Jump to content

Henry J. Hendrix

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Henry J. Hendrix
Born1966 (age 57–58)
Angola, Indiana
Service / branchU.S. Navy
Years of service1988-2014
RankCaptain (O-6)
Unit
  • Served as Director of the Naval History and Heritage Command
  • Previous Assignments:
  • Patrol Squadron TEN
  • USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN 71)
  • Staff of the Chief of Naval Operations
  • Staff of the Under Secretary of Defense
  • Director of the Secretary of the Navy's Advisory Panel
Websitewww.history.navy.mil

Henry J. Hendrix (born 1966) is a retired United States Navy captain. He has served as an American defense analyst, an official historian and curator of the Navy and an author.[1] His written work has focused on the composition of the United States Navy force, the structure of the Navy, the role of the aircraft carrier in modern strategic environments and the structure of the carrier air wing. He also publicly supported U.S. President Donald Trump's plan to build a 350-ship Navy.

Hendrix served as a senior military assistant to Andrew Marshall, and has been named as a possible candidate for the offices of Undersecretary of the Navy and director of the United States Department of Defense Office of Net Assessment.[2]

Education

[edit]

After Hendrix graduated from Purdue University in 1988 with a bachelor's degree in political science, he earned a master's degrees in national security affairs from the Naval Postgraduate School and history from Harvard University. He later earned a PhD in war studies from King's College.[3]

[edit]

Hendrix joined the United States Navy in 1988 as a commissioned officer. A year later, he completed flight training to become a naval flight officer and was stationed with VP-10 (Patrol Squadron 10), which was deployed to the Mediterranean, Red Sea, North Atlantic, and Caribbean. In 1994, he joined the USS Theodore Roosevelt as a tactical action officer and was deployed to the Mediterranean and Persian Gulf. In 1997 Hendrix served as Fleet Training Officer for VP-30 (Patrol Squadron 30), where he supervised the Aircraft Improvement Program. He then took command of Tactical Air Control Squadron 11 and was deployed again to the Gulf.[4]

As a staff officer, Hendrix worked on the Chief of Naval Operations executive panel on homeland defense, naval aviation, and naval missile defense. He also served as the Executive Secretary for the Irregular Warfare Quadrennial Defense Review at the Office of the Undersecretary of Defense for Policy. He worked as an assistant to Andrew Marshall in the Office of Net Assessment, advising on future developments in military technology, He was later named director of the Secretary of the Navy's advisory panel.[5]

At the time of his retirement in 2014, Hendrix was the director of the Naval History and Heritage Command and the official curator of the Navy, responsible for the Navy's museums, arts and artifact collections, document archives and for collecting U.S. Naval history worldwide.[6]

Post-Military Career

[edit]

After retirement from the Navy, Hendrix worked at the Center for a New American Security, where he was a senior fellow and director of the defense program. He testified before the United States Senate Armed Services Subcommittee on Seapower about strategies for achieving U.S. President Donald Trump's plan for a 350-ship Navy.[7]

He is currently the vice president of the Telemus Group, a security consultancy specializing in defense forecasting, wargaming and qualitative analysis.[8]

Hendrix's career as an officer and Navy historian positioned him to become a military thought leader and analyst, contributing to publications and media outlets including the National Review, Foreign Policy, the National Interest, Fox News, the New York Observer, the Japan Times, Politico, as well as a number of national defense websites.[9] He collaborated with Robert C. O'Brien, who served as a United States National Security Advisor, on a foreign policy article analyzing how President Trump's goal for restoring the U.S. Navy ship force could be achieved.[10] In 2018 he co-authored an essay with Senator Roger Wicker examining the central role of naval forces in U.S. foreign policy.[11]

In 2020 Hendrix published a short treatise on naval strategy “To Provide and Maintain a Navy: Why Naval Primacy is America’s First, Best Strategy” [12] that made historical as well as philosophical arguments for growing the American fleet and changing its internal force mix. The book was positively received by several profession journals and was named “book of the quarter” by the Naval Review.[13]

Dr. Hendrix consistently advocates for a "high-low" naval procurement policy that balances high-tech capabilities with lower cost, lower maintenance ships, aircraft, and weapons systems to ensure the military can respond to different grades of threats.[14]

In the past he has taken a critical position on aircraft carriers due to what he sees as a high expense and questionable survivability in modern strategic environments.[15][16] He proposes modifying the structure of the carrier air wing to include more unmanned aerial vehicles, which he believes essential to countering modern threats.[17]

Hendrix is known for supporting an increase in the number and capabilities of strategic bombers under the theory that a large and effective fleet of bombers has historically reduced the total length of wars, can force rivals to invest in air defenses and can also act as a powerful deterrent.[18]

His support for this policy is in part derived from his work on Theodore Roosevelt's use of naval power as a tool for diplomacy, which points to the conclusion that Roosevelt's naval strategy laid the foundation for establishing the United States as a great world power.[19] He is a proponent of Roosevelt's Big Stick diplomacy, and views a larger Navy and strategic bombers as the means to carry on this tradition in the 21st century, and thus maintain the United States' status as a dominant superpower.

Published works

[edit]

Selected articles, reviews, and commentary

[edit]
  • An Extraordinary Thing in a Routine Way, Foundation Journal, Fall 1999
  • Fulcrum of Greatness, in Naval History Magazine, Naval Institute Press, December, 2002
  • One Hundred Years Ago,: T.R.. Averts Crises, in Proceedings, Naval Institute Press, December, 2002
  • Exploit Sea Basing, in Proceedings, Naval Institute Press, Aug, 2003
  • T.R.'s Virtuoso Performance in American History Magazine, Primedia Press, Feb. 2004
  • Active-Reserve Integration or Bust with CDR D.D. Centanni in Proceedings, Naval Institute Press, Dec, 2004
  • Drain the Entire Swamp, in Proceedings, Naval Institute Press, April, 2005
  • An Unlikely Location, in Naval History Magazine, Naval Institute Press, Aug, 2005
  • Control of the Sea Protects the New Global Heartland, in Proceedings, Naval Institute Press, April, 2006
  • TR's Plan to Invade Colombia, in Naval History Magazine, Naval Institute Press, Dec. 2006
  • Carried Away, in Armed Forces Journal, Defense News Media Group, Mar. 2008
  • Buy Ford, Not Ferrari, in Proceedings, Naval Institute Press, April 2009
  • More Henderson, Less Bonds, in Proceedings, Naval Institute Press, April, 2010
  • An Influential 'Shaping' Navy, in Proceedings, Naval Institute Press, Feb., 2011
  • Twilight of the $uperfluous Carrier, in Proceedings, Naval Institute Press, May, 2011
  • Hendrix, Henry J. (March 2013). At What Cost A Carrier? (PDF). Disruptive Defense Papers. Center for New American Security. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 August 2014. Retrieved 4 December 2020.
  • in The National Interest, April 2018
  • To Provide and Maintain a Navy: Why Naval Primacy Is America's First, Best Strategy” Focsle Press, Annapolis, 2020

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Henry J. Hendrix, II Former Director, Naval History and Heritage Command". Retrieved 29 May 2021.
  2. ^ "why-jerry-hendrix-should-be-the-next-navy-undersecretary-21660". 25 July 2017. Retrieved 29 May 2021.
  3. ^ "Henry J. Hendrix, II Former Director, Naval History and Heritage Command". Retrieved 29 May 2021.
  4. ^ "On the Occasion of the Retirement of Capt. Henry Hendrix". Retrieved 29 May 2021.
  5. ^ "Dr. Jerry Hendrix". Center for a New American Security.
  6. ^ "Henry J. Hendrix, II Former Director, Naval History and Heritage Command". Retrieved 29 May 2021.
  7. ^ "Testimony of Dr. Jerry Hendrix PhD Senior Fellow and Director Defense Strategies and Assessments Program Center for a New American Security 25 July 2017" (PDF). Retrieved 29 May 2021.
  8. ^ "Telemus Group". Retrieved 29 May 2021.
  9. ^ "Jerry Hendrix Articles". Retrieved 29 May 2021.
  10. ^ "How Trump Can Build a 350-Ship Navy". Politico. Retrieved 29 May 2021.
  11. ^ "How to Make the US Navy Great Again". 18 April 2018. Retrieved 29 May 2021.
  12. ^ Hendrix, Henry J. (December 2020). To Provide and Maintain a Navy: Why Naval Primacy Is America's First, Best Strategy. Focsle Lld.
  13. ^ "To Provide and Maintain a Navy: Why Naval Primacy Is America's First, Best Strategy". Retrieved 30 May 2021.
  14. ^ "McCain's Excellent White Paper: Smaller Carriers, High-Low Weapons Mix, Frigates, Cheap Fighters". 18 January 2017. Retrieved 30 May 2021.
  15. ^ "Twilight of the $UPERfluous Carrier". May 2011. Retrieved 30 May 2021.
  16. ^ "At What Cost a Carrier" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2 June 2021. Retrieved 30 May 2021.
  17. ^ "Retreat from Range: The Rise and Fall of Carrier Aviation" (PDF). Retrieved 30 May 2021.
  18. ^ "Higher, Heavier, Farther, and Now Undetectable? Bombers: Long-Range Force Projection in the 21st Century" (PDF). Retrieved 30 May 2021.
  19. ^ Hendrix, Henry J. (July 2009). Theodore Roosevelt's Naval Diplomacy: The U.S. Navy and the Birth of the American Century. Naval Institute Press.