Colonel Timothy M Daniel, United States Army (Retired)
Tim Daniel is an independent consultant and the author of ShellTiers' business plan for North America. Colonel Daniel was a national security fellow at Harvard's JFK School of Government and received a master's degree in Public Administration from Webster University and a bachelor's degree in International Relations from the University of Wyoming.
Tim served in the United States Army for almost 28 years as a Corps of Engineers officer, commanding successfully at every level up to brigade level command, culminating his service as the chief, commanders planning group for the 50th Chief of Engineers, United States Army Corps of Engineers.
Tim was, in 2001, the first person named by a governor to be the state's homeland security advisor and later director of homeland security, a cabinet position he held from 2001 until December 2004.
Later he served as the chief of strategy and integration for the United States Army Corps of Engineers. His team developed recommendations for corporate-wide strategy and he coordinated programs for implementation, integration and strategic metric programs. Prior to that, Tim was a key member of a Booz Allen Hamilton strategy team responsible for developing strategic approaches to manage highly complex problems for the United States Special Operations Command and the Army Service Component Command to the United States Central Command.
Tim Daniel is an independent consultant and the author of ShellTiers' business plan for North America. Colonel Daniel was a national security fellow at Harvard's JFK School of Government and received a master's degree in Public Administration from Webster University and a bachelor's degree in International Relations from the University of Wyoming.
Tim served in the United States Army for almost 28 years as a Corps of Engineers officer, commanding successfully at every level up to brigade level command, culminating his service as the chief, commanders planning group for the 50th Chief of Engineers, United States Army Corps of Engineers.
Tim was, in 2001, the first person named by a governor to be the state’s homeland security advisor and later director of homeland security, a cabinet position he held from 2001 until December 2004.
Later he served as the chief of strategy and integration for the United States Army Corps of Engineers. His team developed recommendations for corporate-wide strategy and he coordinated programs for implementation, integration and strategic metric programs. Prior to that, Tim was a key member of a Booz Allen Hamilton strategy team responsible for developing strategic approaches to manage highly complex problems for the United States Special Operations Command and the Army Service Component Command to the United States Central Command.