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Biden Administration International Affairs Personnel Tracker
Kathleen Hicks
Deputy Secretary of Defense
On This Page
Dr. Kathleen Hicks left her position as the senior vice president, Henry A. Kissinger Chair, and director of the International Security Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, which she held since 2013, to join the Biden-Harris administration. She formerly served as the Principal Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Policy under the Obama administration from 2012-2013. Dr. Hicks served as the Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Policy from 2009-2012. Before serving in the Obama administration, Dr. Hicks was a Senior Fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. On February 8, 2021, Dr. Hicks was confirmed by the Senate Armed Services Committee as the Deputy Secretary of Defense.
Views On China
Dr. Hicks is the first Senate-confirmed woman as the Deputy Secretary of Defense. She will be succeeding the post following the departure of David Norquist. Dr. Hicks is described as a “trusted advisor to President-elect Joe Biden with decades of national security and foreign policy experience” and she led the Biden-Harris Transition’s Defense Agency Review Team. During her tenure under the Obama administration, Dr. Hicks helped implement the Pivot to Asia strategy at the Pentagon. During her time at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, Dr. Hicks wrote substantially for the Counter-Coercion Series which focused on maritime security issues in the East and South China Sea. POLITICO commented that her nomination was “also is a reassuring sign to members of the national security community who have sounded the alarm over Austin’s lack of experience in countering China, which they believe is the Pentagon’s most urgent challenge.”
Dr. Hicks sees China’s rising military capability as a direct challenge to the United States. In her testimony before the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission regarding PLA modernization and implications for the United States and beyond, Dr. Hicks described the challenge as “With a decided lack of transparency in its investments and intentions, alongside a manifest series of coercive and, at times, extralegal actions in the cyber, air, and maritime domains, China has largely demonstrated a will to compete rather than cooperate. In the defense realm, the same can be fairly said of the United States.”
Most Recent Actions
- As Deputy Secretary of Defense, Hicks will be working with Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin to “operationalize” the strategy to counter what the U.S. Department of Defense defined as the “pacing challenge” posed by China and the increased perceived threat from a “resurgent” Russia.
- On February 17, 2021, Hicks issued an instruction to order the DoD’s Director of Cost Assessment and Program Evaluation (CAPE) to evaluate long-range fires, low yield nuclear weapons, and aviation programs like the KC-46 tanker, the F-35 Lighting II Joint Strike Fighter, and the MQ-9 Reaper as the DoD reevaluates the FY2022 President’s Budget requiest.
- On February 4, 2021, President Joe Biden has tasked the Department of Defense to conduct a global posture review, which “will examine the U.S. military’s footprint, resource and strategy.” Hicks is reported to be overseeing the global posture review to “help translate the rhetoric of strategic competition into the reality of execution.”
- It was reported on March 11, 2021 that Hicks will also establish a new council to tackle a host of workforce challenges from diversity to extremism.
- “We look at China as the nation or the entity that is growing its capabilities to a degree that really challenges the U.S. ability to defend its interests. It means China is the country against which we have to think and plan our capabilities because they are the most advanced.” – March 23, 2021, Washington DC
- “Pacing a China challenge doesn’t mean necessarily a symmetrical ship-for-ship count approach. We look at how they are modernizing … and we have to pace our capabilities to overcome those challenges.”- March 23, 2021, Washington DC
- “Armed conflict between the United States and China is not desirable, and it is not inevitable. The U.S. military plays a critical role in preventing that outcome. Even as we stand ready today, we must modernize our concepts, capabilities, workforce and budget for deterrence to endure.” – February 2, 2021, Washington DC
Archive
Media
- U.S. DoD News, Deputy Defense Secretary Sees Challenges, Opportunities for DOD, March 23, 2021
- POLITICO, Hicks to establish ‘workforce council’, March 11, 2021
In Her Own Words
- U.S. DoD News, Hicks: Governance Differences Between U.S., China Are in Sharp Focus, March 19, 2021
Media
- U.S. DoD News, Hicks Takes Reins as Deputy Secretary of Defense, February 9, 2021
- U.S. DoD News, Deputy Secretary of Defense Nominee Emphasizes Reform, Modernization, February 2, 2021
In Her Own Words
- Senate Armed Service Committee, Hearing on the Nomination of the Honorable Kathleen H. Hicks to be Deputy Secretary of State, February 2, 2021
Media
- Kathleen Hicks is Biden’s pick to be first female deputy Defense secretary, POLITICO, December 30, 2020
- Biden Picks First Woman to Serve as Deputy Defense Secretary, Bloomberg, December 30, 2020
- Biden taps Obama veterans Kathleen Hicks and Colin Kahl for top Pentagon roles, Axios, December 30, 2020
In Her Own Words
- Interview – Kathleen Hicks, E-International Relations, November 6, 2014
- Countering Coercion in Maritime Asia: The Theory and Practice of Gray Zone Deterrence, Center for Intelligence and Strategic Studies report, May, 2017
- Testimony before the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission: PLA Modernization and Implications for the United States and Beyond, February 15, 2018
- Can China’s Military Win the Tech War?: How the United States Should—and Should Not—Counter Beijing’s Civil-Military Fusion, Foreign Affairs, July 29, 2020
Page Last Updated: April 12, 2021
*None of the personnel in this tracker are associated with the Institute for China-America Studies. All images used on this page are sourced from the official Biden-Harris transition website buildbackbetter.gov or the public domain.*