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Despite efforts to foster inter-agency cooperation, U.S. officials from the intelligence and military side of the house have sometimes been at odds, complaining about "food fights" between groups going after the same target. A West Point graduate, Sheehan served as a U.S. Army Special Forces officer, with peacekeeping stints in Somalia and Yemen. While in uniform, he served as a National Security Council aide in both the Bush and Clinton administrations. He later served as the State Department's counterterrorism ambassador, held a senior peacekeeping role at the U.N. and, most recently, served as the head of counterterrorism for the New York City Police Department. Sheehan wrote the 2008 book "Crush the Cell: How to Defeat Terrorism Without Terrorizing Ourselves," which included a blurb by Ambassador Richard Holbrooke, who died last month. "Mike Sheehan is the person I would most want at my side when trying to stop terrorists," Holbrooke wrote, calling the book "a primer for the next president."
[Associated
Press;
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