DOV ZAKHEIM
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Dov Zakheim

Former United States government official Dov Zakheim was the Undersecretary of Defense and Comptroller from 2001-2004 in the George W. Bush administration, and was a foreign policy advisor to that administration during the 2000 election campaign. From 1985-1987, during the Regan administration, Zakheim was Deputy Undersecretary of Defense for Planning and Resources. An Orthodox Jew, he helped to end the IAI Lavi Israeli fighter program. Previous to his work with the Bush administration, from 1987-2001, Zakheim served as a consultant to the Office of the Secretary of Defense and sat on a number of Defense Department panels, including the Task Force on Defense Reform, in 1997, and the Board of Visitors of Overseas Regional Centers, from 1998-2001. During those years he was also CEO of SPC International, a subsidiary of System Planning Corporation. Zakheim is on the editorial board of The National Interest Journal and has published a multitude of articles and monographs on defense issues.

Zakheim earned his BA in government from Columbia University in 1970 and his PhD in economics and politics from St. Antony's College, Oxford University. He was an Adjunct Scholar at the Heritage Foundation, and an adjunct professor at the National War College, Yeshiva University, Columbia University and Trinity College, where he was also Presidential Scholar. He has been a Senior Associate at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, and is currently a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, the International Institute for Strategic Studies, and the United States Naval Institute. Zakheim has received many awards for government and community service, including the Department of Defense Distinguished Public Service Medal, its highest civilian award. He is now a Vice President of one of the world's oldest strategy consulting firms, Booz Allen Hamilton.

Ideas recorded at the 2007 Aspen Ideas Festival on: 7/2/07
Interests
Most Recent Idea
Foreign Policy
01/02/2008

Description: In the face of global terrorism, Zakheim believes it's time to bury the hatchet.

Transcript:  Well I think the most important thing is to think about Europe.  I’ve seen all too often people take the Europeans for granted.  In other words, I’ve been in government.  And you have these interagency decisions, so called.  So guess what?  The State, and Defense, and the NSC and whoever all agree, that’s it!  And then we go off to negotiate with whoever and discover that they don’t agree with us.  And I’ve seen people look absolutely stunned, as if, “Well, if we all agreed inside the U.S. government, and that was so hard to do, shouldn’t these other guys come along?”  So number one is to recognize they all have their national interests.  And yes there’s a lot of overlap, but it’s not congruent.  You asked me about Israel.  Same thing.  There’s overlap, but there’s not congruence.  Secondly, because we share these values, and because there are now a group of 400 some odd million people who have done something that history hasn’t seen before – bury the hatchet – Germans and French don’t think about killing each other anymore.  It wasn’t that long ago that’s all they thought about.  They are, or can be, a force to work alongside of us.  We do it at times.  We spend a lot more talking about it than actually doing it.  And when we do it – and again, Afghanistan is a perfect example – it seems to work.  The Balkans.  It seems to work.  When we don’t do it – when we just talk about it – then we wind up, first of all, at each other’s throats.  And secondly, we don’t achieve the objectives that we want.  But of course, that also means give in a little.  A senator once said to me when I was up for confirmation, he said, “Dov, you know how it is around here.  You give a little to get a little.”  Well guess what?  That’s how it is everywhere.

Recorded on: 7/2/07

 

 

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