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New Atlanticist

Jul 10, 2018

NATO’s 2 percent guideline: What about the United States?

By Steven Grundman

At the NATO summit four years ago, the allies declared their commitment to “reverse the trend of declining defense budgets, to make the most effective use of our funds and to further a more balanced sharing of costs and responsibilities.” To that end, the heads of state and government gathered in Wales that summer recommitted themselves […]

NATO Security & Defense

Defense Industrialist

Oct 28, 2017

Aerospace revelations: What could possibly go wrong?

By Steven Grundman

The Four Horsemen in the Book of Revelations, let us recall, are no cowpokes but terrible harbingers of the end of times, each marked by the color of the horse he rides to summon a hardship which by degrees is more cataclysmic than the last. Holding that allusion in mind, I use the seasonal tradition of AerospaceDefenseChain to harvest my critical thinking about the things that could possibly go wrong and turn to doom and dust today’s happy outlook on the second century of aerospace. Put differently, “How could we screw this up?”

Defense Industry Economy & Business

Defense Industrialist

Aug 17, 2017

Can defense industrialists work with Trump?

By James Hasik

Whatever opprobrium the president is owed, his administration’s more important initiatives deserve attention. Donald Trump’s twin business advisory panels have collapsed. Members of both the Manufacturing Council and the Strategy & Policy Forum had been resigning quickly, and according to today’s Wall Street Journal—“CEOs Scrap Trump Panels”—they voted yesterday just to disband. At first, the president […]

Defense Industry Economy & Business

Steven Grundman is a senior fellow with the Forward Defense practice of the Atlantic Council’s Scowcroft Center for Strategy and Security. His practice addresses over-the-horizon challenges facing the transatlantic defense establishment, its militaries, ministries, and industries.

Mr. Grundman is also the principal of Grundman Advisory, a professional services company that guides strategic management in public, private, and nonprofit organizations. Before founding that firm, Mr. Grundman was a vice president at Charles River Associates (CRA), a global business consultancy, where he was director of Aerospace and Defense Consulting and of Transportation Consulting. Mr. Grundman had general management responsibility for building the company’s multimillion dollar line of business with aerospace and defense companies and for sustaining its world-class brand in travel demand forecasting. During his ten years at CRA, Mr. Grundman supervised over 170 engagements with dozens of companies in North America and Europe. The work contributed to clients’ regulatory strategies, corporate and business development initiatives, mergers and acquisitions, and investment choices. His tenure at CRA was distinguished by thought-leadership about the strategic challenges facing the A&D industry.

In the 1990s, Mr. Grundman served in a succession of appointments at the US Department of Defense culminating in his assignment as deputy under secretary for industrial affairs and installations. Mr. Grundman monitored critical industrial capabilities, evaluated corporate mergers and acquisitions, and served on the Defense Acquisition Board. He spearheaded the department’s initiative to better integrate the industrial bases of the United States and Europe, and coordinated the priority allocation of industrial resources in support of NATO’s operations in Kosovo. Mr. Grundman also led department-wide reforms aimed at competing commercial activities, eliminating inadequate military housing, and implementing the realignment and closure of military bases.

Earlier in his tenure at the Department of Defense, Mr. Grundman served as special assistant to William J. Lynn, the director of program analysis and evaluation. Mr. Grundman coordinated the political and legislative aspects of the directorate’s work and prepared its formal communications about the Future Years Defense Program to the Defense Resource Board, the public, Congress, and the White House. He also was a principal architect of the first Quadrennial Defense Review and of the Defense Reform Initiative.

Prior to these assignments, Mr. Grundman worked as the special assistant to Robert J. Murray, the president and CEO of the CNA Corporation, a Washington think tank, where he led a series of initiatives to transform the post-cold-war relevance of the company. Mr. Grundman served in the US Foreign Service at Ottawa, where he performed a variety of consular and diplomatic duties. He also was an officer in the US Army’s 1st Armored Division at Ansbach, West Germany, where he led a surveillance platoon and served as battalion adjutant.

He is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of the Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University and holds a master’s in public policy from the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.