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SPOTLIGHT: MS. VERONICA A.


“NITA” LOPEZ-JEWELL


MS. VERONICA A. “NITA” LOPEZ-JEWELL


COMMAND/ORGANIZATION:


Matrixed to Assistant Program Execu- tive Office for Strategic Planning and Operations, Program Executive Office for Missiles and Space


TITLE:


Foreign disclosure officer YEARS OF SERVICE IN WORKFORCE: 9


EDUCATION: MBA, Texas A&M University-Texarkana; B.S. in computer information systems,


Hawai’i Pacific University AWARDS:


Commander’s Award for Civilian Service; achievement awards


A


I was a single parent of three kids, and get- ting my degree took a long time, but it was definitely worth it.


134 Army AL&T Magazine October-December 2015


s the world gets smaller, the work of people like Veronica Lopez- Jewell becomes increasingly more important. Lopez-Jewell is a foreign disclosure officer (FDO) in the Program Executive Office for Missiles and Space (PEO MS), tasked with approving the


release of military information to foreign government representatives, ensur- ing that recommendations for foreign visit requests are processed in a timely manner and managing the foreign liaison officers certified to PEO MS.


“Today’s Army is, increasingly, more globally diverse,” said Lopez-Jewell. “It is important to the Army to share information with our partner nations, as it allows for successful completion of joint missions.”


Te government-to-government release of classified military information is accomplished through delegation-of-disclosure authority letters (DDLs), which outline classification levels, categories, scope and limitations on infor- mation that may be disclosed to foreign recipients. DDLs are part of the foreign disclosure process, which happens before, during and after the execu- tion of a foreign military sales (FMS) case, and are required for international agreements, military personnel exchange programs and cooperative research and development agreements.


Requests for information might be related to FMS but could also occur before an FMS case or as follow-ons to that process, Lopez-Jewell explained. For example, she said, a country might buy the Patriot missile system through an FMS agreement, but a software update to that system might be classified. An FMS customer wouldn’t automatically receive that update; the customer would have to request that information and an FDO would review the request. When a request comes in, Lopez-Jewell works with a subject- matter expert to obtain a review and an opinion of the request and researches databases on her own to make the determination of whether to approve it.


Getting the details right


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