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Profiles
Profile: Robert Hale, Defense Department Comptroller
by Ross Wilkers
Published on April 19, 2013
Profile: Robert Hale, Defense Department Comptroller

 

Robert Hale
Robert Hale

Robert Hale serves as comptroller at the Defense Department, where he is responsible for the Pentagon’s budget and financial policy and advises the secretary on budget and fiscal matters.

Hale, nominated to the post in January 2009, also oversees financial management systems and business modernization efforts.

He also serves as a fellow of the National Academy of Public Administration and has previously served on the Defense Business Board.

Between 1994 and 2001, he served as the Air Force’s comptroller and assistant secretary of financial management, where he oversaw budgets of more than $70 billion annually and let efforts to streamline the branch’s financial management practices.

Prior to that position, he led the Congressional Budget Office’s national security division, where he developed analyses of defense budget issues and testified before congressional committees.

Prior to becoming Pentagon comptroller, he served as executive director of the American Society of Military Comptrollers, a professional association of defense financial managers.

He also led training programs, a professional journal and the ASMC’s annual National Professional Development Institute conference, which more than 3,500 participants attend, according to the organization.

While in the private sector, Hale led the acquisition and grants management group at federal service consulting firm LMI, where he also served as a senior fellow.

Hale has served in the U.S. Navy for three years as an active duty officer and also has served as a staff analyst and study director at the Center for Naval Analyses.

The certified defense financial manager graduated with honors from Stanford University with a bachelor’s degree in mathematics and statistics and also holds two master’s degrees, one in operations research from Stanford and the other as an M.B.A. from George Washington University.

Mr. Hale graduated with honors from Stanford University with a B.S. in mathematics and statistics. He also holds a Master’s degree in operations research from Stanford and an MBA from the George Washington University.

 

Coverage of Hale on ExecutiveGov

Robert Hale: Pentagon Plans 6% Workforce Cut Through 2018

Pentagon Not Planning 2014 Furloughs; Robert Hale Comments

Robert Hale: Pentagon May Not Award New Contracts Under Sequestration

Robert Hale: Pentagon Could Reprogram Funds for ‘High-Priority’ Contracts Under Sequestration

Robert Hale: Pentagon at ‘Midfield’ in Audit Preparations

 

Profiles
Profile: Frank Kendall, Defense Under Secretary for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics
by Ross Wilkers
Published on April 19, 2013
Profile: Frank Kendall, Defense Under Secretary for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics

FrankKendallFrank Kendall serves as defense under secretary for acquisition, technology and logistics, having been confirmed for this post in May 2012.

He reports to the defense secretary on matters regarding acquisition, research, engineering, developmental testing, contract administration, logistics, materiel readiness, installations, environment, operational energy, weapons of mass destruction, the acquisition workforce and the defense industrial base.

Prior to this appointment, he served as principal deputy under secretary between March 2010 and May 2012 and also as acting undersecretary before his confirmation.

According to the Pentagon, Kendall is a four-decade veteran of engineering, management, defense acquisition and national security affairs in private industry, government and the military.

Within the private sector, he served as vice president of engineering for Raytheon and oversaw internal research and development there. He has also served as a managing partner at Renaissance Strategic Advisors, a Virginia-based aerospace and defense sector consulting firm.

He has also consulted defense industry firms, non-profit research organizations and the Defense Department on strategic planning, engineering management and technology assessment.

His government career includes service as director of tactical warfare programs in the Office of the Secretary of Defense and as assistant deputy under secretary for strategic defense systems.

Kendall is a former member of both the Army Science Board and the Defense Intelligence Agency‘s science and technology advisory board. He also was a consultant to the Defense Science Board and a senior adviser to the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

His 10-year Army career includes active duty service in Germany, a teaching position in engineering at the U.S. Military Academy and research and development positions.

He is a recipient of military awards including the Meritorious Service Medal with oak leaf cluster, Army Commendation Medal and the National Defense Service Medal.

As an attorney, he worked several human rights cases on a pro bono basis with Amnesty International USA, the Tahrih Justice Center and with Human Rights First. He served as board chairman at the Tahrih Center and on the board of directors at Amnesty International.

Federal civilian awards he has received include the Defense Distinguished Civilian Service Medal, Secretary of Defense Meritorious Civilian Service Medal, Presidential Rank Award of Distinguished Executive, Presidential Rank Award of Meritorious Executive and the Army Commander’s Award for Civilian Service.

He graduated from the U.S. Military Academy and holds a master’s degree in aerospace engineering from the California Institute of Technology, an M.B.A. from the C.W. Post Center of Long Island University and a juris doctorate from the Georgetown University Law Center.

 

Coverage of Kendall on ExecutiveGov

Frank Kendall: Pentagon In Sequestration Damage Limitation Mode

Contractors Given Permission to Consult DoD Program Managers about Sequestration; Frank Kendall Comments

Frank Kendall: DoD Starting Sequestration Planning

Frank Kendall: Sequestration Means 11% Line Item Cuts, R&D Included

Profiles
Profile: Mike Rodrigue, NGA Deputy Director
by Ross Wilkers
Published on April 1, 2013
Profile: Mike Rodrigue, NGA Deputy Director


Mike Rodrigue
Mike Rodrigue

Mike Rodrigue serves as deputy director of the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, where since June 2012 he has formulated policy, managed agency resources and led operational activities.

Rodrigue, who joined the Defense Intelligence Senior Executive Service in 2000, has since led the agency’s development strategic initiative and served as director for NGA’s vision integration team, which is responsible for coordinating and integrating activities aimed at helping NGA achieve its vision and strategic initiatives.

Before joining the VIT team, he served as director for NGA’s new campus east program management office, responsible for leading four government and 14 commercial partners to plan and execute the agency’s relocation to its new Springfield, Va. campus.

He is a recipient of the Meritorious Executive Presidential Rank Award and the National Intelligence Distinguished Service Medal.

Prior to entering federal service, Rodrigue served for 20 years in the U.S. Army and held leadership assignments in both Korea and the U.S., including joint assignments in U.S. Pacific Command and the Defense Mapping Agency, NGA’s former name.

He also was an assistant professor in computer science and topographic research at the U.S. Military Academy and served as DMA’s representative to U.S. Central Command Forward during the 1991 Persian Gulf War.

His military awards include the Legion of Merit, Bronze Star and Joint Meritorious Service Medal.

Rodrigue holds a bachelor’s degree in nuclear engineering from West Point and a master’s degree in mechanical engineering from Georgia Tech.

Profiles
Profile: Michael Krieger, Army Deputy CIO
by Ross Wilkers
Published on March 6, 2013
Profile: Michael Krieger, Army Deputy CIO


Michael Krieger
Michael Krieger

Michael Krieger serves as deputy chief information officer/G6 for the U.S. Army, where he leads implementation of the Army’s strategic direction for the network and enterprise network infrastructure.

The Army CIO/G-6 oversees the branch’s $10 billion information technology investment portfolio, manages the enterprise IT architecture, establishes and enforces IT policies and directs delivery of operational IT services in C4 (command, control, communications and computers).

Krieger assumed his current post in July 2008 and additionally served as acting CIO from November 2009 through March 2010.

The senior executive has also served as principal director for the Defense Department‘s deputy CIO and as director for information policy and integration in the office of the department’s CIO.

Prior to his civilian career, he served 25 years in the Army and held operational assignments in tactical communications and command and control.

Krieger holds a bachelor’s degree from the United States Military Academy and two master’s degrees, one in physics from Georgia Tech and the other in national security strategy from the National Defense University.

 

Profiles
Profile: Martin Gross, DISA PEO For Command and Control Capabilities
by Ross Wilkers
Published on March 5, 2013
Profile: Martin Gross, DISA PEO For Command and Control Capabilities


Martin Gross
Martin Gross

Martin Gross serves as a program executive officer at the Defense Information Systems Agency, holding executive management and acquisition oversight responsibilities for programs and projects encompassing command and control, combat support and information sharing services.

Prior to this position, he served as deputy PEO for Global Information Grid enterprise services, overseeing programs and projects in net-centric enterprise information sharing services.

Gross first joined the federal acquisition community in 2001, initially serving as program manager for the Global Combat Support System and subsequently serving as chief of the Combat Support Center and senior program manager in the office of the component acquisition executive.

In 2006, he was assigned to the National Security Council, where he served as program manager for the renovation of the White House Situation Room.

After the renovation completed, he moved into the Executive Office of the President to serve as a special projects coordinator for
the deputy chief of staff.

He returned to DISA to serve as the vice acquisition executive.

Gross holds an undergraduate degree in electrical engineering from Drexel University, performed graduate studies at Virginia Tech and also attended both the Federal Executive Institute and the Defense Systems Management College.

He is a member of the Defense Acquisition Corps and is level-three certified in the program management career field.

 

Profiles
Profile: Lt. Gen. John Davis, Cybercom Deputy Commander
by Ross Wilkers
Published on February 14, 2013
Profile: Lt. Gen. John Davis, Cybercom Deputy Commander


Lt. Gen. John Davis
Lt. Gen. John Davis

Marine Corps Lt. Gen. Jon Davis serves as deputy commander of Fort Meade, Md.-based U.S. Cyber Command, having been appointed to this position as of June 2012.

Davis previously served at Fort Meade from 2006 to 2008 as deputy commander of the joint functional component command for network warfare.

Prior to joining Cybercom, the 33-year military veteran served as commander of the 2nd Marine Aircraft Wing between July 2010 and May 2012 and as deputy assistant commandant for aviation for the two years prior.

Staff billet services includes a two-year tour as a member of the 31st Commandant’s Staff Group and two years as the junior military assistant to the deputy defense secretary.

In 2003, he served as an Assistant Operations Officer on the 3rd Marine Air Wing staff in Kuwait during the Iraq War and then in 2004 he became officer in charge of the 3rd Marine Aircraft Red Team.

According to the Marine Corps, he has flown more than 4,500 mishap free hours in the AV-8 and other fixed, tilt-rotor and rotary-winged aircraft.

He was commissioned in May 1980, completed Basic School in August 1980 and received his wings in September 1982 to fly the AV-8.

Davis reported to VMAT-203 in October 1982, completed Harrier training and reported to VMA-231 in 1983 for deployment aboard the U.S.S. Inchon.

In 1985, he transferred to VMAT-203 serving as an instructor pilot, then attended the WTI course at MAWTS- and transferred to VMA-223 in 1987 for assignment as the “Bulldogs” WTI and operations officer.

Davis represented the Marines as an exchange officer with the British air force in 1988 and deployed to Gutersloh, Germany after training, where he served as a GR-5/7 attack pilot.

Upon return to the U.S. in 1991, he served as an instructor in Yuma, Ariz. and took command of VMA-223 in October 1998.

VMA-223 won the CNO Safety Award and the Sanderson Trophy two years in a row during his tenure there and the USMC says the team exceeded 40,000 hours of mishap-free operations.

After completing the Executive Helicopter Familiarization Course at HT-18 in Pensacola in 2003, he was assigned to MAWTS-1, where he served as executive officer and then as commanding officer from 2004 to 2006.

His personal decorations include the National Intelligence Distinguished Service Medal, two Defense Superior Service Medals, two Legion of Merit awards, three Meritorious Service Medals and three Navy Commendations.

Davis graduated with honors from The Basic School and was a distinguished graduate of the Marine Corps Command and Staff College.

He is also a graduate of the Tactical Air Control Party Course, Amphibious Warfare School, Marine Aviation Weapons and Tactics Instructor Course, School of Advanced Warfighting and the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies.

Davis holds a bachelor’s degree from Allegheny College, a master’s degree from Marine Corps University and a master’s in international public policy from Johns Hopkins, concentrated in East and Southeast Asian affairs.

Profiles
ExecutiveGov Focuses on Government Leaders by Publishing Original Profiles
by David J. Barton
Published on January 31, 2013
ExecutiveGov Focuses on Government Leaders by Publishing Original Profiles

EM-Logo_ExecutiveBizAs part its mission to inform the government contracting community about the different events and personalities in the U.S. federal government,  ExecutiveGov unveils original profiles of federal leaders every week.

These biographies are an in-depth look at what each executive has accomplished and his/her current responsibilities.

A recent profile looked at Army Gen. Keith Alexander, who currently serves as director of the National Security Agency and commander of the U.S. Cyber Command.

Alexander is an example of the notable leaders the profiles focus on, and the content shows the original and informative style of each piece.

Rep. Mike Rogers, chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, was also profiled for the website.

(Click Here, to read more pieces on federal executives.)

Profiles
Profile: David Ahern, Defense Deputy Asst Secretary for Strategic and Tactical Systems
by Ross Wilkers
Published on January 18, 2013
Profile: David Ahern, Defense Deputy Asst Secretary for Strategic and Tactical Systems


David Ahern
David Ahern

David Ahern serves as deputy assistant secretary of defense for strategic and tactical systems, working under the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Acquisition.

Ahern’s office is responsible for portfolio management, technical and programmatic evaluation and functional oversight of the Defense Department‘s strategic and tactical programs.

Before joining the Pentagon, Ahern served as a professor of program management and director of the Center for Program Management at the Defense Acquisition University in Fort Belvoir, Va.

At DAU, Ahern also served as an executive course learning team mentor and instructor at the Defense System Management College School of Program Management.

Before joining the DAU faculty, he held business development, program management and business unit positions at General Dynamics and Northrop Grumman in developing tactical information systems

Ahern also served in the Navy as an aviator in the RA5C Vigilante for deployments in the Atlantic and Pacific theaters and as executive and commanding officer of Tactical Electronic Warfare Squadron Thirty Three.

His shore-based assignments included service as head of the tactical command and control branch on the staff of the Chief of Naval Operations; project officer in the Navy Space Project; class two program manager at the Joint JTIDS Program Office; program manager for Navy tactical data link systems; and deputy program executive officer for space, communications and sensors.

Profiles
Profile: Steven Chabinsky, CrowdStrike Chief Risk Officer
by Ross Wilkers
Published on January 17, 2013
Profile: Steven Chabinsky, CrowdStrike Chief Risk Officer

 

Steven Chabinsky
Steven Chabinsky

Steven Chabinsky serves as senior vice president of legal affairs and chief risk officer for CrowdStrike, where he advises the company on cyber, legal, privacy and reputation-related issues involving product development and execution.

Before joining the company, he served as deputy assistant director in the FBI‘s cyber division and led investigations, intelligence analysis, policy developments and outreach related to cyber attack, cyber espionage, online child exploitation and Internet fraud.

He has also served as chief of the FBI’s cyber intelligence section, where he organized and led the FBI’s analysis and reporting on terrorism, foreign intelligence and criminal matters related to cyber threats.

According to CrowdStrike, Chabinsky helped formulate the Homeland Security Act of 2002, the National Strategy to Secure Cyberspace in 2003 and National Security Presidential Directive 54 in 2008, which included the Comprehensive National Cybersecurity Initiative.

Between 2007 and 2009, Mr. Chabinsky served in the Office of the Director of National Intelligence in positions such as acting assistant deputy director of national intelligence for cyber, chairman of the National Cyber Study Group, and director of the Joint Interagency Cyber Task Force.

At ODNI, he was responsible for helping lead national intelligence efforts to coordinate, monitor and provide recommendations to the president on cyber strategy.

Chabinsky first joined the FBI in 1995 as an attorney in the Office of the General Counsel and initially focused on employment law and personnel litigation.

In 1998, he served as principal legal adviser to the National Infrastructure Protection Center and then in 2002 he assumed the senior counsel role in the FBI’s cyber division.

The FBI says he helped expand the InfraGard program from 200 unvetted members in three cities to 500,000 vetted members in more than 85 cities.

InfraGard is a critical infrastructure partnership between the private sector, academia and government agencies.

Between 2002 and 2003, Chabinsky served in the White House’s transition planning office to help create the Department of Homeland Security and oversaw legal matters associated with starting the department’s information analysis and infrastructure protection directorate.

Before joining the FBI, he served as an associate attorney in the New York City-based law firm Simpson Thacher & Bartlett, where he tried cases involving insurance and reinsurance contract disputes, class action product liability and internal investigations.

He also clerked for Judge Dennis G. Jacobs at the U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals and holds both undergraduate and law degrees with honors from Duke University.

Chabinsky is also a recipient of the National Security Agency’s bronze medallion for inspired leadership, the ODNI’s bronze medallion for ollection and the President’s Rank Award of Meritorious Executive award.

In August 2012, Security magazine selected Chabinsky for its list of the “Most Influential People in Security.”

 

Profiles
Profile: Doug Rosendale, Cairn CEO and Founder
by Ross Wilkers
Published on January 16, 2013
Profile: Doug Rosendale, Cairn CEO and Founder


Doug Rosendale
Doug Rosendale

Doug Rosendale is the CEO and founder of Cairn Corp., a health information technology startup aimed at advancing interoperability and increased use of mobile technology in the healthcare arena.

Before founding Cairn, he served as senior physician adviser for clinical informatics at the Veterans Health Administration‘s office of health information.

He co-chaired the intra-governmental Health IT Innovation/Interoperability Development Environments sub-group for health IT innovation test beds, started by the White House’s Office of Science and Technology and Policy and the National Coordination Office for Networking IT R&D.

He also served on a senior coordination group responsible for founding the Defense-Veterans Affairs departments’ interagency program office, co-established the clinical informatics and requirements division focused on interagency EHRs and the Virtual Lifetime Electronic Record.

Rosendale has also served as chief of surgery for the VA’s medical center in Grand Junction.

Rosendale, a board-certified general surgeon and trained in Clinical Informatics at Harvard Brigham and Women Hospital, serves as affiliate faculty at the University of California-San Diego’s medical informatics program.

He was affiliate faculty for the Harvard Decision Systems Group.

Rosendale is a member of the American Quality Alliance’s measures improvement workgroup, an editor for the American Medical Informatics Association’s clinical informatics board certification prep-program and the Medical Device Coordinating Council.

He was recently the federal executive sponsor for the American Council for Technology and Industry Advisory Committee.

Rosendale currently is a member of the Surgical Quality Alliance, the Ambulatory Quality Alliance and the health and human services secretary’s value exchanges program, and a clinical decision support panel overseeing health research and quality pilot programs at Harvard and Yale Universities.

He was on the executive board for the original VA National Surgical Quality Improvement Program.

Rosendale was the chair of the surgery discipline and served on the board of governors for the American College of Osteopathic Surgeons and is a fellow of both the American College of Osteopathic Surgeons and the American College of Surgeons.

He is a recipient of the 2006 American College of Osteopathic Surgeons’ “Presidential Recognition Award” for his contributions on the Surgical Quality Alliance.

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