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253 Ian K. Adam serves in the Royal Navy at the Maritime Warfare Centre, which is responsible for exploiting operational lessons and developing maritime doctrine. Commander Adam was assigned to the Development Concepts and Doctrine Centre within the Ministry of Defence, where he helped inform decisions on strategy, capability development, and military concepts. As a warfare branch officer he has served onboard fourteen ships, including two as commander, and holds a master’s degree from King’s College, University of London. Marc J. Berkowitz is a vice president for strategic planning at Lockheed Martin Corporation, where he develops business strategies, strategic plans, and advanced concepts for integrated national security space, intelligence, and information mission solutions. He served previously as the assistant deputy under secretary of defense for space policy and director of space policy in the Office of the Secretary of Defense with responsibility for the analysis, formulation, coordination, and oversight of policy on defense and intelligence activities in outer space. Larry Clinton is the president and CEO of the Internet Security Alliance, a multisector trade association focused on cyber issues. He has written for and edited professional journals on cyber security, testified before Congress on numerous occasions , and been featured on the PBS News Hour, on the CBS Morning Show, and on many cable outlets including CNN, C-SPAN, MSNBC, and Fox News. His publications on best practices have been endorsed by organizations ranging from the US Department of Homeland Security to the American Bankers Association. Kevin G. Coleman is a senior fellow and cyber security strategist and adviser at the Technolytics Institute. He explores cyber warfare doctrine and investigates the current international and domestic military structures as they apply to acts of cyber aggression , including the use of cyber attacks as an instrument of foreign policy. Mr. Coleman is the author of The Cyber Commander’s Handbook and his work has been cited in the US Army Cyber Operations and Cyber Terrorism Handbook and Critical Infrastructure Threats and Terrorism Handbook. Contributors Contributors 254 Ian Easton is a China analyst at the Center for Naval Analyses. As a former research fellow at the Project 2049 Institute, Mr. Easton conducted Chinese language research and analysis on missile defense and military space competitions in Asia. Prior to that, he worked for the Asia bureau chief of Defense News covering Chinese signal intelligence, cyber security activities, and air defense and missile trends in the Taiwan Strait. His latest publication is China’s Electronic Intelligence (ELINT) Satellite Developments: Implications for US Air and Naval Operations. Schuyler Foerster is currently Brent Scowcroft Professor of National Security Studies in the Department of Political Science and the Eisenhower Center for Space and Defense Studies at the US Air Force Academy. During a career in the US Air Force, he served as senior adviser on security and arms control. He subsequently became the CEO of an award-winning educational organization. He holds a doctorate in politics from Oxford University and has published two books and several articles on international politics and security studies. Paul S. Giarra is the president of Global Strategies and Transformation. A strategic planner, wargamer, and security analyst, he is a frequent panelist and commentator on naval strategy and global, regional, and alliance security futures. He is a graduate of the Naval War College and the National Institute for Defense Studies in Tokyo, and also a member of the last Harvard NROTC class. His most recent book chapter is “China’s Maritime Salient: Competitive Strategies on the Oceanic Front for the 21st Century,” in Competitive Strategies for China. Susan Page Hocevar is an associate professor in the Graduate School of Business and Public Policy at the Naval Postgraduate School, where she teaches in the areas of organizational behavior, negotiation and consensus building, effective teams, and interagency collaboration in stability, security, transition, and reconstruction environments . She received her doctorate in business administration from the University of Southern California. Her current research is focused on diagnosing organizational collaborative capacities. Scott Jasper is a lecturer in the Center for Civil-Military Relations and the National Security Affairs Department at the Naval Postgraduate School. In the US Navy he commanded a maritime patrol squadron and served on USS Enterprise and with US Naval Forces Central Command. As the deputy for Joint Experimentation, Captain Jasper drafted transformation plans at Headquarters, US Pacific Command. He is the editor of Securing Freedom in the Global Commons and Transforming Defense Capabilities : New Approaches for International Security...

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