Consultant

Mark Cancian (Colonel, USMCR, (Ret.) is a senior adviser with the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) International Security Program.  He joined CSIS in April 2015 from the Office of Management and Budget, where he spent more than seven years as chief of the Force Structure and Investment Division, working on issues such as Department of Defense budget strategy, war funding, and procurement programs, as well as nuclear weapons development and nonproliferation activities in the Department of Energy.  Previously, he worked on force structure and acquisition issues in the Office of the Secretary of Defense and ran research and executive programs at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government.  In the military, Colonel Cancian spent over three decades in the U.S. Marine Corps, active and reserve, serving as an infantry, artillery, and civil affairs officer and on overseas tours in Vietnam, Desert Storm, and Iraq (twice).  On his last tour in Iraq (2006-2007) he was the G-7 Assistant Chief of Staff for Assessments at the Marine headquarters in Al Anbar province.  In field units he had previously served successively as a platoon commander, company commander, infantry battalion S-3 and infantry battalion XO.  Since 2000, he has been an adjunct faculty member at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, where he teaches a course on the connection between policy and analysis. A prolific author, he has published over 40 articles on military operations, acquisition, budgets, and strategy and received numerous writing awards.  He graduated with high honors (magna cum laude) from Harvard College and with highest honors (Baker scholar) from Harvard Business School.

(Current as of May 2015)

Mark F. Cancian

Mark F. Cancian