Kori Schake

American international relations scholar From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kori N. Schake (/ˈʃɑːki/ SHAH-kee;[1] born 1962) is an American international relations scholar currently serving as director of foreign and defense policy at the American Enterprise Institute. She has held several high-level positions in the U.S. Defense and State Departments and on the National Security Council. She was a foreign policy adviser to the McCain–Palin 2008 presidential campaign. Schake is a contributing writer at The Atlantic.[2] She serves on the board of advisors of Foreign Policy Research Institute[3] and the Alexander Hamilton Society.[4] Schake is a member of the Defense Policy Board Advisory Committee.[5]

Quick facts Education, Fields ...
Kori Schake
Schake in 2020
EducationStanford University (BA)
University of Maryland, College Park (MPA, MA, PhD)
Scientific career
FieldsForeign policy
National defense
Government
InstitutionsAmerican Enterprise Institute Hoover Institution
United States Military Academy at West Point
Orbis
Centre for European Reform
Academic advisors
George Quester
Thomas Schelling
Catherine Kelleher
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Education

Schake obtained her PhD in government from the University of Maryland, where she was a student of Thomas Schelling and Catherine Kelleher. She holds an MA in government and politics from the University of Maryland and a MPA from the University of Maryland School of Public Policy. She completed her undergraduate studies in international relations at Stanford University, where she studied under Condoleezza Rice.[6][7][8]

Career

Pentagon

Schake's first government job was with U.S. Department of Defense as a NATO desk officer in the Joint Staff's Strategic Plans and Policy Division (J-5), where from 1990 to 1994 she worked military issues of German unification, NATO after the Cold War, and alliance expansion.[9] She also spent two years (1994–1996) in the Office of the Secretary of Defense as the special assistant to the Assistant Secretary for Strategy and Requirements.[10]

National Security Council

During President George W. Bush's first term, she was the director for defense strategy and requirements on the National Security Council.[11] She was responsible for interagency coordination for long-term defense planning and coalition maintenance issues. Projects she contributed to include conceptualizing and budgeting for continued transformation of defense practices, the most significant realignment of U.S. military forces and bases around the world since 1950, creating NATO's Allied Command Transformation and the NATO Response Force, and recruiting and retaining coalition partners for operations in Afghanistan and Iraq.[9]

State Department

Schake was the deputy director for policy planning in the U.S. State Department from December 2007 to May 2008.[9][11] Her responsibilities included staff management as well as resourcing and organizational effectiveness issues, including a study of State Department reforms that enable integrated political, economic, and military strategies.[9]

Academia

Schake (far right) participating in a panel discussion at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in June 2017

She has held the Distinguished Chair of International Security Studies at West Point, and also served in the faculties of the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, the University of Maryland's School of Public Policy, and the National Defense University.[9]

She was previously a research fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution.[9][12][13] She blogs regularly for Shadow Government on Foreign Policy[14] and is on the editorial board of Orbis[15] and the board of Centre for European Reform. She is also commonly featured on the Deep State Radio podcast.[16] Schake advises Spirit of America, a 501(c)(3) organization that supports US troops.[17]

Trans-Atlantic Task Force

Since 2019, Schake has also been serving on the Transatlantic Task Force of the German Marshall Fund and the Bundeskanzler-Helmut-Schmidt-Stiftung (BKHS), co-chaired by Karen Donfried and Wolfgang Ischinger.[18]

McCain–Palin campaign

Schake left the State Department in order to serve as a senior policy advisor to the McCain–Palin 2008 presidential campaign, where she was responsible for policy development and outreach in the areas of foreign and defense policy.[19][20][21] Earlier in the campaign, she had been an adviser to Rudy Giuliani.[22]

In 2020, Kori endorsed Joe Biden for president.[23] On February 12, 2021, Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin appointed Schake as one of four departmental representatives to the Commission on the Naming of Items of the Department of Defense That Commemorate the Confederate States of America or Any Person Who Served Voluntarily with the Confederate States of America.[24]

In 2020, Schake, along with over 130 other former Republican national security officials, signed a statement that asserted that President Trump was unfit to serve another term, and "to that end, we are firmly convinced that it is in the best interest of our nation that Vice President Joe Biden be elected as the next president of the United States, and we will vote for him."[25]

Personal life

Schake was raised in a small town in Sonoma County, California, by her parents Cecelia and Wayne, a former Pan Am pilot. Kori has a brother and sister. Kristina Schake, her younger sister, has also worked in the White House and played key roles on Democratic presidential campaigns, working with Michelle Obama and on the Hillary Clinton 2016 presidential campaign. Despite their political differences, they remain very close.[26]

Publications

Books

  • The State and the Soldier: A History of Civil-Military Relations in the United States, (Polity, 2025) ISBN 978-1-5095-7053-9
  • America vs the West: Can the Liberal World Order be preserved?, (Penguin Random House Australia, 2018) ISBN 978-0-1437-9536-0.
  • Safe Passage: The Transition from British to American Hegemony, (Harvard University Press, 2017) ISBN 978-0-674-97507-1

Articles

  • Trump's Speech to Generals Was Incitement to Violence Against Americans, Foreign Policy, October 1, 2025[27]
  • Dispensable Nation: America in a Post-American World, Foreign Affairs, June 24, 2025[28]
  • Congress Must Constrain Trump, Foreign Policy, June 11, 2025[29]
  • Why Biden's Foreign Policy Fell Short, Foreign Policy, January 7, 2025[30]
  • The National Security Imperative for a Trump Presidency, Foreign Affairs, November 8, 2024[31]
  • North Korea Joining Russia's War Is a Sign of Weakness, Foreign Policy, November 5, 2024[32]
  • The Case for Conservative Internationalism, Foreign Affairs, December 4, 2023[33]
  • Biden's Foreign Policy is a Mess, Foreign Affairs, February 10, 2023[34]
  • America Must Spend More on Defense, Foreign Affairs, April 5, 2022[35]
  • Masters and Commanders Are Civil-Military Relations in Crisis?, Foreign Affairs, August 24, 2021[36]
  • The Roads Not Taken in Afghanistan, Foreign Affairs, August 25, 2021[37]
  • The Post-American Order, Foreign Affairs, October 21, 2020[38]
  • Back to Basics, Foreign Affairs, April 16, 2019[39]
  • "Choices for the Quadrennial Defense Review", Orbis, Summer 2009
  • NATO after the Cold War, 1991–1995: Institutional Competition and the Collapse of the French Alternative, Contemporary European History, November 1998[40]

Reports

References

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