News

Anthony Oettinger receives National Intelligence Medallion

Recognizes his role as Chairman of the Intelligence Science Board

Anthony G. Oettinger, Gordon McKay Research Professor of Applied Mathematics and Research Professor of Information Resources Policy at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS), received the National Intelligence Medallion "in recognition of outstanding service from August, 1997 to September, 2009 in support of the Director of National Intelligence as Chairman of the Intelligence Science Board. Dr. Oettinger's exemplary leadership and guidance led the Intelligence Science Board to conduct numerous forums and publish over 20 studies that significantly contributed to the Intelligence Community's knowledge, understanding, and decision making when addressing ofome of the Community's most pressing and complex problems."

Oettinger founded the Harvard Program on Information Resources Policy in 1972 to create useful knowledge, both competent and impartial, on controversial information matters. Toward this aim, the Program follows what still seems to be a unique process, with many ingredients. Among the essential ingredients is research support that comes both in small doses and from the widest variety of sources the Program can convince to contribute their money to its work; the idea is to be owned by everybody so as to be owned by nobody: no single sponsor can kill the Program just by withdrawing support.

From 1997 to 1998, he served on the Banking and Finance Sector Study Team that contributed to the report, Preliminary Research and Development Roadmap for Protecting and Assuring Critical National Infrastructures, issued by the President's Commission on Critical Infrastructure Protection and the Critical Infrastructure Assurance Office in July 1998. From 1996 to 1998 he was a member of the National Library of Medicine's Long Range Planning Panel on International Programs.

In the White House, Professor Oettinger was a consultant to the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board (1981-90), the National Security Council (1975-81), and the Office of Science and Technology (1961-73). He chaired the Massachusetts Cable Television Commission (1975-79) under Democratic governor Michael Dukakis, having been on it from its start in 1972 under Republican governor Francis Sargent. He founded the Computer Science and Engineering Board of the National Academy of Sciences and chaired it from 1967 to 1973. He was also on the Research Advisory Board of The Committee for Economic Development (1975-79) and a consultant to Arthur D. Little, Inc. (1956-80), as well as on the Scientific Advisory Group of the Defense Communications Agency (1979-90; now DISA, the Defense Information Systems Agency), on the Command, Control, Communications, and Intelligence Panel of the Naval Research Advisory Committee (1978-82), and a member of the Information Warfare panel of the Naval Studies Board of the National Academy of Sciences (1993-1995). From 1963 to 1967 he was an adviser to NASA's Apollo moon-landing program.

From 1966 to 1968 he was president of the Association for Computing Machinery. He is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the Association for Computing Machinery, and the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers, the last "for pioneering contributions to machine language translation, to information retrieval, and to the use of computers in education," contributions detailed in Early Years in Machine Translation: Memoirs and Biographies of Pioneers, edited by W. John Hutchins (John Benjamins Pub. Co., 2000) and in Makin' Numbers: Howard Aiken and the Computer, edited by I. Bernard Cohen and Gregory W. Welch (MIT Press, 1999).

Professor Oettinger wrote several chapters in The Information Resources Policy Handbook: Research for the Information Age, edited by Benjamin M. Compaine and William H. Read (MIT Press, 1999). With Martin Ernst and others he co-authored Mastering the Changing Information World (Ablex, 1993); with Carol Weinhaus, Behind the Telephone Debates (Ablex, 1988); and, with Paul Berman and William Read, High and Low Politics: Information Resources for the `80s (Ballinger, 1977). He is also the author ofAutomatic Language Translation: Lexical and Technical Aspects, of Run Computer Run: The Mythology of Educational Innovation,and of numerous papers on the uses of information technologies. His former students follow not only academic but also business, military, legal, and other careers.