McFarlane co-founded and served as CEO of McFarlane Associates Inc., an international consulting company. He was also a Co-founder and Director of IP3 International (short for "International Peace Power & Prosperity"), a consortium of firms wanting to build nuclear reactors in Saudi Arabia that is led by retired U.S. military commanders and former White House officials.
Michael Flynn has described himself as an adviser to IP3, which the company denies. In May 2019, McFarlane wrote an
op-ed in
The Washington Times advocating for developing nuclear power generation in the Middle East titled "The New Imperialism". This proposal, dubbed "Middle East Marshall Plan" by its backers, the chairman of
Donald Trump's 2017 Presidential
Inaugural Committee, a senior adviser to Trump's presidential campaign, and a long-time close friend of and fundraiser for Donald Trump. In 2021, McFarlane co-wrote with David Gattie a piece for
The National Interest, titled, "China and the Importance of Civil Nuclear Energy," which extended his ideas on nuclear energy to the geopolitical outlook for China. McFarlane was a member of the
Washington Institute for Near East Policy (WINEP) Board of Advisors, was president of the Institute for the Analysis of Global Security, was on the Board of Advisors, and was a founding member of the
Set America Free Coalition. He was also an Advisory Board member for the
Partnership for a Secure America, a not-for-profit organization dedicated to recreating the bipartisan center in American national security and foreign policy. McFarlane served on a number of boards including: •
Aegis Defence Services –
Non-executive director •
Partnership for a Secure America – Advisory Board •
Fuel Freedom Foundation – Advisory Board • Myriant Incorporated – Advisory Board • Member of the
Committee on the Present Danger •
Alphabet Energy – advisory board He was an advisor to
John McCain's 2008 presidential campaign. From 2009 on, McFarlane worked in the southern region of
Sudan and
Darfur on intertribal relations and development projects. On September 30, 2009, the
Washington Post published a story suggesting that McFarlane's contract for this work, which was supported by the
government of Qatar, was the result of a request by Sudanese officials. McFarlane denied any improper contact with Sudanese officials or efforts to avoid disclosure of his work. The
Washington Post article reported that some persons involved in peacemaking efforts in the
southern Sudan region questioned the source and helpfulness of McFarlane's activities. That article prompted FBI investigators to review McFarlane's activities in the Sudan. After an exhaustive probe that lasted three years and included search of his trash, email, and personal belongings, investigators concluded their search and did not file any criminal charges. In July 2011, McFarlane, in cooperation with former
CIA director Jim Woolsey, co-founded the United States Energy Security Council, sponsored by the Institute for the Analysis of Global Security. ==Death==