As President and founder of The Scowcroft Group and one of the country's leading experts on international policy, Brent Scowcroft provides Group clients with unparalleled strategic advice and assistance in dealing in the international arena.
Brent Scowcroft has served as the National Security Advisor to both Presidents Ford and Bush. From 1982 to 1989, he was Vice Chairman of Kissinger Associates, Inc., an international consulting firm. In this capacity, he advised and assisted a wide range of U.S. and foreign corporate leaders on global joint venture opportunities, strategic planning, and risk assessment.
His prior extraordinary twenty-nine-year military career began with graduation from West Point and concluded at the rank of Lieutenant General following service as the Deputy National Security Advisor. Brent Scowcroft's Air Force service included Professor of Russian History at West Point; Assistant Air Attache in Belgrade, Yugoslavia; Head of the Political Science Department at the Air Force Academy; Air Force Long Range Plans; Office of the Secretary of Defense International Security Assistance; Special Assistant to the Director of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; and Military Assistant to President Nixon.
Out of uniform, Brent Scowcroft continued in a public policy capacity by serving on the President's Advisory Committee on Arms Control, the Commission on Strategic Forces, and the President's Special Review Board, also known as the Tower Commission.
He currently serves on numerous corporate and nonprofit boards. He earned his masters and doctorate in international relations from Columbia University.
• Political and Business Risk Assessment of Target Markets
• Market Entry Strategy and Business Venture Structure Development
• Identification of Potential Sources of Capital
• Identification and Vetting of Potential Joint Venture Partners
• Local and International
• Management of Regulatory and Taxation Issues
• Access to International Government Agencies and Overseas Private Parties
• Resolution of Investment and Operational Challenges