Here’s what I can share about Andrew Imbrie right now, based on publicly available information up to 2024–2025.
Direct answer
- Andrew Imbrie is a scholar and policy expert focused on security, emerging technology, and foreign policy. He holds an Associate Professor of Practice and the Gracias Chair in Security and Emerging Technology at Georgetown University’s Walsh School of Foreign Service (as of recent years), and has held senior roles in U.S. government and think tanks [source: CNAS profile; Georgetown profile; LinkedIn summaries].[1][2][3]
Context and key roles
- Current/recent roles: Associate Professor of Practice and Gracias Chair in Security and Emerging Technology at Georgetown University’s Center for Security and Emerging Technology (CSET) in Washington, D.C., with a background in policy advising and senior fellow positions at related institutions.[2][3]
- Prior government and policy work: Speechwriter and senior policy roles at the U.S. Department of State during the Kerry era, staff experience on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and involvement as a senior advisor to Secretary Kerry and as a policy planning staff member.[3][1]
- Think tank and policy ecosystem: Senior Fellow at the Center for Security and Emerging Technology, and involvement with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and other policy organizations; also linked to the National Security Commission on Artificial Intelligence as a consultant/SGE advisor.[1][2]
Publications and media
- He is co-author of The New Fire: War, Peace, and Democracy in the Age of AI (MIT Press, 2022) and has written on AI and international security in outlets such as Foreign Affairs, Lawfare, War on the Rocks, Survival, and Defense One. He has contributed to academic and policy discussions on AI policy, security, and diplomacy.[2][3]
Personal and background notes
- He has lived and worked in multiple international contexts, with fluency in several languages and a background shaped by a foreign service family, which informs his geopolitical and policy perspectives. He resides in Maryland with family details that appear in profiles, and he has a prolific career spanning academia, government service, and think tanks.[3][1]
Illustrative snapshot
- If you’re trying to place his work: imagine a bridge between scholarly research on AI and practical policy guidance for national security—teaching at a leading university while advising U.S. policymakers and international diplomacy on emerging tech issues.[2][3]
What I can do next
- If you want, I can compile a concise timeline of his career, pull out key publications and talks (with publication dates), or summarize his books and major policy recommendations.
- I can also search for the latest news from reliable outlets to verify any developments after 2024 and provide inline citations for each item. If you’d like this, tell me your preferred time window (e.g., the last 6 months) and any particular aspects you’re most interested in (AI policy, diplomacy, or academia).
Citations
- The Georgetown/CSET profiles and LinkedIn summarize his roles and career path.[1][3]
- CNAS and related bios describe his prior fellowships and advisory work, including his involvement with the National Security Commission on Artificial Intelligence.[2]
- Publications and media appearances note his books and articles on AI and security.[3]