Eric Rosenbach | |
---|---|
Assistant Secretary of Defense for Homeland Defense and Global Security | |
In office September 23, 2014 – July 6, 2015 | |
President | Barack Obama |
Preceded by | Todd M. Rosenblum (Acting) |
Succeeded by | Thomas F. Akin (Acting) |
Personal details | |
Born | Colorado Springs, Colorado |
Education | Davidson College (BA) Harvard University (MPP) Georgetown University (JD) |
Military service | |
Allegiance | United States |
Branch/service | United States Army |
Years of service | 1995-2000 |
Rank | Captain |
The Honorable Eric Brien Rosenbach[1] is an American public servant and professor who served as Pentagon Chief of Staff from July 2015 to January 2017 and as Assistant Secretary of Defense for Homeland Defense and Global Security from September 2014 to September 2015.[2] As Chief of Staff, Rosenbach assisted Secretary Ash Carter on the Department of Defense's major challenges of the time, which included increased Russian aggression, the Syrian Civil War, and North Korean missile tests.[3]
Rosenbach's background is in cybersecurity, both public and private sector. He was the first-ever DoD ‘cyber tzar’ known as the Principal Cyber Advisor to the Secretary of Defense. From September 2011 to August 2014, he served as the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Cyber, in which role he oversaw and led the DoD's cybersecurity strategy.[2] Rosenbach continued to oversee cybersecurity as Chief of Staff. From 2000 to 2002 he advised Tiscali, the then-largest Internet service provider in Europe, on cybersecurity as their Chief Security Officer,[4] and prior to that, he was an Army intelligence communications officer.[5]
Returning to Harvard Kennedy School to teach in 2007, Rosenbach was the executive director of the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs for three years before going to the DoD. He would again return to Harvard in May 2017 to become co-director of the Belfer Center with Secretary Ash Carter.[5]
Eric Rosenbach was born at the US Air Force Academy in Colorado. His father, Dr. William E. Rosenbach,[6] a thirty-year Air Force Veteran, served in the U.S. Air Force flying a Lockheed C-130 Hercules in the Vietnam War. A professor at the academy, Dr. Rosenbach was an influential force in Eric Rosenbach's decision to join the military through the ROTC program.[7]
Rosenbach graduated from Gettysburg Area High School in 1991 and played football and basketball while a student there.
On a ROTC scholarship at Davidson, Rosenbach was elected student body president, played quarterback for the Davidson football team, and was a ROTC battalion commander. Rosenbach got involved in Davidson's Dean Rusk International Studies Program and found public service appealing. A Davidson article quotes him as saying, “Public service motivated me. It’s a rewarding feeling to know you’re making a little bit of difference in the world. I figured that I’d be either a history or government teacher, or work in the foreign service.[8]” The Dean Rusk program gave Rosenbach a grant to go to Vietnam - the country where his father had flown for the US Air Force and had almost been shot down. The trip inspired him to think deeply about military use of force and US foreign policy.[7]
Upon graduation from Davidson, Rosenbach became a Fulbright Scholar and studied privatization in post-communist Bulgaria for a year.[9] He then entered the US Army as an intelligence officer in the Army (see early career).[5]
Rosenbach attended Harvard Kennedy School from 2002 to 2004 and received a Masters in Public Policy. He was HKS professors Richard A Clarke and Graham Allison's Graduate Assistant; they both have been great mentors to him.[10] Upon graduating he enrolled into the Georgetown University Law Center and obtained a Juris Doctor in 2007.
Rosenbach learned German at the Volkshochschule Rosenheim in Germany.
Rosenbach served as the commander of a communications intelligence unit in the US Army for four years, 1996 to 2000. The unit, which worked closely with the National Security Agency, provided strategic information to support US operations in Bosnia and Kosovo. The Central Intelligence Agency named it the top intelligence organization in the U.S. military for two consecutive years.[5]
In 2000 Rosenbach left the Army with the rank of captain. He became the chief security officer for Tiscali, an internet telecommunication company that was then the largest Internet service provider in Europe. For two years he was responsible for their cybersecurity. He recollects, “It was such a different environment from the army. I had a fancy company car and flew all over Europe. But then 9/11 happened, and that really jarred me. I realized what I was doing didn’t feel rewarding, and went back to school intent on doing something in the public sector[citation needed].”
After graduating from HKS in 2004, Rosenbach worked on the core staff of John Kerry's 2004 Presidential Campaign for Kerry's security advisors Rand Beers and Susan Rice.[7]
Rosenbach served as a professional staff member for the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, US Senate.[5] In that role he led the investigation into whether there were ties between Al-Qaeda and Saddam Hussein in the 9/11 attacks. He also had oversight of the US’ counterterrorism profile and the individual agencies’ counterterrorism operations (including the CIA and NSA).
Concurrently (2005–2007), Rosenbach advised Senator Chuck Hagel as his National Security Advisor.[11]
Rosenbach became the second ever Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Cyber in September 2011.[2] In that position he was responsible for creating and implementing DoD's strategy for US operations in cyberspace. He co-authored Presidential Policy Directive 20, which established principles and processes for US cyber operations and was signed by President Barack Obama in 2012.[12] He also helped design and establish the mission force of the US Cyber Command (USCYBERCOM).
In September 2014, Rosenbach was confirmed by the US Senate as Assistant Secretary of Defense for Homeland Defense and Global Security.[13] In that role he led the DoD's efforts to deter Chinese theft of American intellectual property and to counter Iranian and North Korean cyber attacks against US critical infrastructure. He also dealt with the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, space operations, and antiterrorism. He helped lead the implementation of the Global Health Security Agenda with a stress on multi-sector approaches to combating global health threats. Rosenbach led the DoD's domestic response to the Ebola outbreak in 2014 and established new medical safety policies.[14]
Rosenbach became Pentagon Chief of Staff in July 2015. As Chief of Staff, Rosenbach was a senior leader of the Department of Defense, an organization with a yearly budget of $550 billion, 2.8 million personnel, and high-stakes operations across the globe.[2]
Rosenbach and Carter's many objectives were defeating ISIL, building effective cyber strategy, and opening all combat positions to female service members. Other major priorities included counterterrorism operations, and strategies for the Asia-Pacific, Europe, and Middle East regions.[3]
One of Rosenbach's major projects was innovation improvement at the DoD. Rosenbach's efforts included the Defense Innovation Unit Experimental (DIUx), the Defence Digital Service (a project Rosenbach conceived of and helped lead), the Silicon Valley–based Defense Innovation Unit, and the Defense Innovation Board.[14]
Rosenbach is a Senior Lecturer at the Harvard Kennedy School, where he teaches a core class on policy development and execution for master's students and classes about the nexus of emerging technology and international security. He previously served as co-director of Harvard Kennedy School's Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs. With Robby Mook and Matt Rhoades, Rosenbach founded and ran the Defending Digital Democracy Project, an initiative aiming to identify and build mitigations for cyber vulnerabilities in democratic elections.[15]
Rosenbach is married, has two children.
{{cite book}}
: |website=
ignored (help)
{{cite book}}
: |website=
ignored (help)