skip to main content
Article Podcast Report Summary Quick Look Video Newsfeed triangle plus sign dropdown arrow Case Study All Search Facebook LinkedIn YouTube

Search Results

Your search for Jerry Meyerle found 13 results.

CNA HONORS JERRY MEYERLE FOR EXCEPTIONAL CONTRIBUTIONS TO US NATIONAL SECURITY
/our-media/press-releases/2023/08-2023
Dr. Jerry Meyerle receives the Phil E. DePoy Award for Analytical Excellence
Dr. Jerry Meyerle receives the Phil E. DePoy Award for Analytical Excellence /images/news/PressRelease.png CNA HONORS JERRY MEYERLE FOR EXCEPTIONAL CONTRIBUTIONS TO US NATIONAL SECURITY  CNA has just honored Dr. Jerry Meyerle with the Phil E. DePoy Award for Analytical Excellence. Dr. Meyerle, a CNA principal research scientist, has helped shape Marine Corps preparations for counterinsurgency ... , a former CNA president. Prior recipients include Dr. Jason Thomas, director of CNA’s Operational Warfighting Division, who nominated Meyerle for this year’s award. “Jerry consistently tackles our
cna talks: DePoy Award Winner: Jerry Meyerle
/our-media/podcasts/cna-talks/2023/08/depoy-award-winner-jerry-meyerle
CNA’s Phil E. DePoy Award recognizes analytic excellence, harmonious relations with colleagues and clients, and dedication to this organization. The ideal candidate produces consistently superb analysis, communicates effectively to expert and lay audiences alike, leads teams well, and influences the thinking and decisions of sponsors through their work. In this episode, this year’s winner, Jerry Meyerle, joins the podcast to discuss his deployment to Afghanistan, his work's impact, and advise new CNA analysts.
DePoy Award Winner: Jerry Meyerle CNA’s Phil E. DePoy Award recognizes analytic excellence, harmonious relations with colleagues and clients, and dedication to this organization. The ideal candidate ... . In this episode, this year’s winner, Jerry Meyerle, joins the podcast to discuss his deployment to Afghanistan, his work's impact, and advise new CNA analysts. DePoy Award Winner: Jerry Meyerle Jerry Meyerle is a Principal Research Scientist with CNA’s Fleet Plans and Requirements Program and an expert in military operations, defense policy and posture, strategic planning, and combatant commands
Jerry Meyerle
/our-experts/meyerle-jerry
Meyerle-Jerry /images/Experts/Meyerle-Gerald.jpg Jerry Meyerle is an expert in military operations and warfighting, defense policy and posture, strategic planning, and combatant commands. A CNA analyst since 2007, he has led complex and important research projects for Congress, the Office of the Secretary of Defense, the Joint Staff, Navy, and Marine Corps. Meyerle has served as a CNA field ... Degree in international relations and his Bachelor’s Degree in English literature from the University of Virginia.   Jerry Meyerle PH.D. Principal Research Scientist Featured Squares white Explore
Implications of the U.S. Withdrawal from Afghanistan
/our-media/indepth/2021/10/implications-of-us-withdrawal-from-afghanistan
The end of the Afghan conflict—and the manner in which it ended—is significant, but it will take time for its implications to come into focus.
Implications of US Withdrawal from Afghanistan The end of the Afghan conflict—and the manner in which it ended—is significant, but it will take time for its implications to come into focus. /images/InDepth/Post102.jpg Implications of the U.S. Withdrawal from Afghanistan 102 Jerry Meyerle Jerry Meyerle is a principal research scientist in Countering Threats and Challenges at CNA. He is an expert on military strategy, defense policy, irregular warfare, and the Middle East and South Asia. U.S. forces are gone from Afghanistan after 20 years of counterinsurgency and nation-building
U.S. Forces are Weathering the COVID-19 Crisis — So Far
/our-media/indepth/2020/08/u.s.-forces-are-weathering-the-covid-19-crisis-so-far
Though the pandemic has upended organizations of all sizes across the globe, the U.S. military and its supporting agencies have proven surprisingly resilient.
U.S. Forces are Weathering the COVID-19 Crisis - So Far Though the pandemic has upended organizations of all sizes across the globe, the U.S. military and its supporting agencies have proven surprisingly resilient. /images/InDepth/Post60.jpg U.S. Forces are Weathering the COVID-19 Crisis — So Far 60 Jerry Meyerle Jerry Meyerle is a principal research scientist at CNA's Countering Threats and Challenges division. He is an expert on military strategy, defense policy, irregular warfare, and the Middle East and South Asia. He served four years as an advisor to U.S. Central Command, which
Summary Report US UK Integration in Helmand
/reports/2016/summary-report-us-uk-integration-in-helmand
The Commander, U.S. Marine Corps Forces Central Command (COMUSMARCENT) asked CNA, working in partnership with the UK’s Permanent Joint Force Headquarters (PJHQ), to capture insights from U.S.-UK staff integration in Afghanistan. A combined U.S.-UK study team was created, consisting of three CNA analysts from the United States, two UK military officers from PJHQ, and a scientist from the Defence Science and Technology Laboratory. The study team used a hybrid analytic approach involving interviews of U.S. and UK military officers and other subject matter experts, combined with analysis of previous studies and references pertaining to U.S. and UK military operations and integration of forces.
/centers-and-divisions/cna/sppp/countering-threats-and-challenges Unlimited distribution. Specific authority: N00014-11-D-0323. 32 DOP-2015-U-011259-Final Catherine Norman Jerry Meyerle
Independent Assessment of the Afghan National Security Forces
/reports/2014/independent-assessment-of-the-afghan-national-security-forces
This assessment, tasked by the United States Congress, was made by analysts in CNA’s Center for Strategic Studies. Dr. Jonathan Schroden led this work, and many CNA analysts con- tributed to the results. Their names are on the cover. The CNA analysts involved in this assess- ment have considerable experience with Afghanistan’s security situation, many having been assigned in Afghanistan and having worked with United States, NATO, and Afghan security forces, and knowing the local language. The Center for Strategic Studies engages in analysis of security matters of many kinds in all parts of the world. We have significant expertise in the Middle East, Asia, Africa, and Latin America. On-the-ground experience, knowledge of local languages, and use of local primary source data to produce empirically-based analyses are hallmarks of our regional work. This report contains the best opinion of CNA at the time of issue. It does not necessarily represent the opinion of the Sponsor, the Secretary of Defense.
DRM-2014-U-006815-final Mark Rosen Daniella Mak Nicholas Hutchinson Mary Ellen Connell Nilanthi Samaranayake Sarah Vogler Michael Markowitz Jim Gavrilis Michael Connell Catherine Norman Jerry Meyerle
Were the Afghan National Security Forces Successful
/reports/2014/were-the-afghan-national-security-forces-successful
With all of the recent developments pertaining to a possible bilateral security agreement (BSA) regarding future troop presence and military cooperation between the United States and Afghanistan, another important aspect of the future of Afghanistan has gotten much less attention. The Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) just finished their first year of being fully in the lead for providing security in Afghanistan, with the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in support. With 2013 behind us, it is time to take stock of how the ANSF performed.
/centers-and-divisions/cna/sppp/countering-threats-and-challenges This occasional paper is cleared for public release, distribution unlimited.  20 DOP-2014-U-006817-final Catherine Norman Jerry Meyerle
Risky Business
/reports/2014/risky-business
Since 9/11, the United States has invested billions of dollars in training and equipping foreign security forces to fight terrorist and insurgent groups abroad. Despite considerable effort and expense (including thousands of U.S. lives lost), raising military and police forces in places such as Afghanistan, Iraq, and Mali has yielded decidedly lackluster results. As a result, there is growing recognition that the application of traditional security sector reform efforts to combat asymmetric threats such as terrorist groups in fragile or failed states is proving to be slow, cumbersome, and in some instances counterproductive. Moreover, in an era of shrinking defense budgets, a purely top-down, state-centric approach has become too costly and politically contentious to sustain on a large scale.
they previously had little or no presence. Such groups also tended to deplete the potential recruiting pool for insurgent groups and terrorists. Patricio Asfura-Heim Jerry Meyerle
Unconventional Warfare and Counterinsurgency in Pakistan
/reports/2012/unconventional-warfare-and-counterinsurgency-in-pakistan
Much has changed in the government’s thinking over the last 11 years. Yet the transition remains largely hesitant and partial. U.S. and NATO forces are pulling back from Afghanistan, and the Taliban is poised to regain at least some of its former power. At the same time, India has modernized its military and strengthened its alliances with the western powers. These trends create strong incentives for the military to, at the very least, retain the unconventional warfare option. The challenge for the Unites States going forward will be to ensure that Pakistan continues to move in the right direction and does not revert back to its earlier policies.
operations against them in the last 10 years. It concludes with implications for the draw-down of Western forces in Afghanistan. Jerry Meyerle /reports/2012/drp-2012-u-003250-final%20%281%29.pdf