Fo B1 Commission Meeting 4-10-03 Fdr- Tab 7- Maceachin Resume- Douglas John Maceachin 569

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Feb-19-03 O 1 : O 3 P

Douglas John MacEachin Professional Record: since retiring from CIA: November 2001 - February 2QQ3: Team Leader for study carried out for the Assistant Director of Central Intelligence for Collection. The study team was tasked with "developing a strategic planning architecture for long term intelligence collection targeting of the international terrorist threat, to produce intelligence required to support policy measures aimed at preempting and ultimately eliminating transnational operational terrorist groups and the foreign entities that sponsor, direct, and provide material support to them." September 1995 - June 2000: Harvard University JFK School of Government, Senior Research Fellow. Activities included presentations of seminars in the Intelligence and Policy program, both for graduate students, and for participants in the Executive Programs course on Intelligence and Policy given for middle and senior grade Intelligence Community officers. During this time, conducted case studies on .the role of intelligence in major policy events: — Two of these, carried out under the auspices of the JFK School Program, have since been published of the Center for the Study of Intelligence (CSI, Washington, DC, also available through GPO): '>• CM 's Assessment.'! of the Soviet Union: The Record versus the Charges (published by CSI in 1996) "r The Final Months of the War vvif/t Japan: Signals Intelligence, U.S. Invasion Planning, and the A-Boruh Decision (published by CSI in 1998) -- Two others, done in 1998-1999 and also under the auspices of the JFK Program, were subsequently combined to produce a book: ~s U.S. Intelligence and the Confrontation in Poland: 1980-1981 (University Park, PA; Penn State University Press, 2002) (This book has been nominated for the American Academy of Diplomacy (Washington, DC) annual award for "Distinguished Writing in the Field of American Diplomacy.") -- Another study done in 2000, also published the Center for the Study of Intelligence: 'r Predicting the Soviet Invasion of Afghanistan: The Intelligence Community's Record (published by CSI in 2001) (With the exception of the study on Japan, all of these products included personal work on reviewing and obtaining release of previously classified intelligence reports.)

In the period 1997 - 2000: served as principal action officer for diverse studies for the Director of Central Intelligence: > 1997: Headed team composed of intelligence officers from diverse Community agencies, tasked with a Hard Target Studv. partly in response to a Congressional Directed Action, examining Intelligence Community posture to deal with a specific issue. Drafted final report. > 1998: Principal action officer and drafter of final report for a special panel headed by former National Security Advisor Scowcroft, charged with examining

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and providing recommended actions for the future employmenLof a special intelligence program. > 2000: Performed same function for another Scowcroft panel tasked by the DCI with reviewing and recommending a strategy for allocating resources on weapons intelligence needed to support policies - ranging from military countermeasures to formal treaties - for countering expansion and proliferation of weapons threats. Assignments during CIA career: February 1993 - August 1995: CIA Deputy Director for Intelligence, heading the Agency's all-source analytic Directorate. Retired to take position at JFK School. March 1989-January 1993: Special Assistant to the DCI for Arms Control, and Chief of the Intelligence Community Arms Control Intelligence Staff. DCI representative on the Interagency Arms Control Group (the "Ungroup"). March 1984-February 1989: Director, Office of Soviet Analysis October 1981 -February 1984: Deputy Director, then Director of Office of Current Operations (later renamed Office of Current Production and Analytic Support)... Component responsible for running CIA 24-hour Operations Center and Watch Office, and compiling and disseminating the National Intelligence Daily and the President's Daily Brief. (While Deputy Director from October '81 to June '82, MacEachin presented the morning "brief," including the PDB, to Vice President Bush and Secretary of State Haig.) February 1980-September 1981: Chief, Strategic Evaluation Center, Office of Strategic Research (charged with political-military analysis of Soviet Union strategic forces and objectives.) April 1979-January 1980: Chief, Strategic Warning Staff, National Military Intelligence Center, Pentagon. August 1978 - April 1979: Deputy Chief, Soviet and Warsaw Pact Conventional Forces Division, Office of Strategic Research. April 1974-Julv 1978: Chief Intelligence Advisor, U.S. Delegation to Mutual and Balanced Force Reduction talks in Vienna. August 1972 - March 1974: Chief, Soviet and Warsaw Pact Ground Forces Branch, Office of Strategic Research. January 1966 - August 1972: Analyst with various accounts in Soviet Ground Force and Air Force Branches in the Office of Strategic Research, and in the Soviet Military Industry Division of the Office of Economic Research. Military Service: U.S. Marine Corps, 1959-1961, based in Okinawa and Philippines. Education: 1959: BA, Dual major in Military Science and Economics (undergraduate studies were under U.S. Navy Scholarship, known as the "Holloway" program, as extension of U.S. Naval Academy Class) Miami University, Ohio. 1964: MA Economics Miami University of Ohio. 1965: Mershon Ph.D Fellow, National Security Studies, Ohio State. (Succumbed to CIA recruitment and never finished doctorate.)

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PUBLICATIONS: ADR and the Federal Government: Not Such Strange Bedfellows After All (co-authored by Jeffrey Senger), 66 Missouri L. Rev.709 (2001). Delivered by me as the Earl F. Nelson Memorial Lecture, University of Missouri-Columbia School of Law, Nov. 9, 2000. Implications of FDA's Tobacco Rule for Manufacturers of Drugs and Medical Devices, 2 Regulatory Affairs Focus (journal of Regulatory Affairs Professional Society) 13 (1997). OSHA's Hazard Communication Standard, chapter in The Environmental Law Manual, published by ABA Section of Natural Resources, Energy, and Environmental Law (1992). OSHA's Expanding Hazard Communication Requirements, Natural Resources & Environment (published by ABA Section of Natural Resources, Energy, and Environmental Law), Vol 4, No. 3, p. 19(1990). Soviet Pipeline Sanctions: The President's Authority to Impose Extraterritorial Controls, 15 Law & Policy in International Business 1163 (1983). FDA Approval of Comparative Claims for Prescription Drugs - The Moxam Case, 17 Drug Information Journal 171 (1983) The New FDA Hearing Regulations - An Analysis. 29 Food, Drug, Cosmetic L.J. 336 (1974). FDA Compliance Problems, chapter in Consumer Protection Compliance, Practising Law Institute (1971). Note, Ford v. Ford: Full Faith & Credit for Child Custody Decrees, 73 Yale L.J. 134 (1963).

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