Captain
James Ter Bush
USN (Ret.) (D)
Captain Bush began his naval career in 1952 following graduation from the University of Michigan
with a B.A. in Political Science. During the next several years he served in both the Atlantic and Pacific
fleets on cruisers and destroyers. In 1956 he was selected for duty in submarines. In
1960 during the Cold War he attended nuclear power training and spent the next ten years at sea on nuclear submarines.
In that period, he was Executive Officer of the USS TRITON and the USS JOHN C. CALHOUN Gold, and, for three years,
he was Captain of the USS SIMON BOLIVAR which was armed with Polaris nuclear missiles.
Captain
Bush next served in London, England, as a planning officer on the staff of the Commander in Chief U.S. Naval Forces Europe.
During this time he earned a Masters Degree in International Relations from the University of Southern California.
His next duty was in the Pentagon as Director of Readiness and Tactics for attack nuclear submarines on the staff of the Chief
of Naval Operations. His last tour of duty was as the Operations and Readiness Officer on the staff of Commander of the United
States Second Fleet and the NATO Strike Fleet Atlantic. He retired from the Navy in 1977 after twenty-six
years of service - nineteen of which were at sea.
After retirement from the Navy, Captain
Bush served on three congressional staffs as military advisor. He joined the Center for Defense Information
in 1982 and was appointed Associate Director in 1983. Because of his diverse military, academic, and political
experience, he had established a reputation for expertise on a wide variety of military and arms control issues.
He made presentations at significant academic and social institutions in the United States and abroad, having
traveled extensively in Europe and Asia.
Captain Bush retired from the Center for
Defense Information in 1994. He served as a military advisor to Business Leaders for Sensible Priorities.
He published numerous articles primarily on defense subjects in publications
that include the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, Business Week, Navy Times, and Defense News.
He was the President of the Naples
Council on World Affairs, Naples FL where he also was a group leader in the Great Decisions organization. He was a member
of the Inter-American Dialogue and the Atlantic Council in Washington, D.C.
He is survived by his wife, Patricia, of
Naples Florida. They have two children and two grandchildren.