Gordon Richard England (born 1938) is an American businessman who serves as United States Deputy Secretary of Defense. A two-time former Secretary of the Navy, he was nominated for his current position by U.S. President George W. Bush. President Bush recess appointed England to Deputy Defense Secretary on January 4, 2006.
Early life and education
England was born in
Baltimore, Maryland and attended Mount Saint Joseph High School. In
1961 received his bachelor's degree in
electrical engineering from the
University of Maryland. In
1975 he received his master's degree in
business administration from the
M.J. Neeley School of Business at the
Texas Christian University. He was a member of several fraternities including
Beta Gamma Sigma (business),
Omicron Delta Kappa (leadership) and
Eta Kappa Nu (engineering).
Business career
England started his business career in 1966 at
Honeywell where he was an engineer on the
Project Gemini space program. He worked for
Litton Industries as a program manager on the
E-2C Hawkeye aircraft for the
U.S. Navy. He was also CEO of
GRE Consultants.
In 1980 he went to work for General Dynamics where he held various posts including Director of Avionics, President of General Dynamics Land Systems Division and President of General Dynamics Fort Worth aircraft company (later Lockheed). England left General Dynamics to be President of Lockheed for four years.
England returned to General Dynamics as Executive Vice President of the Combat Systems Group. He served from 1997-2001 as Executive Vice President of General Dynamics where he had overall responsibility for Information Systems and International sectors.
Government career
England left the world of business to enter government during the administration of
U.S. President George W. Bush serving in a number of key roles, having previously served as a member of the
Defense Science Board.
72nd Secretary of the Navy
England was a controversial choice for
Secretary of the Navy due to his lack of any military service experience and his long career in the defense industry including his most recent appointment as Executive Vice President of
General Dynamics Corporation. Critics such as
William D. Hartung, Head of the
Arms Trade Resource Center, felt that it was inappropriate to appoint businessmen whose companies would be the prime benefactor of any increase in defense spending.
U.S. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld however had decided to make corporate experience one of the key requirements in his appointees as was reported in the
Washington Times. This policy led to England's appointment alongside other leading industrialists including
James Roche and
Thomas E. White. England was sworn in on
May 24,
2001. He is reported in the
Washington Post as having announced that one of his key aims in the role was the development of "futuristic weapons to counter new types of threats emerging in the post-Soviet world."
The Washington Post reports that during his time in this role "England has joined with Adm. Vernon Clark, chief of naval operations, in directing some of the most sweeping change the service has seen in decades." The report goes on to list the following;
- Retiring dozens of ships
- Shedding thousands of jobs,
- Consolidating Navy and Marine Corps tactical aviation forces
- Juggling crew deployments to keep some ships at sea longer
- Devising plans to surge more warships into action faster during a crisis.
By an instruction dated 31 May 2002, England directed all United States Navy ships to fly the first navy jack in honor of those killed in the September 11, 2001 attacks. The jack is to be flown for the duration of the War on Terrorism.
England left the post in January 2003 for a new position within the administration.
1st Deputy Secretary for Homeland Security
On
January 24 2003 England took up his new role as Deputy Secretary for Homeland Security in the newly formed
United States Department of Homeland Security. Although England's stint in this post was brief a close associate quoted in the
Washington Post states that it "broadened his exposure to the White House and his 'contact base' in Washington."
73rd Secretary of the Navy
England was recalled to once again take on the role of Secretary of the Navy after just a few months following the suicide of his nominated replacement
Colin R. McMillan. England was sworn in on
October 1,
2003 becoming only the second person to hold the post twice and the first to serve back-to-back terms. According to a close associate quoted in the
Washington Post, England's time in the
United States Department of Homeland Security had "expanded
* view of the administration's war on terrorism", which lead to a number of initiatives that he pursued in his second term at the Pentagon including;
- Stronger ties between the Navy and Coast Guard
- Greater assistance to Marines on the front lines in Iraq
In June 2004 a Supreme Court ruling granted prisoners at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba the right to plead their cases in U.S. courts. As the BBC pointed out the 600 hundred detainees had been languishing in legal limbo since their capture during the 2001 invasion of Afghanistan, during which time only three detainees had been charged and several dozen had been sent back home following diplomatic pressure from other nations. England was appointed to head the review that was conducted in secret by a panel consisting of three military officers to whom prisoners were given the chance to provide facts to support their case for release. England made clear that "The question is: Are they still threats to America? It's not guilt or innocence." As a result of this review 38 prisoners were released due to a lack of evidence that England referred to as ‘thin files’.
England was succeeded as Secretary of the Navy by Donald C. Winter, and awaits Senate confirmation for his next role.
Deputy Secretary of Defense
England was nominated as
Deputy Secretary of Defense on
May 13,
2005 and immediately took up the role in an acting capacity while awaiting his confirmation. His replacement of
Paul Wolfowitz has been looked upon favorably in the media with the
Washington Post commenting, "England has a reputation for being less ideological than Wolfowitz and more attuned to the administrative demands of the Pentagon's second-ranking civilian job'" but critics still maintain that his prime loyalty remains to the defense industry. England was recess appointed to the full Deputy Secretary position on January 4, 2006 by President Bush.
Other activities and awards
England has been actively involved in a variety of civic, charitable and government organizations, including serving as a city councilman; Vice Chair, Board of
Goodwill Industries; the
USO's Board of Governors; the
Defense Science Board; the Board of Visitors at Texas Christian University; and many others.
He has been recognized for numerous professional and service contributions from multiple organizations such as Distinguished Alumnus Award from the University of Maryland; the Department of Defense Distinguished Public Service Award; the Silver Beaver Award from the Boy Scouts of America; the Silver Knight of Management Award from the National Management Association; the Henry M. Jackson Award and the IEEE Centennial Award.
References
- Bradley Graham, "Wolfowitz Successor Picked: Navy Secretary Is Bush's Choice for No. 2 Defense Job" The Washington Post, April 1, 2005
- William D. Hartung, "How Much Are You Making on the War, Daddy?", Bantum Books, 2003
- Rowan Scarborough, "Rumsfeld's 'Defense Inc.' Reasserts Civilian Control", Washington Times, April 24, 2001 (requires registration)
- "US to review Guantanamo prisoners" BBC News, June 24, 2004
External links
1938 births | Living people | Texas Christian University alumni | United States Department of Defense officials | United States Secretaries of the Navy | University of Maryland, College Park alumni
Gordon R. England