Jeffrey D. Gordon

'''Jeffrey D. "J.D." Gordon''' (born October 24, 1967) is an American communications consultant and retired career United States Navy officer. He has worked with numerous conservative Washington, DC-based think tanks as a Senior Fellow on national security, foreign policy and communications issues. Gordon is also a contributing columnist to Fox News, AOL News, The Washington Times and other media outlets. According to The Washington Times, Gordon founded Protect America Today, a national security-themed Super PAC in February 2012.

Previously, he served as a spokesman for the Navy and for the Department of Defense in the Western Hemisphere, retiring as a Commander. He managed communications and press relations in a wide variety of conditions over a 20-year career, including posts in Europe, Latin America and Asia. As a spokesman for the Pentagon in his last assignment from 2005-2009, he dealt with sensitive issues related to the extrajudicial detention of captives since 2002 at the Navy's base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

Early life and education
Gordon was born in New York City in 1967, grew up in central New Jersey and graduated from Wall High School, located at the Jersey Shore. Gordon received his undergraduate and graduate education from Penn State University and Norwich University. He attended two executive courses at Harvard Law School's Program on Negotiation.

Naval career
After graduating college, he was commissioned as an officer in the Navy, and initially assigned to the Naval Amphibious Base Little Creek, Virginia. He had additional professional training at the U.S. Air Force Command and Staff College. Since the early 1990s, Gordon served as a Navy spokesman in various assignments and geographical locations, to include the Pacific Fleet Headquarters in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii; Naval Forces Southern Command in Roosevelt Roads, Puerto Rico; Naval Support Activity, Naples, Italy; Amphibious Force Seventh Fleet based in Okinawa, Japan; and Atlantic Fleet headquarters in Norfolk, Virginia.

In 1994, Gordon served at Guantanamo Bay as the Naval Base spokesman for the Haitian and Cuban refugee crises. Later that year, he deployed to Haiti with the Multi-National Force for the restoration of President Jean Bertrand Aristide to power.

While based in Puerto Rico from 1999 to 2001, Gordon served as a spokesman for the Atlantic Fleet during controversy associated with its training range on Vieques Island. It had been occupied by protestors who were trying to force the Navy to leave. It had used the range in support of decades of major fleet exercises. Gordon also served in Navy Office of Information (CHINFO) as the director of public affairs plans.

In 2005, he transferred to the Office of the Secretary of Defense, where he served as the Pentagon spokesman for the Western Hemisphere, first under Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and later Secretary Robert Gates. In this period, notable issues were related to the extrajudicial detention of captives in the Guantanamo Bay detention camps in Cuba as well as increasing U.S. tensions with Venezuela under Hugo Chavez, and increasing cooperation between the U.S. and Mexico against drug cartels.

Gordon contributed to developing Defense Department policies related to the use of social networking services and sites such as YouTube by military personnel, which DoD prohibits. He served as the spokesman to explain DoD's position on these issues.

On October 2, 2007, Gordon explained why the Defense Department continued to hold certain detainees at Guantanamo, although they had been cleared for release. He touched on the need to ensure that receiving countries treated them properly.

On July 21, 2009, Gordon told CNN's Peter Bergen that one in seven detainees are confirmed or suspected of having returned to terrorism.

Gordon retired from the Navy as a Commander.

Complaint with The Miami Herald
In his position as Pentagon spokesman, on July 25, 2009 Gordon wrote to a senior editor at The Miami Herald, reporting what he characterized as sexual harassment by its reporter Carol Rosenberg, whose beat is the Guantanamo detention camp. He said that Rosenberg had made crude jokes at his expense. The Miami Herald conducted an internal investigation, and reported on August 3, 2009 that it had concluded that, while Rosenberg had used profanity, she had not satisfied conditions of sexual harassment.

Gordon returned to the issue a year later in a column written for Fox News on August 9, 2010. In discussing the Pentagon having banned four reporters from Guantanamo, including Rosenberg, he said that Rosenberg was "notorious for clashes" and claimed she used language to him "...that would make even Helen Thomas blush", referring to a prominent reporter at the White House. By October 2011, when Gordon was serving as the chief spokesman for Herman M. Cain in his presidential campaign and was asked about the Rosenberg incident, he asserted he could no longer remember the details of his complaint against the reporter. On October 31, 2011 The Atlantic Wire repeated Gordon's 2009 claim: "I've been abused worse than the detainees have been abused" and compared it with his blithe dismissal of complaints at the time about sexual harassment allegation against his boss, presidential candidate Herman Cain.

Political activities
After the Navy, Gordon began his work in politics as a senior communications adviser to the Liberty & Freedom Foundation, where he worked to organize and handle communications for public speaking events by former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin in Florida and California during the 2010 Congressional campaign cycle. At the time, Palin's speaking tour was the focus of intense national media attention, and credited by many with the Republican landslide in Congress, where it recaptured the majority from the Democrats.

In 2011, Gordon became Vice President of Communications and Chief Foreign Policy and Security Adviser for the 2012 Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain. Grace Wiler of Business Insider described Gordon's dual role as both campaign spokesman and foreign policy adviser as further evidence that Cain had "completely thrown out the conventional campaign playbook." From its analysis of Gordon's columns and television appearances prior to the campaign, The Nation magazine wrote, "it would appear that Cain is getting the same national security advice he would from Dick Cheney."

After the Cain campaign ended, Gordon returned to his role as a Senior Fellow and adviser to several Washington, DC based think tanks, as well as conservative columnist and television commentator.

In February 2012, he founded a national security-themed Super PAC, Protect America Today. Throughout the duration of the 2012 Presidential campaign, Gordon ran political ads in eight states to "Save 1 million jobs", a reference to stopping further cuts to defense spending, including sequestration. Winning candidates backed by Gordon included Sen. Dean Heller (R-NV), House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH), Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL), Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart (R-FL) and Rep. Steve Daines (R-MT).