Bradd C. Hayes

 

Professor Bradd C. Hayes is a Senior Strategic Researcher in the Warfare Analysis and Research Department of the Center for Naval Warfare Studies, Naval War College, Newport, RI.  A retired US Navy Captain, he served as the Deputy Director of the NWC’s Strategic Research Department from August 1992 to retirement in 1996.  Prior to assuming that position, he was the Strategy and Policy Officer for the Commander, US Naval Forces Europe, in London, from 1989 to 1992. While there, he served as a member of the Naval Force Capabilities Planning Effort that helped develop concepts eventually published in the Navy’s white paper....From the Sea. Previous appointments included command of Helicopter Anti-Submarine Squadron Six aboard USS Enterprise (1988-89), followed by a tour as a Federal Executive Fellow with the RAND Corporation in Santa Monica, CA, which culminated with the publication of a RAND Note entitled, Naval Rules of Engagement: Management Tools for Crisis.

 

His publications include Leveraging for Success in United Nations Peace Operations (with Jean Krasno and Donald C.F. Daniel,  Praeger, October 2003); a chapter in The Global Century, Volume I, edited by Richard L. Kugler and Ellen L. Frost (NDU Press, 2001), Coercive Inducement and the Containment of Crises (with Professor Don Daniel, United States Institute of Peace Press, 1999); Doing Windows: Non-traditional Military Responses to Complex Emergencies (with Jeffrey Sands, CCRP, 1998); Beyond Traditional Peacekeeping (an edited volume with Don Daniel, Macmillan Press Ltd (UK) and St. Martin’s Press (US) 1995); a chapter entitled “Securing Observance of UN Mandates Through the Employment of Military Force” (with Don Daniel) in The UN, Peace and Force edited by Michael Pugh (London: Frank Cass, 1997); “Non-Traditional Military Responses to End Wars: Considerations for Policymakers,” with Jeffrey Sands (Millennium: Journal of International Studies); “Keeping the Naval Service Relevant,” and “Calling a Duck a Duck” (US Naval Institute’s Proceedings magazine); “Institutionalizing Innovation: Objective or Oxymoron” (Naval War College Review); “Breathing Life Into the Naval Service’s New Direction,” with LtCol Larry Bockman (Marine Corps Gazette); a volume entitled The Politics of Naval Innovation (Center for Naval Warfare Studies); and, two monographs (The Future of Sea Power published by the US Army War College, and Securing Observance of UN Mandates Through the Employment of Military Forces, published by The Joan B. Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies at the University of Notre Dame, both with Professor Daniel).

 

He holds a BS (cum laude) in political science from the University of Utah and an MS (graduating with distinction) in National Security Affairs from the Naval Postgraduate School.  While at the Naval Postgraduate School, he was the first recipient of the US Naval Institute’s award for academic achievement.