is a graduate of the Naval War College and the MIT Foreign Policy Program. Vice Admiral Harward also served as an executive fellow at RAND. Vice Admiral Harward grew up in Iran, graduated from the Tehran American School and speaks Farsi.
Lieutenant General (Ret.) Frank Kearney is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Lieutenant General (Ret.) Frank Kearney served 35 years in the United States Army as an Infantry and Special Operations officer. Most recently, LTG Kearney served as the Deputy Director for Strategic Operational Planning at the National Counter-Terrorism Center in Washington, DC. In this position, he was responsible for whole-of-government planning with over 29 Inter-Agency partners to achieve the strategic end states outlined in the Obama Administration’s National Counter-Terrorism Strategy. He has been appointed to the U.S. House of Representatives House Armed Services Committee National Defense Panel, the U.S. Secretary of Defense’s WMD Threat Reduction Advisory Committee, and the Iran Project.
Previously, LTG Kearney was the Deputy Commander of the United States Special Operations Command in Tampa, Florida responsible for a $9.3 billion dollar budget execution, and for overseeing, training and equipping 62,000 Special Operations forces from all four Services from July 2007 to July 2010. He commanded all Theater Special Operations Forces in Central Command Area of Responsibility from 2005-2007, before which he served as commander of the Joint Inter-Agency Task Force-Former Regime Elements in Baghdad, Iraq. LTG Kearney has been recognized with the Distinguished Intelligence Service Medal and two awards of the Defense Distinguished Service Medal as well as multiple awards for combat and military service. He sits on the Department of Defense Threat Reduction Advisory Committee (TRAC). LTG Kearney also chairs the board of Team Red, White & Blue, a non-profit organization that seeks to reintegrate military veterans with traumatic brain injuries and Post Traumatic Shock Disorder back into their local communities using sports and outreach. He is a 1976 graduate of the United States Military Academy at West Point, NY, has a Master’s in Education from the University of South Carolina and is a graduate of the United States Army War College.
Lieutenant General (Ret.) Robert P. Ashley is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Lieutenant General (Ret.) Robert P. Ashley, Jr. retired from the U.S. Army November 2020 after over 36 years of active duty service as an intelligence officer. He assumed his last duty position on 3 October 2017 when he became the 21st Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA). He formerly served as the Army Deputy Chief of Staff, G-2, where he was the senior advisor to the Secretary of the Army and Army Chief of Staff for all aspects of intelligence, counterintelligence and security. He has commanded at the company, battalion, squadron, and brigade levels with six combat tours in Iraq and Afghanistan as a squadron, brigade commander, and Deputy Chief of Staff for Intelligence (J-2). Other key assignments include the Director of Intelligence, United States Joint Special Operations Command; the Director of Intelligence, United States Central Command; the Deputy Chief of Staff, Intelligence, International Security Assistance Force and Director of Intelligence, United States Forces, Afghanistan; and Commanding General and Commandant United States Army Intelligence Center and School Fort Huachuca, AZ.
Lieutenant General Ashley has a Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science from Appalachian State University, a master’s degree in Strategic Intelligence from the National Intelligence University (formerly known as the Defense Intelligence College) and a master’s degree in Strategic Studies from the United States Army War College. Lieutenant General (Ret.) Ashley is the CEO of Ashley Global Leadership and Security (LLC). He and his spouse, Barbara, have two sons – Justin and Sean. Sean is married to the former Lucy Backer and they have two sons, Arthur and Keaton.
Rear Admiral (Ret.) A.B. Cruz III is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Rear Admiral (Ret.) A.B. Cruz III is a seasoned C-Suite Executive, Senior Adviser, and Former Navy Admiral. Throughout his career, he has helped lead four public (NASDAQ: VIA & SSP | NYSE: SNI & EBS) and three private companies (USAA, BET, ARINC)—spanning several very different highly regulated industries and representing over $60B in total annual revenue—through challenge, crisis and change. During his 33+ year military career, he shaped and led numerous high-performing operational teams in demanding, high-stress and ambiguous environments, and represented the United States internationally in multiple high-level engagements with foreign militaries.
Rear Admiral Cruz is a board director and the nominating & governance committee chair at Graf Acquisition Corp. IV. and is a Senior Advisor at BarkerGilmore LLC where he provides executive coaching, leadership development and executive search services to legal leaders, CEOs and corporate boards. He is also currently the President of the Board of Governors for the National Asian Pacific American Bar Association. He previously served as Senior Vice President & Divisional General Counsel at USAA, a Fortune 100 financial services company, where he led the legal teams that supported the Company’s C-suite members and their organizations. He spearheaded the optimization of the chief legal office’s operating and interaction models and reviewed and approved new products and services to foster USAA’s future growth, competitiveness, and technology transformation.
Prior to USAA, Rear Admiral Cruz was Executive Vice President, General Counsel, Corporate Secretary, Chief Compliance & Ethics Officer, and PAC chairman for Emergent BioSolutions, Inc. Before Emergent, he concurrently served as the Deputy Director of Maritime Operations for U.S. Fleet Forces Command and as Executive Vice President, Chief Legal Officer & Corporate Secretary for Scripps Networks Interactive, Inc. Prior to that, Rear Admiral Cruz was the Deputy Commander for both U.S. 4th Fleet and Naval Forces Southern Command and served as the Executive Vice President & General Counsel for The E.W. Scripps Company.
Rear Admiral Cruz holds a JD from The Catholic University of America, an MA in Marketing from The University of Maryland, and a BS in General Engineering & Physical Sciences from U.S. Naval Academy. He currently serves on the boards of the Naval War College Foundation, Yellow Ribbon Fund, American Bar Association’s Rule of Law Initiative, World Affairs Council of San Antonio, Down Syndrome Association of South Texas, and Saint Mary’s Hall. He also serves as a board trustee and governance committee member for the U.S. Naval Academy Alumni Association & Foundation. He has served on many other boards over his distinguished career, including as the board chair for the Minority Corporate Counsel Association and as an advisory board member at both Bellatorum Resources and VetStoreUSA.
Rear Admiral (Ret.) William D. Byrne, Jr. is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Rear Admiral William Byrne retired from the Navy in August of 2022 after 35 years of service. His final assignments in the military were at the Pentagon as the Director of Warfare Development for the Chief of Naval Operations where he developed the Navy strategy and ensured alignment of the Navy budget to that strategy; and as Vice Director of the Joint Staff where he directed the day-to-day operation of the Joint Staff, a diverse organization of 2,000 civilian and military members that formulates the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff’s advice on military matters to the Secretary of Defense and the President of the United States.
Rear Admiral Byrne served in the Navy as a Surface Warfare Officer, making several world-wide deployments on his many ships. Highlights in uniform include commanding both a frigate and a cruiser and leading a tremendously successful combat deployment as Commander of Carrier Strike Group ELEVEN and the NIMITZ Strike Group. He served in a variety of duty stations across the United States, and also overseas in Guam, Japan and the Republic of Korea where he was Commander of U.S. Naval Forces Korea.
Born in San Francisco to Irish immigrants, Rear Admiral Byrne grew up in nearby Pacifica, California, and became a first-generation college student, graduating from the United States Naval Academy in 1987. He later earned a Master’s degree from the National Defense University. An avid fitness enthusiast and life-long sports junky, he learned early the key traits of competitiveness, toughness and resilience through his participation in year-round team sports. Rear Admiral Byrne was a record-setting quarterback and football team captain at the Naval Academy and was honored in 2015 by the National Football Foundation with their Distinguished American Award. His wife, Amy, is a Naval Academy classmate and fellow varsity athlete. Four of their five children are also Naval Academy graduates and former varsity athletes and are all serving proudly in the Fleet.
Lieutenant General (Ret.) Michael Groen is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Lieutenant General Groen served over 36 years in the U.S. Marine Corps, culminating his career as the Director of the Joint Artificial Intelligence Center, and the senior executive for AI in the Department of Defense. He previously served at the National Security Agency, overseeing Computer Network Operations, and as the Director of Joint Staff Intelligence (JSJ2), working closely with the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs, Secretary of Defense and Senior Leaders across the Department. Lieutenant General Groen is an experienced Marine commander and multi-tour combat veteran. He is the author of, With the First Marine Division in Iraq, No Greater Friend, No Worse Enemy.
Lieutenant General Groen’s expertise centers on transformative technology and its application in Defense, the Intelligence Community, and the commercial marketplace. He is an experienced change-agent, with a penchant for modernizing capabilities, integrating technology, and adapting organizations and cultures. He is a skilled advisor, with deep experience in the key roles of process, culture, technology and ethics. His focus areas include Artificial Intelligence, Cybersecurity, Quantum implementation, National Security and Digital Transformation. He has earned Master’s Degrees in Electrical Engineering and Applied Physics from the Naval Postgraduate School. Today, he seeks to inform transformational change in defense technology, intelligence and information capabilities against the backdrop of expanding definitions of national security and American competitiveness.
Vice Admiral (Ret.) Sean S. Buck is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Admiral Buck retired from the United States Navy after more than 40 years of commissioned service. His active-duty career culminated as the 63rd Superintendent of the United States Naval Academy. He has over a decade of service in the Pentagon with tours of duty on the Navy Staff and the Joint Chiefs of Staff where he specialized in strategy and policy development as well as personnel management. He additionally leveraged unique opportunities in his career by earning designation as a member of the Navy’s Space Cadre while serving at the National Reconnaissance Office. Admiral Buck’s operational naval service was as a Naval Flight Officer in the Maritime Patrol and Reconnaissance naval aviation community accumulating over 4000 flight hours and command-level leadership at the Squadron, Air Wing, and three higher-level organizations culminating with command of the US FOURTH Fleet.
Admiral Buck graduated from the United States Naval Academy in 1983 and holds a Master of Arts in International Security Policy from The George Washington University. He has completed additional studies from organizations including the U.S. Naval War College, the Armed Forces Staff College, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Harvard Kennedy School, and Harvard Graduate School of Education. He currently serves in many roles to include as a member of the Board of Directors for the National Defense Industry Association and a member of its Policy Committee, a Military Advisory Board member to First Command Financial Services, a Trustee to the US Naval Academy’s Athletic and Scholarship Program, a committee member of the US National Naval Museum.
Rear Admiral (Ret.) Alan Reyes is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Alan retired from the Navy Reserve in October 2022 after 32 years of combined service in the US Navy and US Navy Reserve. His final military assignment was Deputy Commander, Naval Supply Systems Command, the US Navy’s global supply chain organization. Previously, he was the Commander, Navy Expeditionary Logistics Group, providing expeditionary logistics capabilities to geographic combatant commanders across the globe. His first flag assignment was Reserve Director, Logistics, Fleet Supply, and Ordnance, US Pacific Fleet, advising the Commander on logistics matters in the most complex logistics theater of operations. As a career Navy Supply
Corps officer, Alan made multiple worldwide deployments, including service aboard a nuclear-powered fast-attack submarine, command of expeditionary logistics units in the US Central Command area of responsibility, and multiple humanitarian assistance/disaster relief operations.
In his concurrent civilian career, Alan served as the Chief Operating Officer of the USO, the nation’s leading military support organization. He has extensive experience in mergers and acquisition, strategic change management, and digital transformation. Prior to his tenure with the USO, he rapidly scaled operations for a start-up for-profit education technology company, leading to its successful public offering.
Alan is a graduate of the US Naval Academy, the Darden School of Business at the University of Virginia, and the Harvard Business School Executive Education Program. He proudly followed in the footsteps of his father who
retired after 30 years of US Navy service after immigrating from the Philippines to earn his US citizenship through his naval service, starting as a Navy Steward and culminating as a Chief Warrant Officer.
Lieutenant General (Ret.) David P. Fridovich is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
David Fridovich served in the United States Army for more than 37 years, culminating his military career as the Deputy Commander of US Special Operations Command (SOCOM) and the senior Green Beret in the Army. His previous assignments include the Director of the Center for Special Operations at SOCOM, the Commander of Special Operations Command – Pacific, the Commander of the 1st Special Forces Group (Airborne) where he led the Army Special Operations Task Force: Operation Enduring Freedom-Philippines, and the Commander of Combined/Joint Special Operations Task Force in Operation Joint Forge, Sarajevo, Bosnia-Herzegovina.
David Fridovich graduated from Knox College in 1974 and earned his master’s degree from Tulane University. After commissioning as an Infantry Second Lieutenant and serving with the 172nd Light Infantry Brigade, he was assigned as an Assistant Professor of Military Science at Norwich University, where he trained the Mountain Cold Weather Cadre and Rescue Team. General Fridovich has additionally studied at the US Command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, and at the British Forces Royal College of Defense Studies in London, England.
General (Ret.) Sir Nick Parker is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
General Sir Nick Parker, a former British Army Officer, left the UK Army in May 2013 after 40 years’ service. He has held several senior operational military tour posts throughout his career, including Northern Ireland, the Balkans, Sierra Leone, Iraq and Afghanistan. General Parker notably led the military reaction to the venue security crisis at the London 2012 Olympics. His final appointment was Commander in Chief UK Land Forces. Since leaving the Army, he has reviewed the senior structure of the UK Police, participated in the Citizens Commission on Islam, Participation & Public Life and has mentored senior business executives.
General Parker advised the Ukraine Minister of Defense from 2016 to 2019. He was the Chair of the Prince of Wales’ #iwill Campaign and was a Director of the Invictus Games 2014. He is now the Chair of REACT Disaster Response and the Armed Services Trauma Rehabilitation Outcome (Advance) Study.
Admiral (Ret.) Sir George Zambellas is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Admiral Sir George Zambellas is a former First Sea Lord and NATO 4 star Maritime Commander. As the professional head of the UK’s Royal Navy, he and his Board won U.K. Government support, to deliver a political-industrial agenda of new carriers, nuclear submarines and ships, and an unrelenting focus on new technology, autonomous systems and digital exploitation. Sir George has an extensive background in strategic leadership and international security. His 36-year public career was as a helicopter pilot, sea commander, amphibious force commander, national and NATO 4 star joint operational and maritime commander. Sir George has a wealth of knowledge in the ways of NATO, the US-UK strategic partnership, international security partnerships and the international defense-industrial base. He has, subsequently, advised the U.K. Government, numerous foreign governments, and is an expert witness in defense procurement matters.
In the last eight years, Sir George has accelerated his commercial, technical and industrial expertise, specifically in the US and UK high-tech market, and the challenge of establishing and growing tech start-ups. He has built a portfolio of experience in fund-raising and governance and is now executive chairman of aerospace, AI and data security companies. Sir George holds numerous UK charitable positions, with an emphasis on maritime and veteran support. He is an extra equerry to His Majesty King Charles III, Gentleman Usher to the Sword of State, and Lord Warden and Admiral of the Cinque Ports.
Vice Admiral (Ret.) Collin Green is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Vice Admiral Collin Green is a retired United States Navy Vice Admiral who last served as the deputy commander of the United States Special Operations Command. Throughout his 38 years of Naval service, Vice Admiral Green participated in special operations in Europe, Africa and Asia. Tours in Naval Special Warfare include assignments at SEAL Teams 2, 3 and 5. He served as operations officer, Naval Special Warfare Task Group U.S. 6th Fleet; executive officer, Naval Special Warfare Unit 10; and assistant chief of staff for Plans, Policy and Operations, Naval Special Warfare Command.
Other assignments include naval special warfare officer, Navy Operations and Plans Branch in the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations; naval special warfare officer, U.S. Naval Forces Central Command/U.S. 5th Fleet; U.S. Central Command branch chief, J3 deputy directorate for U.S. Special Operations, Joint Staff; director of operations, NATO Special Operations Component Command/Special Operations Joint Task Force-Afghanistan; executive officer, Supreme Allied Commander Europe/Commander, U.S. European Command, and as chief of staff, U.S. Special Operations Command.
His command tours include SEAL Team 3, where he deployed as commander, Naval Special Warfare Task Group – Iraq in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom; Naval Special Warfare Unit 3; Naval Special Warfare Group 1, U.S. Special Operations Command South, and Commander, Naval Special Warfare Command.
Vice Admiral Green graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy in 1986 and Basic Underwater Demolition/SEAL Class 149 in 1988. He holds a master’s degree in International Affairs from Catholic University of America, and is a distinguished graduate of the Naval War College with a master’s degree in National Security and Strategic Studies.
Lieutenant General (Ret.) Mary O’Brien is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Mary O’Brien is a retired U.S. Air Force Lieutenant General. She has over 34 years of proven leadership expertise in intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR), cyber operations, and emerging technology. In her last position, she led the Joint Staff Directorate of Command, Control, Communications and Computers (J6), where she provided Joint Force command and control guidance, and evaluated requirements, plans, programs, and strategies for the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Her previous positions include serving as the Director of Intelligence at U.S. Cyber Command, and as the Air Force Director of ISR and Cyber Effects Operations, where she was the senior advisor to the Secretary of the Air Force and Chief of Staff for all aspects of intelligence, cyber, and electromagnetic spectrum operations. General O’Brien commanded at the squadron, group, wing, and numbered air force levels and her deployments included a tour in Afghanistan as the Deputy Chief of Staff for Intelligence.
Lieutenant General O’Brien was commissioned upon graduation from the U. S. Air Force Academy with a bachelor’s degree in Chemistry. She holds a master’s degree in Organization Management from George Washington University and is a distinguished graduate of the Air War College with a master’s degree in Strategic Studies. The National Defense University’s College of Information and Cyberspace recognized General O’Brien with the Rear Admiral Grace Hopper Award for advancing the fields of information and cyberspace in the national security community and she was presented with the Sea Service Leadership Association North Star Award at the 2023 Joint Women’s Leadership Symposium.
Vice Admiral (Ret.) Raquel Bono is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Vice Admiral Raquel Bono retired from the United States Navy after more than 30 years of service, culminating her career as the Director of the Defense Health Agency (DHA) and the first Asian-American female promoted to the rank of Vice Admiral in the US Navy. Prior to this, she served as Chief of the Navy Medical Corps, where she was responsible for the training, readiness, and deployment of all Navy medical personnel. Throughout her career, Vice Admiral Bono held several key leadership positions including as the acting Commander of Joint Task Force National Capital Region Medical, the Command Surgeon of U.S. Pacific Command, and the Deputy Director of Medical Resources, Plans, and Policy for the Chief of Naval Operations. Early in her career, Bono demonstrated her leadership and medical expertise during Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm as the head of Casualty Receiving at Fleet Hospital 5 in Saudi Arabia.
Commissioned as a naval officer upon graduating from the School of Medicine at Texas Tech University with a Doctor of Medicine degree, Admiral Bono also holds a BA in psychology from The University of Texas at Austin and an MBA from Washington State University. She is a diplomate of the American Board of Surgery and a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons. In recognition of her outstanding Naval service and leadership, Admiral Bono was awarded the Defense Superior Service Medal, Legion of Merit, and the Navy and Marine Corps Commendation Medal.
Lieutenant General (Ret.) Rick Waddell is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Lieutenant General Rick Waddell retired from the Army Reserves in 2021 after more than 20 years of active-duty service and 39 years of combined service. His military career culminated as the Assistant to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and Senior Military Advisor to the Secretary of State, from 2018 to 2021. In 2019, he was the first Army Reservist promoted to Lieutenant General to serve in a normally active-duty position since World War II. Prior to this role, General Waddell served as Commander of the 76th Operational Response Command and Deputy Commander for Mobilization and Reserve Affairs at United States Southern Command. Earlier in his career, he served as the JTF Engineer at Joint Task Force Bravo in Honduras, and in multiple key staff roles in the United States and Iraq, and as the Commander of the Combined Joint Interagency Task Force for Counter-Corruption in Afghanistan. General Waddell has also served as the Deputy National Security Adviser in the Trump Administration and as a Director for European Security Affairs in the Clinton Administration. In addition to his distinguished military career, Waddell has published four books on military history and international relations and spent 17 years successfully launching businesses in Latin America in the retail, energy, and mining sectors.
General Waddell was commissioned as an officer in the Army in 1982 after graduating from the United States Military Academy at West Point. He additionally holds bachelor’s and master’s degrees in history and Portuguese from Oxford University earned as a Rhodes Scholar, a master’s degree in public administration from Webster University, and a Ph.D. in international relations from Columbia University.
Admiral (Ret.) Patrick Walsh is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Admiral Patrick Walsh retired from the US Navy in 2012 after more than 34 years of service. His military career culminated as the 59th Commander of the US Pacific Fleet, where he oversaw operations across the entire Indo-Pacific region. Prior to that, he served as the 35th Vice Chief of Naval Operations, the second highest-ranking officer in the Navy. He also commanded US Naval Forces Central Command and US 5th Fleet, leading maritime operations in support of Operations Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom. Earlier in his career, he commanded Carrier Air Wing 1 aboard the USS John F. Kennedy and held several leadership roles in operational squadrons, including commanding Strike-Fighter Squadron 105.
Admiral Walsh graduated from the United States Naval Academy in 1977 with a Bachelor of Science prior to commissioning in the Navy. He later studied at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University, where he graduated first in his class with a Master of Arts and additionally earned a Ph.D. in International Relations. Over the course of his career, he received numerous awards, including the Distinguished Service Medal, Defense Superior Service Medal, Legion of Merit, and Meritorious Service Medal, among others.
Lieutenant General (Ret.) John Evans is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Lieutenant General John Evans retired from the US Army in 2024 after a distinguished 36-year career, including over 8 years in general officer command. His military service culminated as Commanding General of US Army North, where he led homeland defense initiatives, protected critical infrastructure, and directed the Department of Defense response to the COVID-19 pandemic in 2021. He also spearheaded Operation Allies Welcome, supporting the resettlement of over 74,000 Afghan refugees. General Evans previously commanded the US Army Cadet Command, overseeing over 975 senior ROTC programs at colleges and universities and 1,700 junior ROTC programs at high schools. He also led the Army’s Special Operations Aviation Command, managing $3 billion in military aircraft development programs and deploying elite helicopter forces worldwide. Since transitioning to the private sector, General Evans has focused on consultancy work through Evans Strategic Solutions, advising on aviation services, critical infrastructure defense, and leadership development, and serves in advisory roles for several organizations.
General Evans holds Master’s degrees in education from Kansas State University and in national security from the U.S. Naval War College. He is also a resident Federal Executive Fellow of the Brookings Institution and holds a Certificate in Public Leadership from Washington University’s Olin School of Business.
Nancy Morgan is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Nancy Morgan joins Academy as a seasoned expert in national security, data strategy, and technological innovation. During her 36 years of US Federal Government service, she held several executive leadership roles at the Central Intelligence Agency and most recently served as the US Intelligence Community Chief Data Officer. Since her retirement from government service in 2022, she has provided strategic guidance to several organizations including The Cantellus Group and SambaNova Systems, leveraging her expertise to shape the future of AI and data governance. Ms. Morgan is deeply committed to mentoring women in STEM fields, actively supporting initiatives that foster the next generation of industry leaders. She is also a frequent public speaker, sharing her insights on data ethics, AI, and empowering women in the tech industry.
Ms. Morgan holds a Master of Science in Information Systems from American University and a Bachelor of Arts in International Relations and French from Colgate University. She plays a prominent role as a member of Women Leaders in Data and AI (WLDA), earning the organization’s Leader of the Year Award in 2023. She has additionally been named one of 2024’s Most Influential People in Data by DataIQ100 USA and as a Cyber and Tech Center Visiting Fellow at the National Security Institute.
Craig Moringiello is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Craig Moringiello retired from the FBI after serving 20 years in law enforcement specializing in cybersecurity investigations, insider threat cases, and intellectual property theft with assignments in Los Angeles, Washington, D.C., Indianapolis, and Phoenix. He also served at FBI and CIA Headquarters in national security program management positions. During his career, he was responsible for many high-profile investigations and held different executive management roles, including leading the Cyber, Counterintelligence and Technical programs in Arizona and the Counterintelligence and Crisis Negotiation programs in Indiana. He strongly believes in educating private, public, and academic organizations on best practices to protect their data from cyber and human enabled theft.
Craig is a graduate from the United States Naval Academy and served for 10 years as a Naval Flight Officer. He has a master’s degree in Aeronautical Science and possesses a CERT Certificate in Cybersecurity Leadership from Carnegie Mellon’s Software Engineering Institute.
Michael López-Alegría is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Michael López-Alegría is Chief Astronaut at Axiom Space. He is a decorated astronaut who returned to low-Earth orbit for the sixth time in 2024 as Commander of Axiom Mission 3, leading history’s first private mission made up of all government-sponsored crew to the International Space Station. “Mike L-A” (as he’s known to the space community) is involved in both operational and business development efforts within Axiom Space. He has more than 40 years of aviation and space experience with the U.S. Navy and NASA in a variety of roles including Naval Aviator, engineering test pilot and program manager, NASA astronaut, and International Space Station commander. He also holds NASA records for most extravehicular activities (EVAs) or ”spacewalks” (10) and cumulative EVA time (67 hours, 40 minutes). He was inducted into the U.S. Astronaut Hall of Fame in 2021.
Mike L-A is the former president of the Commercial Spaceflight Federation, where he was a spokesman, thought leader, and advocate with the U.S. Congress and pertinent Executive Agencies for favorable public policy on behalf of the commercial spaceflight industry. He has served on several advisory boards and committees of public and private organizations, including the Human Exploration and Operations Committee of the NASA Advisory Council and the Commercial Space Transportation Advisory Committee (COMSTAC) to the FAA, and is past chairman of ASTM International’s Committee on Commercial Spaceflight as well as past president of the Association of Space Explorers. He earned a B.S. in systems engineering at the United States Naval Academy and an M.S. in aeronautical engineering from the Naval Postgraduate School.
In Memoriam
Rear Admiral (Ret.) Danelle Barrett is an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Danelle Barrett was a retired U.S. Navy Rear Admiral. She has over 30 years of proven leadership expertise in innovative cyber, digital transformation and telecommunications strategy development, and global operations. As an admiral, Ms. Barrett served as Director of Current Operations at U.S. Cyber Command and assumed duties in 2017 as the Navy Cyber Security Division Director and Deputy Chief Information Officer on the Chief of Naval Operations staff. In her last position in the U.S. Navy, she led the Navy’s strategic development and execution of digital and cyber security efforts, enterprise information technology improvements and cloud policy and governance for over 700,000 personnel across a global network. She is one of less than 200 women in history to achieve the U.S. Naval rank of admiral.
Rear Admiral Barrett was a graduate of Boston University with a Bachelor of Arts in History where she received her commission as an officer from the U. S. Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps. She holds a Master of Arts in Management, National Security Strategic Studies, and Human Resources Development. She also earned a Master of Science in Information Management. Ms. Barrett has several military decorations including the Defense Superior Service Medal, Women in Technology Leadership Award, and the Executive Women’s Forum Women of Influence Award. She has published 40 articles on cyber, technology, innovation, and leadership. Her book, “Rock the Boat: Encourage Innovation, Lead Change and Be a Successful Leader” was released in June 2021.
Lieutenant General (Ret.) Vincent R. Stewart was an Academy Geopolitical Intelligence Group Member.
Lieutenant General Stewart served in the United States Marine Corps for over 35 years. He most recently served as Deputy Commander, U.S. Cyber Command. Prior to this assignment, Lieutenant General Stewart served as the 20th Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency.
A native of Chicago, Illinois, by way of Kingston, Jamaica, Lieutenant General Stewart graduated from Western Illinois University, earning his commission in 1981. He has served as an armor officer and subsequently as a signals intelligence and intelligence officer, commanding at every level. Lieutenant General Stewart earned master’s degrees in National Security and Strategic Studies from the Naval War College, Newport, R.I. and in National Resource Strategy from the Industrial College of the Armed Forces, National Defense University, Washington, D.C.
Lieutenant General Stewart’s military decorations include: the Defense Superior Service Medal; the Legion of Merit with one gold star; the Bronze Star; the Meritorious Service Medal with one gold star; the Navy and Marine Corps Commendation Medal, with two gold stars; the Navy and Marine Corps Achievement Medal; the Combat Action Ribbon; the National Intelligence Distinguished Service Medal; and various unit awards.
Lieutenant General Stewart retired from the U.S. Marine Corps at the Marine Barracks Washington on April 5, 2019.