
General Kenneth F. McKenzie, USMC (Ret.)
Principal
Former Commander, United States Central Command
General (Ret.) Kenneth F. “Frank” McKenzie, Jr. is a Principal at WestExec Advisors and the Executive Director of the University of South Florida’s Global and National Security Institute as well as the Florida Center for Cybersecurity, also known as Cyber Florida.
He has commanded at the platoon, company, battalion, Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU), and component levels. As a lieutenant colonel, he commanded First Battalion, Sixth Marines. As the Commanding Officer of the 22d MEU (SOC), he led the MEU on combat deployments to Afghanistan in 2004 and Iraq in 2005-06. In 2006-07 he served as the Military Secretary to the 33rd and 34th Commandants of the Marine Corps.
Upon promotion to Brigadier General in July 2007, Frank served on the Joint Staff as a Deputy Director of Operations within the National Military Command Center. In June 2008, he was selected by the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff to be the Director of the Chairman’s New Administration Transition Team (CNATT). In this capacity, he coordinated the efforts of the Joint Staff and the combatant commands in preparing for and executing a wartime transition of administrations.
In June 2009, Frank reported to the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Kabul, Afghanistan, to serve as the Deputy to the Deputy Chief of Staff (DCOS) for Stability. Upon his return from Afghanistan, in July 2010, he was assigned as the Director, Strategy, Plans, and Policy (J-5) for U.S. Central Command. In August 2012, he reported to Headquarters Marine Corps to serve as the Marine Corps Representative to the Quadrennial Defense Review. In June 2014, he was promoted to Lieutenant General and assumed command of U.S. Marine Corps Forces, Central Command.
In October 2015, he was assigned to the Joint Staff to serve as the Director, J-5, Strategic Plans and Policy, Joint Staff.
In July 2017, Frank was named the Director, Joint Staff. He was promoted to the grade of General and assumed command of U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) in March 2019. He relinquished command of CENTCOM and retired from the Marine Corps on April 1, 2022, completing over 42 years of service.
Frank’s book, titled The Melting Point: High Command and War in the 21st Century, was released in 2024 by the U.S. Naval Institute Press and details his three years as commander of United States Central Command. A native of Birmingham, Alabama, he was commissioned into the Marine Corps and trained as an infantry officer upon graduation from The Citadel in 1979.