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Image:70th_Anniversary_of_the_Marshall_Plan.jpg|The former U.S. Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis and former German Minister of Defense Ursula von der Leyen during a ceremony honoring 70 years of the Marshall Plan June 28, 2017. (DOD Photo)
Image:70th_Anniversary_of_the_Marshall_Plan.jpg|The former U.S. Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis and former German Minister of Defense Ursula von der Leyen during a ceremony honoring 70 years of the Marshall Plan June 28, 2017. (DOD Photo by Karl-Heinz Wedhorn)
File:Marshall_Center_Sunrise.jpg|The Marshall Center conducts a variety of programs involving officials from more than 155 countries.
File:Marshall_Center_Sunrise.jpg|The Marshall Center conducts a variety of programs involving officials from more than 155 countries. (DOD Photo by Karl-Heinz Wedhorn)
Image:Our_namesake.jpg|The Marshall Center is named after American statesman and soldier George Catlett Marshall, Jr.
Image:Our_namesake.jpg|The Marshall Center is named after American statesman and soldier George Catlett Marshall, Jr.
Image:WoernerHall.jpg|A view of the Marshall Center's Woerner Hall, Bldg. 109.
Image:WoernerHall.jpg|A view of the Marshall Center's Woerner Hall, Bldg. 109. (DOD photo by Karl-Heinz Wedhorn)
Image:Plenary_Lecture.jpg|Marshall Center’s methodology centers on daily plenary lectures—presentations by subject matter experts from an array of backgrounds.
Image:Plenary_Lecture.jpg|Marshall Center’s methodology centers on daily plenary lectures—presentations by subject matter experts from an array of backgrounds. (DOD photo by Karl-Heinz Wedhorn)
Image:Seminar_Room.jpg|The Marshall Center offers the opportunity to discuss topics presented by subject matter experts in greater depth in small seminar groups.
Image:Seminar_Room.jpg|The Marshall Center offers the opportunity to discuss topics presented by subject matter experts in greater depth in small seminar groups. (DOD photo by Karl-Heinz Wedhorn)
Image:English_Language_Enhancement_Course.jpg|The Marshall Center's Partner Language Training Center Europe (PLTCE) offers a five-week English Language Enhancement Course in conjunction with PASS, CTOC, PCSS and PTSS.
Image:English_Language_Enhancement_Course.jpg|The Marshall Center's Partner Language Training Center Europe (PLTCE) offers a five-week English Language Enhancement Course in conjunction with PASS, CTOC, PCSS and PTSS. (DOD photo by Karl-Heinz Wedhorn)
Image:PASS_Berlin_Field_Study_Trip.jpg|Program on Applied Security Studies participants visit Federal Ministry of Interior for presentations on challenges in fighting the international terror and developments in migration policy Nov. 8, 2017, as part of the Berlin Field Study Trip.
Image:PASS_Berlin_Field_Study_Trip.jpg|Program on Applied Security Studies participants visit Federal Ministry of Interior for presentations on challenges in fighting the international terror and developments in migration policy Nov. 8, 2017, as part of the Berlin Field Study Trip. (DOD Photo by SMSGT Mark Winkler)
Image:PASS_Culture_Night.jpg|It’s a tradition for participants of the Program on Applied Security Studies to prepare food from their native land to share their culture with the Marshall Center staff and Faculty.
Image:PASS_Culture_Night.jpg|It’s a tradition for participants of the Program on Applied Security Studies to prepare food from their native land to share their culture with the Marshall Center staff and Faculty. (DOD photo by Karl-Heinz Wedhorn)
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Revision as of 16:02, 17 February 2021

George C. Marshall Center for European Security Studies
Marshall Center Seal
Agency overview
Formed1993
JurisdictionGovernment of Germany, United States Government
HeadquartersGernackerstrasse 2, 82467 Garmisch-Partenkirchen
MottoDemocratia per fidem et concordiam
(Democracy through trust and friendship)
Employees208 (2013)
Agency executive
Parent agencyDepartment of Defense, Defense Security Cooperation Agency, German Defense Ministry
WebsiteMarshall Center [1]

The George C. Marshall European Center for Security Studies is a bi-national United States Department of Defense[1] and Federal Ministry of Defence (Germany)[2] security and defense studies institute. When the Marshall Center was founded in 1993, its mission was to create a more stable security environment by advancing democratic institutions and relationships, especially in the field of defense; promoting active, peaceful, security cooperation; and enhancing enduring partnerships among the nations of North America, Europe, and Eurasia. As of Oct. 1, 2014, the Marshall Center's regional mission changed to a transnational one based on an Office of the Secretary of Defense directive to change from a European to a global participants base.

The mission of the Marshall Center is to enable solutions to regional and transnational security challenges through capacity building, access, and a globally connected network.[3] The Marshall Center conducts a variety of unique programs involving to date more than 14,000 officials from more than 157 countries. [4]

The Marshall Center conducts a variety of programs involving more than 14,000 security officials from more than 157 countries. Most programs are taught in English. [5]

The Marshall Center is named after American statesman and soldier Gen. George Catlett Marshall, Jr. After World War II and in his service as Secretary of State, Marshall advocated a significant U.S. economic and political commitment to post-war European recovery, often referred to as the Marshall Plan – a plan that saved millions of Europeans from starvation and Soviet domination. [6]

The Marshall Center is co-located with the Armed Forces Recreation Center's Edelweiss Lodge and Resort, a U.S. Department of Defense owned hotel in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany. Located in the Bavarian Alps near the Austrian border, the Edelweiss opened in September 2004. Both the Marshall Center and the Edelweiss are supported by the U.S. Army Garrison Bavaria-Military Community Garmisch,[7] which falls under Army Installation Management Command-Europe.[8]

Background

After the failed August 1991 coup attempt in Russia, defense specialists identified the need for an institution such as the Marshall Center. The United States European Command (EUCOM)[9] began to develop proposals to expand defense and security contacts with the emerging democracies of Central and Eastern Europe and Eurasia in order to positively influence the development of security structures appropriate for democratic states. In February 1992, a proposal was submitted to then-Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Colin Powell to use the facilities of the former U.S. Army Russia Institute (USARI) to create a European center for security studies in order to rapidly develop opportunities to work with European and Eurasian defense establishments. He endorsed the plan on March 17, 1992. Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Paul Wolfowitz approved the proposal that summer, and the staffs began developing a charter for the proposed center.

Former Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney signed DOD Directive 5200.34[10] in November 1992, establishing the George C. Marshall European Center for Security Studies as an element of EUCOM under the authority, direction and control of the EUCOM commander. The Marshall Center became a German-American partnership when a memorandum of agreement was signed on December 2, 1994, between headquarters EUCOM and the German Ministry of Defense.

EUCOM Commander Gen. John M. Shalikashvili hosted the June 5, 1993 ceremony officially dedicating the Marshall Center in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany. The center was given the charter of stabilizing and thereby strengthening post-Cold War Europe. Secretary of Defense Les Aspin and German Minister of Defense Volker Rühe were the keynote speakers.

The facilities of the Marshall Center encompass the Sheridan Kaserne and Artillery, formerly the Krafft von Dellmensingen Kaserne. Sheridan Kaserne, originally named Jaeger Kaserne, was built in 1937 to house German military (Wehrmacht) troops. The U.S. Army first used the installation in 1945 as a prisoner-of-war camp for officers. The headquarters of the First Mountain Division of the new German Army was located on the Kasernes from 1960 to 1992.[11] The installation became home to the Garmisch U.S. military community, the headquarters of the Armed Forces Recreation Center and the former U.S. Army Russia Institute (USARI) in May 1964. In June 1992, the USARI facilities transferred to the newly formed George C. Marshall European Center for Security Studies. [12]

College of International and Security Studies

The Marshall Center’s College of International and Security Studies offers 12 resident courses that examine transnational, regional and international security issues. Due to the COVID Pandemic, the Marshall Center also now offers virtual events. The Marshall Center Website lists resident, outreach and alumni events. [13]

The Marshall Center works to support and expand its network of more than 14,000 alumni from 157 nations through dialogue and information exchange, continuing professional development opportunities, and collaboration with graduates who seek to uphold its ideals and vision. This network is supported through a program including in-country events, web-based professional involvement and opportunities for selected graduates.

Graduates have access to many resources via the Marshall Center’s alumni portal "GlobalNET." This password-protected website includes access to many commercial databases of periodical and scholarly journal articles. The alumni portal also makes graduate essays and papers available, hosts discussion forums about the key security challenges of the day, and links to other materials of topical interest to alumni. The portal also provides a searchable directory of alumni maintained by the Graduate Support Program as a networking tool for security professionals. In addition, the GlobalNET portal hosts all the Marshall Center resident course programs and content.

Special opportunities for selected graduates include the opportunity for practitioners or experts in specific security fields to return to Garmisch as part of a one-week Community of Interest event, to focus and collaborate with other graduates in their specific areas of expertise. Additionally, graduates with exceptional scholarly and writing skills can return for up to five weeks as a Marshall Center Scholar to conduct research under the sponsorship of Marshall Center faculty.

Non-Resident Programs

Through its outreach and nonresident programs, the Marshall Center is able to extend programs on critical security and defense issues to the widest possible audiences within partner nations, including those who may not be able to attend resident courses in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, and respond to requests for special focused events. The Marshall Center plans, develops and conducts more than 75 outreach activities a year.

Conferences and Workshops: The Marshall Center organizes approximately 30 conferences and workshops per year. These events, typically three to four working days in length, allow for focused sharing of information and viewpoints among experts and policymakers, leading to a summary report with concrete policy recommendations. Conferences and workshops are conducted in single nation or multinational regional formats either in Germany or at a location in a participating country.

Regional Education Team Seminars: Marshall Center faculty routinely conduct customized Regional Education Team Seminars (RETS) throughout the world, bringing Marshall Center expertise directly to partner nations in tailored, compressed form. RETS typically are 2-to-3-day packages of detailed, interactive events for audiences of 20 to 50 officials on requested topics of interest. Currently available packages include Counterterrorism/Countering Violent Extremism; Countering Corruption; Counternarcotics/Illicit Trafficking; Cyber Security; Policy and Strategy Development; Interagency Cooperation; Regional Cooperation; Civil-Military Relations; Peace Support Operations; NATO; Euro-Atlantic Security; Energy Security; Border Security; Civil Security and Emergency Response; Security Sector Capacity Building.

Speakers Bureau: Marshall Center faculty are available to speak on a wide range of contemporary security issues, such as regional security, peace and stability operations, terrorism, border security, combating organized crime and corruption, intelligence, international law, and defense transformation.

Other Programs

Also located at the Marshall Center are the Eurasian Foreign Area Officer Program (FAO) and the Partner Language Training Center Europe (PLTCE.)[14]

The FAO program prepares U.S. military officers and officers of allied nations to be leading regional experts and to serve in key political-military assignments throughout Eurasia. While each FAO executes a unique, tailored, individual training program, most FAOs can expect to spend 12–18 months living, working, and traveling in Eurasia, as well as participating in Marshall Center activities. After completing the program, FAOs will go on to serve in U.S. embassies in the region, on NATO and major U.S. theater command staffs, and on numerous operational missions throughout the world.

The PLTCE conducts classroom language instruction in more than 10 languages and dialects to U.S., NATO and Partnership for Peace military and civilian linguists. English classes are also offered to the international participants enrolled in the College’s resident programs. [15]

Additionally, the operations staff of the Partnership for Peace Consortium of Defense Academies and Security Studies Institutes[16] is located at the Marshall Center. This international organization is dedicated to strengthening defense and military education and research through enhanced institutional and national cooperation.

In cooperation with Bundeswehr University of Munich, the Marshall Center has introduced a Master of Arts in International Security Studies (MISS). [17]

Notable alumni

As part of its continuing engagement with alumni, the Marshall Center offers support for alumni-led activities, such as outreach networking events in capital cities across the region, which provide an opportunity for alumni to discuss important security issues in an inter-ministerial forum. As of January 2015, 255 graduates of Marshall Center resident programs are serving in the following positions: President - 1 (Atifete Jahjaga); Speakers of Parliament - 1; Minister - 8; Deputy Minister - 24; Chief of Defense - 8; Ambassador - 151; Member of Parliament - 62.

DSCA Regional Centers

The Marshall Center is one of five regionally-focused security studies organizations, all of which are managed by the Defense Security Cooperation Agency. [18] The other four are:

The Africa Center for Strategic Studies (ACSS) supports the development of U.S. strategic policy towards Africa by providing a variety of programs, fostering awareness of and dialogue on U.S. strategic priorities and African security issues, building trusting long-term relationships with African military and civilian leaders, assisting U.S. policy-makers in formulating effective African policy, and articulating African perspectives to U.S. policymakers

The Daniel K. Inouye Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies (APCSS) officially opened September 4, 1995, in Honolulu, Hawaii. The APCSS is a regional study, conference and research center with a non-warfighting mission to enhance Asia-Pacific security cooperation through programs of executive education, professional exchange and policy relevant research. The Center provides a focal point where national officials, decision makers and policy makers can gather to exchange ideas, explore pressing issues and achieve a greater understanding of the challenges that shape the security environment of the Asia-Pacific region.

The William J. Perry Center for Hemispheric Defense Studies (WJPC) is a U.S. Department of Defense institution for defense and security studies in the Western Hemisphere. Through courses, seminars, outreach, strategic dialogue, and focused research in support of policy objectives, the Perry Center works with senior civilian and military officials from the Americas to build strong, sustainable networks of security and defense leaders and institutions. In so doing, the Perry Center promotes greater understanding of U.S. policy, mutually supportive approaches to security challenges, and improved, sustainable institutional capacity.

The mission of the Near East South Asia Center for Strategic Studies (NESA) is to enhance stability in the Near East and in South Asia by providing an academic environment where strategic issues can be addressed, understanding deepened, partnerships fostered, defense-related decision-making improved, and cooperation strengthened among military and civilian leaders from the region and the United States.

See also

References

  1. ^ US DoD http://www.defenselink.mil
  2. ^ German MOD http://www.bundesregierung.de/Webs/Breg/EN/Federal-Government/Ministries/FederalMinistryOfDefence/federal-ministry-of-defence.html Archived 2009-03-18 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ https://www.marshallcenter.org/en
  4. ^ https://www.marshallcenter.org/en
  5. ^ https://www.marshallcenter.org/en
  6. ^ https://www.marshallcenter.org/en
  7. ^ Bavarian Military Community Garmisch http://www.garmisch.army.mil/ Archived 2009-05-16 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ U.S. Army Installation Management Command - Europe "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2009-04-17. Retrieved 2009-03-30.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  9. ^ U.S. European Command http://www.eucom.mil Archived 2011-02-11 at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ DoD Directive 5200.34 http://www.dtic.mil/whs/directives/corres/pdf/520041p.pdf
  11. ^ See de:1. Gebirgsdivision (Bundeswehr)
  12. ^ https://www.marshallcenter.org/en
  13. ^ https://www.marshallcenter.org/en
  14. ^ https://www.marshallcenter.org/en
  15. ^ https://www.marshallcenter.org/en
  16. ^ Partnership for Peace Consortium of Defense Academies and Security Studies Institutes http://www.pfpconsortium.org/
  17. ^ https://www.marshallcenter.org/en
  18. ^ https://www.marshallcenter.org/en