Jack Keane

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Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". John M. Keane (born 1 February 1943) is a retired American general who served as Vice Chief of Staff of the United States Army from 1999 to 2003. He is a national security analyst, primarily on Fox News, and serves as chairman of the Institute for the Study of War and as chairman of AM General.

Early life and education

Keane was born in Manhattan, New York,[1][2] the son of Elizabeth (née Davis) and John Keane. He has a brother, Ronald.

Keane attended Bishop Dubois High School and Fordham University, where he participated in the Pershing Rifles. He graduated with a B.S. degree in accounting in 1966. He then attended Western Kentucky University and graduated with an M.A. degree in philosophy. He later graduated from the US Army Command and General Staff College and the US Army War College.[3][4]

Military career

File:President George W. Bush signs a defense appropriations bill at the Pentagon.jpg
Keane watches as President George W. Bush signs a defense appropriations bill on 10 January 2002

Keane served in the Vietnam War as a Ranger paratrooper, leading in combat as a platoon leader and company commander. He earned the Combat Infantry Badge and the Master Parachutist Badge.[5] He later served in U.S. engagements in Somalia, Haiti, Bosnia, and Kosovo. His commands include the 1st Brigade, 10th Mountain Division, 101st Airborne Division, and the XVIII Airborne Corps.[3]

In 1991 Keane saved the life of David Petraeus during a live-fire exercise. According to Keane, Petraeus was shot "accidentally, standing right next to me, and I had to fight to save his life. He had a hole about the size of a quarter in his back and is gushing with blood, and we stopped the bleeding and got him on a helicopter and got him to a surgeon and so we were sort of bonded ever since that time."[6]

Keane was under consideration to become the Chief of Staff of the Army in 2003, but declined the appointment.[7] He retired from military service in 2003.

Later career

File:Former Army vice chief of staff visits TF Falcon 100903-A-8481S-385.jpg
Keane (left) meeting with an army colonel in 2010
File:President Trump Presents the Medal of Freedom to General Jack Keane (49646196636).jpg
Keane receives the Presidential Medal of Freedom from US President Donald Trump on 10 March 2020

After his retirement, he has served as an informal advisor to presidents and other senior officials. He served an advisory role in the management of the US occupation of Iraq, as a member of the Defense Policy Board Advisory Committee. In January 2007, Keane and the scholar Frederick W. Kagan released a policy paper, "Choosing Victory: A Plan for Success in Iraq,"[8] through the American Enterprise Institute that called for bringing security by putting 30,000 additional American troops there for at least 18 months. In part convinced by this paper, President George W. Bush ordered on 10 January 2007, the deployment of 21,500 additional troops to Iraq, most of whom would be deployed to Baghdad. The deployment has been nicknamed the 2007 "surge."[9][10][11]

Debate was intense over how long the surge should last. Keane supported a longer buildup of at least one year. The surge was supposed to support the Iraqi Security Forces until they could assume responsibility for country security. The National Intelligence Estimate supported the longer timeframe, noting that there were problems with the independence of the Iraqi police from sectarian militias and death squads. Keane supported the view that distribution of economic assistance would have a more significant impact over a longer deployment because "with the short term surge...the enemy can wait you out."[12]

Of his initial meeting with President Bush regarding the surge, Keane said that he made a phone call to Newt Gingrich to ask his advice prior to the meeting. As Keane said in 2014, <templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />

Gingrich gave me some good advice. He said, "Look, Jack. Most people go in the Oval Office, even people who go in there a lot, have a tendency in front of the President of the United States to always leave something on the table." He said, "Don't leave anything on the table." He said, "You're going to get about 15 minutes at best and put it all out there. And when you walk out of that room, feel good that you got it all out there." So that was sound advice, and I did put it all out there.[6]

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Keane was asked by Vice President Cheney to go back on active duty and to lead the surge in the field. When Keane declined, Cheney pressed him to come work in the White House and oversee both the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq; Keane again declined. Keane ended up briefly working at the White House and then later traveled to Iraq several times to advise General Petraeus.[13]

Current activities

Keane is a regular contributor to Fox News and is involved in a variety of business, think tank and charitable activities. He serves as chairman of AM General, the firm that produces the Humvee.[14][15] In June 2016, Keane co-founded IP3 International (IP3), a nuclear energy consulting firm.

Keane is an advisor to the Spirit of America, a 501(c)(3) organization.[16] He formerly served as a strategic advisor for Academi and is a former director of defense giant General Dynamics.

In November 2016, shortly after Stanley A. McChrystal declined the post of Secretary of Defense, Keane was offered an appointment to the post, but he declined, citing the death of his wife several months earlier. After Defense Secretary Jim Mattis resigned in December 2018, Trump again offered the job to Keane, who again declined.[17][18][19]

Keane is considered an influential voice to leaders from both major political parties, including Donald Trump, particularly on foreign policy issues related to the Middle East.[20]

He is a member of the Defense Policy Board Advisory Committee.[21]

IP3

Keane is a cofounder and director of IP3 International.[22] According to a staff report to the chairman of the House Oversight Committee, during the 2016 US presidential campaign of Donald Trump and subsequently, Trump aides such as Jared Kushner and others have been engaged in promoting IP3's plan to transfer nuclear technology from the US to Saudi Arabia. According to the report, IP3 founders and others have been seeking to broker a deal with Riyadh without the "gold standard," a provision—tied to Section 123 of the 1954 Atomic Energy Act, which establishes conditions for nuclear cooperation between the US and its allies, that seeks to limit weaponizing of nuclear energy.[23][24] In July 2019, the committee chairman released a second staff report that detailed various activities and contacts between IP3 and the Trump administration.[23][25] A letter to Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS) that was signed by General Keane and executives of IP3, boasted, “The agreements by President Trump and Mohammed bin Salman have established the framework for our unique opportunity to take the next steps with IP3 and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia."[26]

Personal life

Keane married his first wife, Theresa Doyle, in 1965, and has two sons.[3] She died in 2016 after having Parkinson's disease for 14 years.[27] He is married to Angela McGlowan.[28][29]

Awards and decorations

Military awards that Keane has received include two Defense Distinguished Service Medals, two Army Distinguished Service Medals, the Silver Star, five Legion of Merits, the Bronze Star Medal, three Meritorious Service Medals, one Army Commendation Medal, the Joint Chiefs Service Badge, the Humanitarian Service Medal,[3] Ranger Tab, the Combat Infantryman Badge, the Master Parachutist Badge, and the Air Assault Badge.

President Donald Trump awarded Keane the Presidential Medal of Freedom on 10 March 2020.[30]

Keane's civilian awards include the Fordham University Distinguished Alumni Award, the USO 2002 Man of the Year award, and the Association of the United States Army 2001 Man of the Year award. Keane was furthermore awarded an honorary Ph.D. degree in law from Fordham University and an honorary Ph.D. degree in public service from Eastern Kentucky University.[4]

Defense Distinguished Service Medal with one Oak Leaf Cluster
Army Distinguished Service Medal with one Oak Leaf Cluster
Template:Ribbon devices/alt Silver Star
Legion of Merit with four Oak Leaf Clusters
Template:Ribbon devices/alt Bronze Star Medal
Meritorious Service Medals with two Oak Leaf Clusters
Template:Ribbon devices/alt Army Commendation Medal
File:Presidential Medal of Freedom (ribbon).svg Presidential Medal of Freedom
National Defense Service Medal with two Service Stars
Vietnam Service Medal with two Service Stars
Template:Ribbon devices/alt Humanitarian Service Medal
Template:Ribbon devices/alt Army Service Ribbon
Template:Ribbon devices/alt Army Overseas Service Ribbon
Template:Ribbon devices/alt Vietnam Campaign Medal
Template:Ribbon devices/alt Valorous Unit Award
Template:Ribbon devices/alt Vietnam Gallantry Cross Unit Citation
File:Combat Infantry Badge.svg Combat Infantryman Badge
File:US Army Airborne master parachutist badge.gif Master Parachutist Badge
File:AirAssault.svg Air Assault Badge
File:Ranger Tab.svg Ranger Tab
File:Joint Chiefs of Staff seal.svg Joint Chiefs Service Badge
File:United States Army Staff Identification Badge.png United States Army Staff Identification Badge
File:502 Parachute Infantry Regiment DUI.PNG 502nd Infantry Regimental Affiliation

References

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  1. Matthew Kaminski, Wall Street Journal, "Why the Surge Worked", September 20, 2008
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  5. Fred Kaplan, The Insurgents: David Petraeus and the Plot to Change the American Way of War, Simon & Schuster, 2013, p. 225.
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  17. Bergen, Peter. (2019). Trump and his generals: the cost of chaos. New York: Penguin Press. Template:ISBN. p. 49, p. 251
  18. Ret. Army Gen. Jack Keane Says He Declined Offer To Be Defense Secretary, NPR (November 20, 2016).
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External links

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Military offices
Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/check Vice Chief of Staff of the United States Army
1999–2003 Template:S-ttl/check
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Chief of Staff of the United States Army
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2003 Template:S-ttl/check
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