ADST-DACOR Diplomats and Diplomacy Books ,QVRIDU$'67DQG'$&25ODXQFKHGIRXUERRNVLQWKH'LSORPDWVDQG'LSORPDF\6HULHV±±E\ROBERT V

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

ADST-DACOR Diplomats and Diplomacy Books ,QVRIDU$'67DQG'$&25ODXQFKHGIRXUERRNVLQWKH'LSORPDWVDQG'LSORPDF\6HULHV±±E\ROBERT V Association for Diplomatic Newsletter Studies and Training Winter 2011-2012 Pickering, Wright, and Coca-Cola Company Message from the Chairman to be Honored at Biennial Awards Dinner $'67¶VWZHQW\¿IWKDQQLYHUVDU\\HDUZDVDJRRGRQH ADST¶VELHQQLDODZDUGVGLQQHUWRWDNHSODFHRQ0DUFK RYHUDOOIRU$'67DOWKRXJKLWEHJDQVDGO\ZLWKWKHORVVRI¿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¿YHQHZERRNVHDFKLQWKH'LSORPDWVDQG'LSORPDF\ $PEDVVDGRU3LFNHULQJZLOOUHFHLYHWKH5DOSK-%XQFKH$ZDUG 6HULHV0HPRLUVDQG2FFDVLRQDO3DSHUVDQGWKH2UDO+LVWRU\6HULHV IRU'LSORPDWLF([FHOOHQFH2QHRI DQGWKHOLVWZLOOFRQWLQXHWRJURZ6SHFLDOUHFRJQLWLRQFDPHIURP $PHULFD¶VPRVWGLVWLQJXLVKHGGLSORPDWV WKH$PHULFDQ$FDGHP\RI'LSORPDF\¶VVHOHFWLRQRI(GPXQG+XOO¶V KHVHUYHGDVDPEDVVDGRUVHYHQWLPHVDQG High-Value TargetIRUWKH'RXJODV'LOORQ$ZDUG DV8QGHU6HFUHWDU\RI6WDWHIRU3ROLWLFDO 7KHQXPEHURILQWHUYLHZVLQWKH)RUHLJQ$IIDLUV2UDO+LVWRU\ $IIDLUV+HLVDOVRZLGHO\UHVSHFWHGIRU &ROOHFWLRQURVHWRDQG6WX.HQQHG\¶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¿FDQWDWWHQ- 9DQFH$ZDUGIRUDGYDQFLQJNQRZOHGJHRI WLRQIURPVFKRODUVDQGZULWHUVDQGZHODXQFKHGDSDJHRQ)DFHERRN GLSORPDF\DQGIRUKHUVXFFHVVDVUHSRUWHU 2XUFORVHUHODWLRQVKLSZLWKWKH)RUHLJQ6HUYLFH,QVWLWXWHWKULYHG DQDO\VWDQGDXWKRULQKHOSLQJ$PHULFDQV :HSURYLGHGVXSSRUWIRUSROLF\VHPLQDUVODQJXDJHURXQGWDEOHV OHDGHUVKLSWUDLQLQJEULH¿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¶(QIDQW3OD]D+RWHO$'67 WRVHH\RXWKHUH,I\RXFDQQRWDWWHQGSOHDVHOHQG\RXUSUHVHQFHLQ PHPEHUVPD\DWWHQGDWDVSHFLDOGLVFRXQW VSLULWE\MRLQLQJLQVSRQVRUVKLSRIWKLVLPSRUWDQWHYHQW UDWHDQGKDYHWKHRSWLRQRISUHDUUDQJ- :LWKEHVWZLVKHVIRUDKDSS\DQGSURVSHURXVQHZ\HDU LQJJURXSWDEOHV'HWDLOHGLQIRUPDWLRQPD\EHREWDLQHGE\FDOOLQJ Jim Dandridge Farewell to Patricia Gates Lynch Ewell and Richard B. Parker $'67LVGHHSO\VDGGHQHGE\WKHSDVVLQJRI$PEDVVDGRURICHARD B. PARKERDQG$PEDVVDGRUPATRICIA GATES LYNCH EWELLRQ-DQXDU\DQG'HFHPEHUUHVSHFWLYHO\ %HIRUHVHUYLQJDVFKDLUPDQRIWKH$'67ERDUGIURPWR3DW*DWHV/\QFK (ZHOOZDVDKLJKO\UHJDUGHGUDGLRKRVWIRU9RLFHRI$PHULFDDQGDPEDVVDGRUWR0DGD- JDVFDUDQGWKH&RPRURV,VODQGV$VFKDLUVKHXVHGKHUH[WHQVLYHFRQWDFWVDQGFRPPX- QLFDWLRQVNLOOVZLWKJUHDWHIIHFWWRSURPRWHXQGHUVWDQGLQJRI86GLSORPDF\DQGLQVSLUH VXSSRUWIRU$'67 'LFN3DUNHUZDV$'67¶V¿UVWSUHVLGHQWIURPWR+HKDGEHHQDQDUP\ RI¿FHUDQG32:GXULQJ:RUOG:DU,,EHIRUHMRLQLQJWKH)RUHLJQ6HUYLFHDQGVHUYLQJ ZLWKGLVWLQFWLRQDVDPEDVVDGRUWR$OJHULD/HEDQRQDQG0RURFFR'LFNFRQWLQXHGKLV LQYROYHPHQWZLWK$'67DIWHULWVIRUPDWLYH\HDUV$SUROL¿FDXWKRUKHSXEOLVKHGThe October WarDQGUncle Sam in BarbaryLQWKH$'67'$&25'LSORPDWVDQG'LSORPDF\6HULHVDQGUHFHLYHG WKH$PHULFDQ$FDGHP\RI'LSORPDF\¶V'LOORQ%RRN$ZDUGIRUWKHODWWHU Hull Book Wins 2011 Dillon Award (story on page 5) 2 The Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training Winter 2011-2012 Excellence in Language Teaching Awards Presented ADST Supports FSI’s Leadership Video Interview 2Q'HFHPEHU)6,'LUHFWRURUTH WHITESIDESUHVLGHGDWWKHWKLWHUD- WLRQRIWKH8QD&KDSPDQ&R[([FHOOHQFHLQ/DQJXDJH7HDFKLQJ$ZDUGVIRU)6, Project /DQJXDJH,QVWUXFWRUV $'67LVSOHDVHGWRSURYLGHVXS- SANDHYA THAPAR SUNIL KIM - 7KHWZRZLQQHUVIRU IRU+LQGLDQG IRU.R SRUWIRUWKHYLGHRLQWHUYLHZVSURMHFW UHDQHDFKUHFHLYHGDZDUGVRI+RQRUDEOHPHQWLRQVDQGLQGLYLGXDODZDUGV RI)6,¶V6FKRRORI/HDGHUVKLSDQG AMIN STANAKZAI SHAHDA RAWI RIZHQWWR ZKRWHDFKHV3DVKWXQDQG ZKR 0DQDJHPHQW7KHIXQGLQJSUR- WHDFKHV$UDELF YLGHGE\$'67ZLOOHQDEOHMIKE $'67DQG)6,¶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unil Kim, Shahda Rawi, FSI Director Ruth VNLOOVLQWKHIRUHLJQDIIDLUVFRPPXQLW\ VKLSPRUDOGLOHPPDVFDUHHUDQG Whiteside, Sandhya Thapar, Amin Stanakzai, &ULWHULDIRUWKHDZDUGLQFOXGHQRPLQHH¶V and ADST President Ambassador Ken Brown WHDPEXLOGLQJVWUDWHJLHVOHDGHUVKLS RXWVWDQGLQJWUDLQLQJDELOLWLHVVXVWDLQHG VW\OHVOHDGHUVKLSGXULQJDFULVLV - UHFRUGRISHUIRUPDQFHDQGRYHUDOOFRQWUL DQGFRQGXFWDQGSHUIRUPDQFHLV- EXWLRQVWRWKHLPSURYHPHQWRIKLVKHUODQJXDJHSURJUDP VXHVLQWKHLUFODVVHV U.S. Institute of Peace Publishes Two Studies by ADST’s John Naland 7KH8QLWHG6WDWHV,QVWLWXWHRI3HDFHUHFHQWO\SXEOLVKHGWZRVSHFLDOUHSRUWVZULWWHQE\JOHN NALANDZKRZDVWKHQ $'67([HFXWLYH'LUHFWRU7KH¿UVWLVGUDZQIURPLQWHUYLHZVWKDW1DODQGVXSHUYLVHGEHWZHHQ$XJXVWDQG $XJXVWXQGHUWKHProvincial Reconstruction Team Lessons Learned ProjectWKDW$'67FRQGXFWHGIRU86,3 86,3KDVIRUZDUGHGWKHUHSRUWWRDQLQWHUDJHQF\ZRUNLQJJURXSDWWKH1DWLRQDO'HIHQVH8QLYHUVLW\ZKLFKVHHNVWRLGHQ- WLI\OHVVRQVIRUDSSOLFDWLRQWRRQJRLQJDQGIXWXUH357OLNHHIIRUWV 7KHVHFRQGUHSRUWU.S. Special Envoys: A Flexible ToolH[DPLQHVWKHUHFHQWSUROLIHUDWLRQRIVSHFLDOHQYR\VDVD SURGXFWRIWKHRSHUDWLQJVW\OHVRI3UHVLGHQW2EDPDDQG6HFUHWDU\RI6WDWH&OLQWRQZKRKDYHIRXQGWKLVPHFKDQLVPWR EHDQHIIHFWLYHWRROIRUDGGUHVVLQJVHOHFWIRUHLJQSROLF\LVVXHV%DVHGRQLQWHUYLHZVZLWKQLQHFXUUHQWDQGWKUHHIRUPHU HQYR\VWKHUHSRUWLVSDUWRID86,QVWLWXWHRI3HDFHVSHFLDOSURMHFWWRLGHQWLI\EHVWSUDFWLFHVWRLPSURYHWKHHIIHFWLYH- QHVVRIWKHVSHFLDOHQYR\PHFKDQLVP%RWKUHSRUWVFDQEHIRXQGRQWKH86,3ZHEVLWHDWZZZXVLSRUJSXEOLFDWLRQV ADST Bookshelf New Acquisitions G. R. BERRIDGEThe Counter-Revolution in Diplomacy HOWARD AND TERESITA SCHAEFFERHow Pakistan Negoti- and Other Essays 3DOJUDYH0DFPLOODQ ±±$Q ates with the United States: Riding the Roller Coaster HPLQHQWGLSORPDWLFVFKRODUH[SORUHVWKHLPSRUWDQFHRI 86,QVWLWXWHRI3HDFH ±±6RXWK$VLDH[SHUWVERWK HPEDVVLHVLQZDUWLPHWKHWKFHQWXU\2WWRPDQHPSLUH IRUPHUDPEDVVDGRUVDQDO\]HKRZLGHRORJLFDOFXOWXUDO WRGD\¶VGLSORPDWLFQRYHOWLHVWKHLPSRUWDQFHRIUHFLSURFLW\ JHRSROLWLFDODQGPLOLWDU\VWUXFWXUHVVKDSH3DNLVWDQ¶V LQDPHOLRUDWLQJFRQÀLFWVRYHUHVSLRQDJHDQGRQWKHMRE IRUPDODQGLQIRUPDOUHODWLRQVZLWK86RI¿FLDOVVLQFH GLSORPDWLFWUDLQLQJ 3DNLVWDQ¶VLQGHSHQGHQFHDQGH[DPLQH86LQYROYHPHQWLQ 3DNLVWDQLSROLWLFV RIAZ MOHAMMAD KHANAfghanistan and Pakistan: Con- ÀLFW([WUHPLVPDQG5HVLVWDQFHWR0RGHUQLW\ :LOVRQ RICHARD H. SOLOMONNIGEL QUINNEYHWDOAmerican &HQWHUDQG-RKQV+RSNLQV8QLY3UHVVHV ±±7KH 1HJRWLDWLQJ%HKDYLRU:KHHOHU'HDOHUV/HJDO(DJOHV IRUPHU3DNLVWDQIRUHLJQVHFUHWDU\ ± DQDO\]HV %XOOLHVDQG3UHDFKHUV 86,QVWLWXWHRI3HDFH ±± $IJKDQLVWDQ¶VFRQÀLFWVWKHULVHRIUHOLJLRXVPLOLWDQF\WKH 'LSORPDWVDQGVFKRODUVIURPHLJKWFRXQWULHVRIIHUFDQGLG URRWVRI3DNLVWDQ¶VDPELJXRXVSROLFLHVDQGLWVLQWHOOHFWXDO IRUHLJQSHUVSHFWLYHVRQDVSHFWVRI86WDFWLFVDQGQHJRWL- FULVLVDQGGHHSFRQIXVLRQDERXWLVVXHVRIPRGHUQLW\ DWLQJVW\OHDQGSURSRVHPHDVXUHVWRHQKDQFHWKHP Winter 2011-2012 The Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training 3 Memoirs and Occasional Papers Series ,Q$'67LVVXHG¿YHQHZYROXPHVLQWKH0HPRLUVDQG2FFDVLRQDO3DSHUV6HULHV±±IRXUDXWKRUHGE\ THOMPSON BUCHANAN, FRANK HUFFMAN, NICOLE LOGAN, DQGHELEN LYMANDQGSXEOLVKHGE\1HZ$FDGHPLD DQGD³PHPRLU´RIWKH$IULFD%XUHDXGHVFULEHGRQSDJH)XWXUHYROXPHVZLOOLQFOXGHWKHPHPRLUVRIDIEGO DQGNANCY ASENCIO, STEPHEN CARNEY, JOHN TINNY, THERESA TULL, DQGGINNY CARSON YOUNG. In 1RWWRWKH0DQQHU%RUQHELEN LYMANSURYLGHV Forever on the Road: A Franco-American Family’s Thirty DZU\DFFRXQWRIKHUSHULSDWHWLFSURIHVVLRQDOOLIH Years in the Foreign ServiceLVNICOLE PRÉVOST LOGAN’S RYHU- PRYLQJEDFNDQGIRUWKEHWZHHQWKH86DQGDEURDG YLHZRIWKHOLIHDQGZRUNRIDQ$PHULFDQGLSORPDWLFIDPLO\ DQGIURPKRXVHZLIHWRWHDFKHUWRFRPSXWHUWUDLQHU RYHU\HDUVLQFRXQWULHVRQWKUHHFRQ- IRUWKH6WDWH'HSDUWPHQW6KHUHFRXQWVLQFLGHQWV WLQHQWV/RJDQDSSURDFKHVHDFKFRXQWU\ IURP6RXWK.RUHD(WKLRSLD1LJHULD6RXWK$IULFD ZLWKFXULRVLW\OHDUQLQJDERXWLWVKLVWRU\ DQG:DVKLQJWRQDQGLQFOXGHVVWRULHVDERXWWKH SROLWLFDOV\VWHPDQGFXOWXUH,QSRUWUD\LQJ IDPRXVVXFKDVNELSON MANDELA DQGHILLARY CLIN- KHUKXVEDQG$ODQVKHUHYHDOVPXFKDERXW
Recommended publications
  • It Deserved an Oscar Diplomatic Reporting Today
    PUBLISHED BY THE AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE ASSOCIATION JULY-AUGUST 2014 DIPLOMATIC REPORTING TODAY IT DESERVED AN OSCAR A BIRTHDAY PARTY FOR THE FOREIGN SERVICE FOREIGN July-August 2014 SERVICE Volume 91, No. 7-8 AFSA NEWS FOCUS EMBASSY REPORTING TODAY Gala 90th-Anniversary Celebration / 45 The Art of Political Reporting / 22 State VP Voice: Despite the challenges, reporting from the field—in whatever form it takes— Bidding and 360s / 46 is still the indispensable ingredient of any meaningful foreign policy discussion. USAID VP Voice: FS Benefits–How Do State and USAID Compare? / 47 BY DAN LAWTON AFSA Welcomes New Staff Members / 48 Diplomatic Reporting: Adapting Two New Reps Join AFSA Board / 48 to the Information Age / 26 Speaker Partnership with USC / 49 2014 AFSA Award Winners / 49 While technology enhances brainpower, it is no substitute for the seasoned diplomat’s powers of observation and assessment, argues this veteran consumer Issue Brief: The COM Guidelines / 50 of diplomatic reporting. Expert on Professions Kicks Off New AFSA Forum / 53 BY JOHN C. GANNON The 2014 Kennan Writing Award / 56 2014 Merit Award Winners / 57 A Selection of Views from Practitioners / 31 AFSA Files MSI Implementation Hitting the Ball Dispute / 61 CHRISTOPHER W. BISHOP On the Hill: Who Said It’s All About Congress? / 62 Bring in the Noise–Using Digital Technology to Promote Peace and Security USAID Mission Directors’ DANIEL FENNELL Happy Hour / 63 Inside a U.S. Embassy: Yet The Value-Added of Networking Another Press Run / 63 CHRISTOPHER MARKLEY NYCE Why You Need a Household Inventory / 64 The Three Amigos–South Korea, Colombia and Panama Trade Agreements Federal Benefits Event Draws IVAN RIOS a Full House / 65 Political Reporting: Then and Now–and Looking Ahead COLUMNS KATHRYN HOFFMAN AND SAMUEL C.
    [Show full text]
  • Open Hearing: Nomination of Gina Haspel to Be the Director of the Central Intelligence Agency
    S. HRG. 115–302 OPEN HEARING: NOMINATION OF GINA HASPEL TO BE THE DIRECTOR OF THE CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY HEARING BEFORE THE SELECT COMMITTEE ON INTELLIGENCE OF THE UNITED STATES SENATE ONE HUNDRED FIFTEENTH CONGRESS SECOND SESSION WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2018 Printed for the use of the Select Committee on Intelligence ( Available via the World Wide Web: http://www.govinfo.gov U.S. GOVERNMENT PUBLISHING OFFICE 30–119 PDF WASHINGTON : 2018 VerDate Sep 11 2014 14:25 Aug 20, 2018 Jkt 030925 PO 00000 Frm 00001 Fmt 5011 Sfmt 5011 C:\DOCS\30119.TXT SHAUN LAP51NQ082 with DISTILLER SELECT COMMITTEE ON INTELLIGENCE [Established by S. Res. 400, 94th Cong., 2d Sess.] RICHARD BURR, North Carolina, Chairman MARK R. WARNER, Virginia, Vice Chairman JAMES E. RISCH, Idaho DIANNE FEINSTEIN, California MARCO RUBIO, Florida RON WYDEN, Oregon SUSAN COLLINS, Maine MARTIN HEINRICH, New Mexico ROY BLUNT, Missouri ANGUS KING, Maine JAMES LANKFORD, Oklahoma JOE MANCHIN III, West Virginia TOM COTTON, Arkansas KAMALA HARRIS, California JOHN CORNYN, Texas MITCH MCCONNELL, Kentucky, Ex Officio CHUCK SCHUMER, New York, Ex Officio JOHN MCCAIN, Arizona, Ex Officio JACK REED, Rhode Island, Ex Officio CHRIS JOYNER, Staff Director MICHAEL CASEY, Minority Staff Director KELSEY STROUD BAILEY, Chief Clerk (II) VerDate Sep 11 2014 14:25 Aug 20, 2018 Jkt 030925 PO 00000 Frm 00002 Fmt 5904 Sfmt 5904 C:\DOCS\30119.TXT SHAUN LAP51NQ082 with DISTILLER CONTENTS MAY 9, 2018 OPENING STATEMENTS Burr, Hon. Richard, Chairman, a U.S. Senator from North Carolina ................ 1 Warner, Mark R., Vice Chairman, a U.S. Senator from Virginia ........................ 3 WITNESSES Chambliss, Saxby, former U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • The Iran Nuclear Deal: What You Need to Know About the Jcpoa
    THE IRAN NUCLEAR DEAL: WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT THE JCPOA wh.gov/iran-deal What You Need to Know: JCPOA Packet The Details of the JCPOA • FAQs: All the Answers on JCPOA • JCPOA Exceeds WINEP Benchmarks • Timely Access to Iran’s Nuclear Program • JCPOA Meeting (and Exceeding) the Lausanne Framework • JCPOA Does Not Simply Delay an Iranian Nuclear Weapon • Tools to Counter Iranian Missile and Arms Activity • Sanctions That Remain In Place Under the JCPOA • Sanctions Relief — Countering Iran’s Regional Activities What They’re Saying About the JCPOA • National Security Experts and Former Officials • Regional Editorials: State by State • What the World is Saying About the JCPOA Letters and Statements of Support • Iran Project Letter • Letter from former Diplomats — including five former Ambassadors to Israel • Over 100 Ambassador letter to POTUS • US Conference of Catholic Bishops Letter • Atlantic Council Iran Task Force Statement Appendix • Statement by the President on Iran • SFRC Hearing Testimony, SEC Kerry July 14, 2015 July 23, 2015 • Key Excerpts of the JCPOA • SFRC Hearing Testimony, SEC Lew July 23, 2015 • Secretary Kerry Press Availability on Nuclear Deal with Iran • SFRC Hearing Testimony, SEC Moniz July 14, 2015 July 23, 2015 • Secretary Kerry and Secretary Moniz • SASC Hearing Testimony, SEC Carter Washington Post op-ed July 29, 2015 July 22, 2015 THE DETAILS OF THE JCPOA After 20 months of intensive negotiations, the U.S. and our international partners have reached an historic deal that will verifiably prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon. The United States refused to take a bad deal, pressing for a deal that met every single one of our bottom lines.
    [Show full text]
  • Americas Society and the Council of the Americas — President and Chief Executive Officer
    Senior Team Susan L. Segal Americas Society and the Council of the Americas — President and Chief Executive Officer uniting opinion leaders to exchange ideas and create Eric P. Farnsworth solutions to the challenges of the Americas today Vice President Peter J. Reilly Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Nancy E. Anderson Americas Society Senior Director, Miami Americas Society (AS) is the premier forum dedicated to education, Ana Gilligan debate, and dialogue in the Americas. Its mission is to foster an Senior Director, Corporate Sponsorship understanding of the contemporary political, social, and economic issues Ragnhild Melzi confronting Latin America, the Caribbean, and Canada, and to increase Senior Director, Public Policy Programs public awareness and appreciation of the diverse cultural heritage and Corporate Relations of the Americas and the importance of the Inter-American relationship.1 Christopher Sabatini Senior Director, Policy and Editor-in-Chief, Americas Quarterly Council of the Americas Andrea Sanseverino Galan Council of the Americas (COA) is the premier international business Senior Director, Foundation and Institutional Giving organization whose members share a common commitment to economic and social development, open markets, the rule of law, and democracy Pola Schijman throughout the Western Hemisphere. The Council’s membership consists Senior Director, Special Events of leading international companies representing a broad spectrum Carin Zissis of sectors including banking and finance, consulting services,
    [Show full text]
  • Not Friend, Not Foe Reassessing U.S.-China Great Power Competition with the Hydrangea Framework
    OCTOBER 2020 Not Friend, Not Foe Reassessing U.S.-China Great Power Competition with the Hydrangea Framework Yilun Zhang Jessica L. Martin October 2020 I About ICAS The Institute for China-America Studies is an independent think tank funded by the Hainan Freeport Research Foundation in China. Based in the heart of Washington D.C., ICAS is uniquely situated to facilitate the exchange of ideas and people between China and the United States. We achieve this through research and partnerships with institutions and scholars in both countries, in order to provide a window into their respective worldviews. ICAS focuses on key issue areas in the U.S.-China relationship in need of greater mutual understanding. We identify promising areas for strengthening bilateral cooperation in the spheres of maritime security, Asia-Pacific economics, trade, strategic stability, international relations as well as global governance issues, and explore avenues for improving this critical bilateral relationship. ICAS is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization. ICAS takes no institutional positions on policy issues. The views expressed in this document are those of the author(s) alone. © 2020 by the Institute for China-America Studies. All rights reserved. Institute for China-America Studies 1919 M St. NW Suite 310 Washington, DC 20036 202 290 3087 | www.chinaus-icas.org II Not Friend, Not Foe Contents IV - VI EXECUTIVE SUMMARY VIII ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS & ABOUT THE AUTHORS 1-6 PART I | Then...and Now 7-47 PART II | The Current State: Now...What Now? 48-68 PART III | What Next: The Hydrangea Framework ENDNOTES October 2020 III Executive Summary he relationship between the United States and China has been in a state of flux for decades, but the tensions and rhetoric of the last few years appears to have left the Tbilateral relationship tainted and semi-hostile.
    [Show full text]
  • State 1993-05: Iss
    LETTERS State (ISSN 0278-1859) (formerly the simply bad management or really a case Department of State Newsletter) is published by the ‘Bad manners’? of bad manners? U.S. Department of State to acquaint its employees, at Sincerely, home and abroad, with developments that may affect Tel Aviv, Israel operations or personnel. There are 11 monthly issues Jerry Mallory Dear Editor: (none in July). Economic officer Effective foreign policy relies on Deadline for submitting material is in the first The Operations Center replies: As week of each month. Contributions (consisting of accurate and timely communication. That the Office responsible for providing final general information, feature articles, poems, said, I wish to raise the issue of the clearance on all outgoing niacts, we are photographs, drawings) are welcome. Double-space, Department’s use of niact cables to spelling out job titles, names of offices and very conscious of the need to limit the use dispatch information that truly does not programs—acronyms are not acceptable. Send of the niact precedence to those cables contributions to State magazine, PER/ER/SMG, require night action. As background, let which demand urgent action in the field SA-6, Room 433, Washington, D.C. 20522-0602, me give you a few examples of some regardless of the hour. We work closely Telephone: (703) 516-1667. Fax: (703) 516-1677. recent niact messages and the times they Contributions may also be dropped off in Room 3811 with the bureaus that assign the prece¬ were received at the Embassy in Tel Aviv: Main State. dence, to convey to drafting officers the Although intended for internal communication.
    [Show full text]
  • Peacekeepers: Will They Advance Any Prospective Arab-Israeli Peace Agreement?
    Fordham International Law Journal Volume 34, Issue 1 2010 Article 1 TWENTY-FIRST ANNUAL PHILIP D. REED MEMORIAL ISSUE Peacekeepers: Will They Advance Any Prospective Arab-Israeli Peace Agreement? Justus Reid Weiner∗ Avinoam Sharony Michelle Morrisonz ∗ y z Copyright c 2010 by the authors. Fordham International Law Journal is produced by The Berke- ley Electronic Press (bepress). http://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/ilj Peacekeepers: Will They Advance Any Prospective Arab-Israeli Peace Agreement? Justus Reid Weiner, Avinoam Sharon, and Michelle Morrison Abstract The establishment of a peacekeeping force is widely accepted to be an essential part of any future Israeli-Palestinian peace accord. The final status settlement proposed by the Clinton Admin- istration specified “[s]security arrangements that would be built around an international presence.” However, while the need for a peacekeeping force appears to enjoy broad support, it should be noted that the ”Road Map” proposed by the European Union, Russia, the United Nations, and the United States (together ”the Quartet”) in 2003 does not suggest the inclusion of peacekeeping forces, although it does envisage a monitoring mechanism for its interim phases. The authors set out to examine, from an Israeli perspective, the feasibility of establishing a form of multinational peacekeeping force as part of a future Israeli-Palestinian peace accord. Part I of this Article as- sesses past successes and failures of peacekeeping missions in and around Israel. Part II discusses the reasons for the success and failure of those past peacekeeping missions. Part III identifies best and worst case scenarios when implementing peacekeeping missions. The Article concludes by suggesting that bilateral security cooperation with multinational oversight may be a better way of dealing with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict than peacekeeping missions.
    [Show full text]
  • Views of the Sanctity of International 5 Sovereignty Or the Right of States to Act Unilaterally, Become Known As the Assertive Multilateralists
    WARS WITHOUT RISK: U.S.HUMANITARIAN INTERVENTIONS OF THE 1990S R Laurent Cousineau A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate College of Bowling Green State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY August 2010 Committee: Dr. Gary Hess, Advisor Dr. Neal Jesse Graduate Faculty Representative Dr. Robert Buffington Dr. Stephen Ortiz ii ABSTRACT Dr. Gary Hess, Advisor Wars Without Risk is an analysis of U.S. foreign policy under George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton involving forced humanitarian military operations in Somalia and Haiti in the 1990s. The dissertation examines American post-Cold war foreign policy and the abrupt shift to involve U.S. armed forces in United Nations peacekeeping and peace enforcement operations to conduct limited humanitarian and nation-building projects. The focus of the study is on policy formulation and execution in two case studies of Somalia and Haiti. Wars Without Risk examines the fundamental flaws in the attempt to embrace assertive multilateralism (a neo-Wilsonian Progressive attempt to create world peace and stability through international force, collective security, international aid, and democratization) and to overextend the traditional democratization mandates of American foreign policy which inevitably led to failure, fraud, and waste. U.S. military might was haphazardly injected in ill-defined UN operations to save nations from themselves and to spread or “save” democracy in nations that were not strongly rooted in Western enlightenment foundations. Missions in Somalia and Haiti were launched as “feel good” humanitarian operations designed as attempts to rescue “failed states” but these emotionally- based operations had no chance of success in realistic terms because the root causes of poverty and conflict in targeted nations were too great to address through half-hearted international paternalism.
    [Show full text]
  • Why There Is No Military Solution to the Problems of Peacekeeping
    JEMEAA - SENIOR LEADER PERSPECTIVE Why There Is No Military Solution to the Problems of Peacekeeping DENNIS JETT Introduction The UN was not even three years old when it launched its first peacekeeping mission in 1948. For the past 70 years, the organization has been continuously involved in such operations—often with mixed results. The results have been mixed, in part, because over that time peacekeeping and the wars to which it has been applied have changed. The challenges peacekeepers face have evolved from ones that were straightforward to tasks that were highly complex and multifaceted. The missions launched most recently represent a fur- ther evolution into a third phase. These missions, all in Africa, are ones where the peacekeepers are bound to fail because policy makers have given them goals inca- pable of being accomplished. To say that these missions cannot succeed is not to say peacekeeping has never been successful. The UN has averaged one new peacekeeping mission a year over the 71 years the organization has existed. Some have ended well; others have not. When the UN has moved beyond keeping the peace, casualties have mounted. This history explains why, in each of the seven decades of UN peacekeeping, the number of peacekeepers who died on duty has increased. The total is now nearly 4,000 and rapidly growing. To understand how peacekeeping has changed requires describing how it has evolved. There are currently 14 UN peacekeeping missions, employing nearly 100,000 soldiers, police, and civilians at an annual cost of almost USD 7 billion. These missions reflect the three stages of peacekeeping’s evolution.
    [Show full text]
  • Why Peacekeeping Fails
    Why Peacekeeping Fails “Dennis Jett’s revision of his book on peacekeeping is brilliant. It incorporates the radical transformation that has occurred, since the end of the Cold War: in the nature of confict in contemporary international relations; and, the phe­ nomenon of the globalization, of virtually all things, including confict within States. Te unprecedented number of refugees in the world today (some 65 million) is its outcome. Tis book, particularly its early chapters analyzing the constructs this new world disorder, should be required reading at the UN Security Council and in other international organizations where decisions on peacekeeping operations are taken.” —Richard Butler, Former Australian Ambassador to the UN, Executive Chairman of the UN Special Commission to disarm Iraq “Dr. Jett is one of very few political scientists who have excelled as both policy­ maker and academic analyst. Tis book provides a much­needed revision of his earlier, signifcant work, delving into cases in which Ambassador Jett was directly involved when he was a Foreign Service Ofcer (Mozambique and Angola) and analyzing additional cases that have emerged since its original publication.” —Dan Caldwell, Distinguished Professor of Political Science, Pepperdine University, USA “Why Peacekeeping Fails, which began to take shape in the frst­hand experi­ ences of an American ambassador who witnessed brutal conficts in Africa, has grown into the classic account of the United Nations’ ever­evolving global peacekeeping role over decades. Rich in institutional history, it also never loses sight of the besieged people UN missions aim to save, often with mixed results.” —Barbara Crossette, Former New York Times UN Bureau Chief and Contributing Editor to PassBlue.com “I have encountered peacekeeping operations throughout the Middle East.
    [Show full text]
  • Curriculum Vitae
    AMBASSADOR DENNIS C. JETT, (RET.), Ph.D. School of International Affairs Email: [email protected] 243 Katz Building Phone: 814-867-2767 Pennsylvania State University Fax 814-867-2800 University Park, PA 16802 CAREER SUMMARY In 2008, became one of the founding faculty members of the new School of International Affairs at Pennsylvania State University following 28 years as a career diplomat in the U.S. Foreign Service and 8 years as Dean of the International Center at the University of Florida. EDUCATION Ph.D., 1998 - International Relations, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa. BA, 1967 and MA, 1969 - Economics, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico. U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland, 1964-1965. University of Miami, Miami, Florida, graduate work in international relations, 1985-86. EMPLOYMENT CHRONOLOGY 2015-2016 Research Fellow, S. Daniel Abraham Center for International and Regional Studies, Tel Aviv University 2015-2016 Fulbright Senior Scholar teaching and research grant, Tel Aviv University 2008-Present Professor of International Affairs and Founding faculty member of the School of International Affairs, Penn State University Responsible for teaching both core curriculum and elective courses in international relations, foreign policy and conflict resolution. INTAF 802 Foundations of Diplomacy (required course) INTAF 590 Colloquium on Global Issues (required course) INTAF 816 War and Peace INTAF 597F Domestic Influences on Foreign Policy INTAF 812 Role of Intelligence in Foreign Policy Affiliate
    [Show full text]
  • Department of State FOIA Log 2011
    UNCLASSIFIED U.S. Department of State Case No. F-2011-07654 Doc No. C05262527 Date: 04/03/2013 FOIA Log - Cases Received Between 1/3/2011 and 12/30/2011 7/25/2012 B6 REQ REF REQ NAME SUBJECT RELEASED IN PART B6 RECEIVE DATE CASE STATUS F-2011-00045 LOST VISA AND I 94 AND ASKING FOR NECESSARY DOCUMENTS 01/03/2011 CLOSED F-2011-00066 JOHN ALTHEN 12/10 RECESS APPOINTMENTS OF US AMBASSADORS TO SYRIA (FORD), THE 01/03/2011 OPEN CZECH REPUBLIC (EISEN), TURKEY (RICCARDONE) AND AZERBAIJAN (BRYZA). F-2011-00067 JASON SMATHERS INDEX IN FOIA CASE 201002837 01/03/2011 CLOSED F-2011-00115 CHRISTOPHER AUTHOR AND SOLDIER BENNETT J DOTY 01/06/2011 CLOSED EGER F-2011-00116 ELIZABETH 01/05/2011 CLOSED COLLINS F-2011-00118 DAVID FELDMAN NATURALTIZATION DOCUMENTS 01/05/2011 CLOSED F-2011-00119 MICHELLE C 01/05/2011 CLOSED SANCHEZ F-2011-00120 KAREN R GENTNER ORPHAN DESIGNATION APPLICATION FOR 01/05/2011 CLOSED F-2011-00121 LE G ELISE DOCUMENTS THAT CONTAIN THE NAME PONT SAINT ESPRIT 01/05/2011 CLOSED F-2011-00122 BRIAN BERGEN JOE F LUSK II HELICOPTER CRASH 01/05/2011 CLOSED F-2011-00123 WILLIAM BURR RECORDS OF MEETINGS BETWEEN GENERAL VERNON WALTERS AND 01/04/2011 CLOSED PAKISTANI PRESIDENT MUHAMMAD ZIA UL HAQ F-2011-00126 SOKOL BRAHA 01/03/2011 OPEN F-2011-00133 VISA RECORDS OF REQUESTER 01/04/2011 OPEN F-2011-00134 RICHARDS BUTLER VISA RECORDS FOR 01/04/2011 CLOSED F-2011-00135 DIETER MAIER 01/04/2011 CLOSED F-2011-00136 JEREMY BIGWOOD HOUNDURAS WORKERS CONFEDERATION (CTH) 01/04/2011 OPEN REVIEW AUTHORITY: Frank Tumminia, Senior Reviewer Page 1 of 364 UNCLASSIFIED U.S.
    [Show full text]