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Michael P. Jackson, President, Firebreak Partners, LLC

Biography provided by participant

Jackson is President and founder of Firebreak Partners, LLC, which was created to integrate, finance and deploy high-value security technologies to protect critical infrastructure.

From 2005 through October 2007, Jackson was Deputy Secretary of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, the chief operating officer responsible for managing day-to-day operations. With 210,000 employees, the department's seven operating components and over 20 supporting organizations span the range of homeland security missions, including counter-terrorism, emergency management, law enforcement, research and development, and intelligence analysis.

He also was Deputy Secretary of the Department of Transportation from May 2001 to August 2003, where his tenure focused particularly on the response to the 9/11 terrorist attacks, including creation of the Transportation Security Administration and management of the Department's recovery efforts for the nation's aviation industry. He served as a member of the Board of Directors for Amtrak and was chairman of its Audit Committee.

In the Administration of President George H. W. Bush, Jackson served at the White House as Special Assistant to the President for Cabinet Liaison, and later as Chief of Staff for the Secretary of Transportation. He held several positions working for the Secretary of Education in the Administration of President Reagan.

In the private sector, Jackson has been a Senior Vice President of AECOM Technology Corporation, a global family of design and engineering firms, Chief Operating Officer at Lockheed Martin IMS's Transportation Systems and Services, and a senior executive with the American Trucking Associations. Earlier, he was a researcher at the American Enterprise Institute and taught political science at the University of Georgia and at Georgetown University. In 2004, he was a member of the President's Commission on Implementation of United States Space Exploration Policy, which provided a management roadmap for undertaking NASA's future missions.

Jackson's undergraduate degree is from the University of Houston, and he received a Ph.D. with distinction from the Government Department at Georgetown University in 1985.

Recent Responses

June 8, 2009 12:40 PM

RE: How Can Cyberspace Be Defended?

It does little to promote serious discourse about the truly grave topic of cyber security threats to begin by ridiculing DHS and DOD as “grasping for power” or to suggest that President Obama has somehow been duped into basing his sensible cyber strategy on “a lame and corny threat model called ‘weapons of mass disruption.’" It shows ignorance of the facts to deny that cyber vulnerabilities do indeed present the possibility of “paralyzing results.” Most of what one needs to know to become seriously impatient about achieving stronger cyber security now can be found in the public domain. This is…  Read more

December 30, 2008 02:05 PM

RE: What Are You Reading Over The Holidays?

  My fellow bloggers have collectively offered a rich and intriguing list to mine for the Winter ahead.  I’d add just a few thoughts.  The first is a “me too” endorsement.  The week before Christmas I gobbled up with great pleasure Malcom Gladwell’s latest book, Outliers. Unpacking diverse research to explain what makes for successes in life, this is, like his earlier books, Blink and The Tipping Point, concise, well-written and a fascinating read. Christmas in our home is a time of traditions, including re-reading favorite books.  As the new year approaches, I’m again reading Thucydides’ History of the Peloponnesian War, in…  Read more

December 8, 2008 08:56 AM

RE: How Will Obama First Be Tested?

This excellent question evoked dormant memories of a quiz game that I first experienced on an elementary school playground, now many decades past. Fertile imaginations yielded multiple variants, but the proposed victim would impishly be confronted with an option such as this: Would you rather be drowned in a vat of boiling-hot acid or run over repeatedly by a giant truck? The very question was intended to provoke chills. It is regrettably easy to provoke chills today when discussing the many scenarios that could spark a national security crisis in the early days -- or in the months and years…  Read more
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