David Isenberg is an independent, Washington-D.C. based analyst and writer on military, foreign policy, national and international security issues. He is an expert in U.S. defense policy , WMD proliferation, terrorism, homeland security, peace operations, the intelligence community, international arms trade, small arms proliferation, private military companies, biological weapons, and general arms control issues.
"Empty Promises: Why the Bush Administration's Half-Hearted Attempts at Defense Reform Have Failed," by David Isenberg and Ivan Eland, Policy Analysis no. 442, June 11, 2002.
"Imperial Overreach: Washington's Dubious Strategy to Overthrow Saddam Hussein," Policy Analysis no. 360, November 17, 1999.
"The Quadrennial Defense Review: Reiterating the Tired Status Quo," Policy Analysis no. 317, September 17, 1998.
"The Misleading Military "Readiness Crisis"," Foreign Policy Briefing no. 35, July 25, 1995.
"The Pentagon's Fraudulent Bottom-Up Review," Policy Analysis no. 206, April 21, 1994.
"Micromanaging Security Contractors," United Press International, September 5, 2008
"Contractor Oversight Is Improving," United Press International, August 29, 2008
"More Contractors in Iraq," United Press International, August 22, 2008
"Blackwater as Wal-Mart," Middle East Times, August 18, 2008
"Contractors vs. Genocide?," Middle East Times, August 8, 2008