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Perry M. Ratliff

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Perry Michael Ratliff is an officer of the United States Navy and a former Director of Naval Intelligence. Since retiring from active duty with the Navy, he served as Executive Director of the American Civic Literacy Program, and, since 2004, first as Executive Director and then President of the Jack Miller Center (http://www.jackmillercenter.org/about-us/staff/), a non-profit educational foundation (see below).

Education

Ratliff graduated from Towson University in 1968. He was a Fulbright Scholar([1])at the London School of Economics, as well as a Woodrow Wilson Fellow at the Johns Hopkins University. In 1997 he was a Capstone fellow at the National Defense University. Towson University has honored Rear Admiral Ratliff as both a distinguished graduate and with a Doctor of Letters degree.

Initial training

"Mike" Ratliff enlisted in the Naval Reserve while a graduate student at Johns Hopkins University in July 1969. Upon completion of his study as a Woodrow Wilson Fellow he reported for active duty to Officer Candidate School in Newport, Rhode Island. He was commissioned an ensign and designated an intelligence officer in March 1971.

Tours

His initial operational assignment was on board William C. Lawe (DD-763) in the Indian Ocean, South Atlantic, and Caribbean. He was subsequently assigned to the Fleet Intelligence Center, US Naval Forces Europe, and then reported to the Navy Field Operational Intelligence Office in Washington, D.C. In June 1977 he returned to sea with Commander, United States Sixth Fleet, on board Albany (CA-123). In 1979 he reported to the Commander-in-Chief Atlantic as a CINC briefer and team chief. He then was assigned to Monterey for nine months of Japanese language training en route to assignments in the Pacific. Initially he served with Commander United States Forces Japan, and then we he was assigned as N2, United States Third Fleet on board Coronado (AGF-11).

Returning to the Atlantic, Commander Ratliff was assigned as Director of Current Intelligence for the United States Atlantic Command. Following a year in the Pentagon on the staff of the Chief of Naval Operations, he returned to the Atlantic Command as Special Assistant to the J2.

In August 1992, upon promotion to the rank of Captain, he was assigned as Commanding Officer, Fleet Ocean Surveillance Information Facility, Rota, Spain. He subsequently returned to Washington D.C., where he was first Director of Intelligence within the Office of Naval Intelligence and then Executive Assistant to the Director of Naval Intelligence. Selected for Rear Admiral (lower half), he returned to the Asia-Pacific region as Director for Intelligence with the Commander-in-Chief, United States Pacific Command. In 1999 he returned to Washington, where he once again served on the Chief of Naval Operations (CNO) staff, this time as the 58th Director of Naval Intelligence.[1]

Present day

Ratliff is now President of the Jack Miller Center (JMC), located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, which provides support for university and college professors working to strengthen education in American history and institutions.[2] The JMC provides support to more than forty partner programs on campuses such as the University of Texas (http://www.utexas.edu/cola/centers/coretexts/about/center.php Jefferson Center for Core Texts) and Notre Dame (http://tocqueville.nd.edu/textpages/aboutus.html Tocqueville Program). This support includes over $5.3 million for postdoctoral fellowships, plus additional support for curricular programs, conferences, and lecture series, as well as over $4.5 million for faculty development fellowships to participate in JMC programs. For example, the Yale Center for the Study of Representative Institutions was launched on March 25, 2011 (see http://www.yaledailynews.com/news/2011/mar/28/new-center-traces-govt-origins/ Yale Daily News article by David Burt). Yale's announcement of the new program quotes Rear Admiral Ratliff (http://opac.yale.edu/news/article.aspx?id=8379 "Yale Launches Center for the Study of Representative Institutions A New Initiative in Constitutional History"): “The Center for the Study of Representative Institutions will provide a home at Yale for the study and teaching of the ideas and debates that have shaped America’s free institutions." In September 2011 the JMC launched a new program, the Constitution Day Initiative. Guided by a Steering Group including nationally respected academics such as Professors James Ceaser (University of Virginia), Daniel Lowenstein (UCLA), Thomas Pangle (University of Texas), Robert Faulkner (Boston college), and Andrew Delbanco (Columbia) this program highlights the importance of the study and teaching of American constitutional principles, values, and practices. During September - October 2011 27 colleges and universities participated in this initiative, including UCLA, Florida Atlantic University (http://www.fau.edu/jackmillerforum/constitution.php), Rhodes College in Tennessee, and Lake Forest College in Illinois(http://www.lakeforest.edu/live/events/470354-college-commemorates-constitution-day-with-debate). He and his wife, Gracia, live in the Brandywine Valley.

Awards

Ratliff's awards include the Legion of Merit (2 awards), Defense Meritorious Service Medal, and the Meritorious Service Medal (2 awards).

References

  1. ^ "Directors of Naval Intelligence - Lists of Commanding Officers and Senior Officials of the US Navy". history.navy.mil. Retrieved 25 October 2010.
  2. ^ "Jack Miller Center - About Us". jackmillercenter.org. Retrieved 25 October 2010.

This article contains information from the United States Federal Government as well as other public sources such as Yale University's Office of Public Affairs and Communications and is in the public domain.

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