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Department of Defense (DOD)

Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
Deputy Secretary Paul Wolfowitz


Secretary
DONALD RUMSFELD

Donald Rumsfeld
Donald Rumsfeld
Official biography
U.S. Defense Department

Government policy experience: Secretary of defense, 1975-1977; Ford administration transition chairman, chief of staff and Cabinet member, 1974-1975; U.S. ambassador to NATO, 1973-1974; director of White House Economic Stabilization Program and counselor to the president, 1971-1973; director, White House Office of Economic Opportunity, assistant to the president and Cabinet member, 1969-1971; Republican congressman from Illinois, 1962-1969.

Other work experience: Chairman and chief executive officer, General Instrument Corporation, 1990-1993; chief executive officer, president, and later chairman of G.D. Searle & Company, 1977-1985; naval aviator in U.S. Navy, 1954-1957.

Education: B.A. in politics, Princeton University.

President Bush on Rumsfeld: "Don and I have set three clear goals to guide American defense policy. First, we will strengthen the bond of trust between the American people and those who wear our nation's uniform. We'll give them the tools they need and the respect they deserve. Second, we will work to defend our people and our allies against growing threats -- the threats of missiles, information warfare, the threats of biological, chemical and nuclear weapons. We will confront the new threats of a new century. Third, we will begin creating the military of the future -- one that takes full advantage of revolutionary new technologies. We will promote the peace by redefining the way wars will be fought."

President Bush on Rumsfeld: "This is a man who has got great judgment, he has got strong vision, and he's going to be a great secretary of defense -- again."

Rumsfeld on defense: "It is clearly not a time at the Pentagon for presiding or calibrating modestly. Rather, we are in a new national security environment. We do need to be arranged to deal with the new threats, not the old ones ... with information warfare, missile defense, terrorism, defense of our space assets and the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction throughout the world.

"History teaches us that weakness is provocative. The task [President Bush has] outlined is to fashion deterrence and defense capabilities, so that our country will be able to successfully contribute to peace and stability in the world."

Background: From 1998 to 1999, Rumsfeld, 68, served as chairman of the U.S. Ballistic Missile Threat Commission, which evaluated the United States' vulnerability to missile attack.

President Bush indicated that his selection was due in part to Rumsfeld's work as chairman of the commission. "I felt that he did an extraordinary job with a delicate assignment," Bush said. "He brought people together who understand the realities of the modern world. In picking Don Rumsfeld, we'll have a person who is thoughtful and considerate and wise on the subject of missile defense."

Most recently, from 1999 to 2000, Rumsfeld was a member of the U.S. Trade Deficit Review Commission. During the Reagan Administration, he served as an adviser to the U.S. departments of State and Defense and as a member of the President's General Advisory Committee on Arms Control.


Deputy Secretary
PAUL
WOLFOWITZ

Paul Wolfowitz
Official biography

The U.S. Senate February 28 confirmed Dr. Paul Wolfowitz, President George W. Bush's nominee to be Deputy Secretary of Defense.

Dr. Wolfowitz joins the Defense Department from his position as Dean of the Johns Hopkins University Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies. He is a veteran of both the Reagan and George H. W. Bush Administrations. At the beginning of the Reagan Administration, he served as Director of Policy Planning for the Department of State and then Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs. In 1986, he was appointed U.S. Ambassador to the Republic of Indonesia. Under President George H.W. Bush, Dr. Wolfowitz served as Undersecretary of Defense for Policy.

He has received several awards including the President's Citizen's Medal in 1991, the State Department Distinguished Service Medal in 1986 and the Defense Department Distinguished Civilian Service Medal in 1980.

Wolfowitz, 57, is a native of New York and a graduate of Cornell University. He received both his Master's degree and Ph.D. from the University of Chicago. He presently lives in Maryland and is the father of three.



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