Difference between revisions of "Paul E. Vallely"
(add affiliation) |
(→External Links) |
||
Line 24: | Line 24: | ||
==External Links== | ==External Links== | ||
*Larry Johnson, [http://www.boomantribune.com/story/2005/12/5/115924/907 "The Hype of Paul Vallely,"] ''Booman Tribune'', 5 Dec. 2005. | *Larry Johnson, [http://www.boomantribune.com/story/2005/12/5/115924/907 "The Hype of Paul Vallely,"] ''Booman Tribune'', 5 Dec. 2005. | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[Category:Terrorologist|Vallely, Paul E.]] |
Revision as of 08:58, 14 February 2008
From the American Center for Democracy biography (viewed 27 Nov 2006):
Major General Paul E. Vallely, USA (Ret.) was born in DuBois, Pa. He retired in 1991 from the US Army as Deputy Commanding General, US Army, Pacific in Honolulu, Hawaii. General Vallely graduated from the US Military Academy at West Point and was commissioned in the Army in 1961 serving a distinguishing career of 32 years in the Army. He served in many overseas theaters to include Europe and the Pacific Rim Countries as well as two combat tours in Vietnam. He has served on US security assistance missions on civilian-military relations to Europe, Japan, Korea, Thailand, Indonesia and Central America with in-country experience in Indonesia, Columbia, El Salvador, Panama, Honduras and Guatemala.
General Vallely is a graduate of the Infantry School, Ranger and Airborne Schools, Jumpmaster School, the Command and General Staff School, The Industrial College of the Armed Forces and the Army War College. His combat service in Vietnam included positions as infantry company commander, intelligence officer, operations officer, military advisor and aide-de-camp. He has over fifteen (15) years experience in Special Operations, Psychological and Civil-Military Operations.
He was one of the first nominees for Assistant Secretary of Defense for Special Operations under President Reagan. From 1982-1986, he commanded the 351st Civil Affairs Command that included all Special Forces, Psychological Warfare and Civil Military units in the Western United States and Hawaii. He was the first President of the National Psychological Operations Association. His units participated in worldwide missions in Europe, Africa, Central America, Japan, Solomon Islands, Guam, Belgium, Korea and Thailand. He has served as a consultant to the Commanding General of the Special Operations Command as well as the DOD Anti-Drug and Counter-Terrorist Task Forces. He also designed and developed the Host-Nation Support Program in the Pacific for DOD and the State Department. Most recently, he has in-country security assistance – experience in El Salvador, Columbia and Indonesia in the development of civil-military relations interfacing with senior level military and civilian leadership.
General Vallely is a military analyst for FOX News Channel and is a guest on many nationally syndicated radio talk shows. He is also a guest lecturer on the War on Terror. He is the Military Committee Chairman for the Center for Security Policy in Washington, DC. He has just co-authored a book entitled Endgame: Blueprint for Victory for Winning the War on Terror.
Contents
Chapters
Vallely suggests Joe Outed Valerie
U.S. Army (Ret.) Major General Paul E. Vallely shared "Revelations that former ambassador Joe Wilson was cavalier about referencing his wife's position prior to the Iraq war" on the 3 Nov. 2005, John Batchelor's ABC Radio show.
Affiliations
- American Center for Democracy
- Benador Associates
- Center for Security Policy
- Family Security Matters – Board of Advisors
- Iran Policy Committee
- National Psychological Operations Association
- The Intelligence Summit 2007
References
- Thomas McInerney and Paul Vallely, Endgame: The Blueprint for Victory in the War on Terror, Regnery Publishing, 1 Feb. 2004, [1]
- From MindWar to FoxNews, "Rigorous Intuition" (blog), 8 Dec. 2004.
- Fred Gedrich and Paul E. Vallely, Enlisting the State Department, Summer 2004 Speech at the Jerusalem Summit 2004 conference.
External Links
- Larry Johnson, "The Hype of Paul Vallely," Booman Tribune, 5 Dec. 2005.