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Dr. Thomas Barnett named Proceedings
'Author of the Year' By Lt. David
Ausiello Copyright: The Newport Navalog (5 April 2002)
Newport, R.I., April 3, 2002 -- If you are looking for Tom Barnett on
a Saturday afternoon this summer, you may not have to look any further than
Second Beach. Chances are you will find him there, showing his 7 year-old
son, Kevin, the fine art of boogie-boarding. Locating him during the week,
however, could prove to be a little more difficult. You could try his
office at the Naval War College, where he is a Senior Strategic Researcher in
the Decision Strategies Department. Then again, you could look in
Washington D.C., where he works as an assistant to Retired Vice Adm. Arthur
Cebrowski in the Office of Force Transformation. If you still haven't been
able to track him down, try calling him on one of the two cell phones he keeps
firmly attached to his belt. One organization that undoubtedly possesses
one of these numbers, is the U.S. Naval Institute. For the past nine
years, Tom Barnett has been writing articles for their Annapolis-based magazine,
Proceedings, and on April 3rd of this year, he was honored as their
'Author of the Year' for 2001.
 Vice Adm. Dennis V. McGinn (center),
Deputy Chief of Naval Operations for Warfare Requirements and Programs presents
Prof. Tom Barnett (left) with the Naval Institute's 'Author of the Year' award
as Rear Adm. Rodney P. Rempt (right), Naval War College President looks on
during a ceremony in Annapolis, MD.
Although a contributor to Proceedings for close to a
decade, Barnett readily admits that his production for the magazine increased
dramatically in 2001.
"I began pitching articles (to the Naval Institute) in February
about the post cold war era, and then again last summer after I returned from
India's International Fleet Review. By the fall, they were calling
me. It's become a relationship where they trust what I write."
In the early part of 2001, Barnett was in the midst of a two-year
project centered on security issues in the new globalization era. This
endeavor took him up and down the East Coast, but mainly he found himself
speaking to audiences at the two centers of security and globalization in
America: The Pentagon and The World Trade Center. Ironically, he was
scheduled to brief in the Navy's Command Center Sept. 18th, which was completely
destroyed exactly one week earlier. On Sept. 25th, Barnett was scheduled
to meet with members of Cantor-Fitzgerald for a briefing on the 105th floor of
World Trade Center Tower One. Obviously, neither meeting took place as
scheduled, and since Sept. 11th, Barnett's focus has gone through a serious
transformation.
One of the first calls Barnett received after Sept. 11th was from
Proceedings editor, Fred Rainbow.
"We were on deadline on Sept. 11th for the October issue. We
decided to make room for some thoughtful reflections on different aspects
related to the attacks," said Rainbow. "We called six people, gave them 24
hours to write 1,000 words…Professor Barnett was one of those authors we called
and he produced."
Barnett, who worked closely with many members of Cantor-Fitzgerald
who perished on Sept. 11th, describes writing about the effects of the attack as
a "cathartic" experience.
"Personally, it felt like such an amazing attack on the work that
I had been doing. Sept. 11th in general ended the project I was working on
because so many lives were lost. The project was kind of shot out from
under me."
According to Barnett, a major issue raised by Sept. 11th revolves
around the nature of combat in the present day.
"Is it a uni-polar moment and are we just waiting for a great
power to rise up in a traditional way, or do we find ourselves going down a
dramatically different path where there are those who can accept globalization
versus those who can not? It puts the whole context of naval power in a
different light. What was a post cold-war era starts to look, all of a
sudden, very dramatically like a globalization era," said Barnett.
One of Barnett's current positions is as an assistant to his
previous boss, Retired Vice Adm. Arthur Cebrowski. Cebrowski was appointed
by Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld this past November to be the Director
of Force Transformation for the Department of Defense.
According to Barnett, his relationship with Cebrowski, who retired
from the U.S. Navy in October 2001 after serving as the president of the Naval
War College in Newport, R.I., got off to an awkward start. Just prior to
his arrival at the Naval War College, Barnett authored an article for
Proceedings entitled, "The Seven Deadly Sins of Network Centric
Warfare." Cebrowski has been called the "father of network-centric
warfare" for helping to initiate the concept that has become one of the
centerpieces of the Defense Department's transformation planning.
"My article definitely could have been interpreted as being openly
critical of Network Centric Warfare. (Adm. Cebrowski's) article was quite
historic and sometimes I see mine paired with it as a sort of
counter-position. It got the idea started that we were at odds," said
Barnett. Cebrowski's article, "Network-Centric Warfare: Its Origin and
Future," appeared in the January 1998 issue of Proceedings, and was
co-authored by John J. Garstka.
"Proceedings did a lot of good by publishing articles about
Network Centric Warfare because it recognized it as a serious, debatable
issue…and a healthy debate enabled the best ideas about Network Centric Warfare
to rise," continued Barnett.
One of the first projects Barnett and his boss, Cebrowski, were
involved with was Y2K. And even though Y2K did not materialize into a
catastrophic global event, the results of their research were extremely
prophetic.
"We predicted a lot of things about what a negative Y2K situation
could be and it is interesting to look at those predictions and see how much of
the reality of Sept. 11th and its aftermath we captured," said Barnett.
Barnett describes his position (Assistant for Strategic Futures)
within the Department of Defense as one in which he is responsible for helping
bring a larger context to the debate of the "direction, content and pace" of
transformation.
As for the future of the Navy, Barnett sees the service defining
itself less in terms of what we have to do to defeat other naval forces, but
more in terms of what our capability to control the seas gives to us.
"No other country is trying to control the ocean anymore, it is
ours. So the starting position (of thought) is, because we control the
oceans, what can we do?"
According to Barnett, the nature of the transformation is evident
in our current war on terrorism because the Navy has been called upon to do "new
and unusual things to support operations on land."
For someone who obviously possesses 'Washington Insider'
knowledge, Barnett claims life in Newport has given him the "best of both
worlds." After spending 14 consecutive years in big cities, the last 8 in
the beltway, Barnett was "burned out" and anxious to escape the "allergies of
Washington." In Newport, he has found a different pace of life and an
opportunity to spend more time with his family. He and his wife Vonne have
three children, Emily, 10, Kevin, 7, and Jerome, 2.
Describing himself as a "triple threat," Barnett acknowledges the
Naval War College has enabled him to concentrate on three different professional
areas. Specifically, in Newport, Barnett has found time to pursue
entrepreneurial interests while still concentrating on his main work in both
public policy and national security research.
"Just like Harvard, to my great delight, the package exists at the
Naval War College to fulfill yourself professionally."
Barnett also said both Rear Adm. Rodney P. Rempt, President of the
Naval War College Rempt, and Rear Adm. Barbara McGann, Provost of the Naval War
College, have kept the organization extremely relevant and have enabled the
staff to come to Newport and be really ambitious.
In comparing life in Newport to his previous assignments, Barnett
offered, "There is a great appreciation here, like anywhere, for delivering
content on time. However, if at 4 o'clock on a Wednesday afternoon in
July, I have had enough for the day, you can find me on the beach
boogie-boarding with my son."
As for being named 'Author of the Year,' Barnett is extremely
grateful to the U.S. Naval Institute, and he indicated his relationship with
Proceedings will continue.
"There are a lot of big issues on the table now, and it's a fun
time to be writing."
A link to Barnett's Proceedings articles can be found at
the following website: www.nwc.navy.mil/newrulesets.
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