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Policy Analysis on U.S. Policy

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In-Depth Reports
The Bush Administration and the Peace Process:
Annapolis and Beyond
On October 21, 2007, David Makovsky, Daniel Kurtzer, Jim Hoagland, and Dennis Ross addressed The Washington Institute's Weinberg Founders Conference. The following is a summary of their remarks. In a spirited discussion moderated by Dennis Ross and David Makovsky of The Washington Insitute, former U.S. ambassador to Egypt and Israel
Oct 21, 2007
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  • Dennis Ross
In-Depth Reports
Vice President Cheney:
Address to The Washington Institute's Weinberg Founders Conference
On October 21, 2007, Vice President Richard Cheney delivered a special address to The Washington Institute's 2007 Weinberg Founders Conference. The following is a transcript of his remarks. The vice president was introduced by Institute Executive Committee member Roger Hertog. Thank you very much, Roger. Thanks for the kind words
Oct 21, 2007
In-Depth Reports
America's Future Direction in Iraq
On October 21, 2007, J.D. Crouch and Antony Blinken addressed The Washington Institute's Weinberg Founders Conference. Mr. Crouch formerly served as assistant to the president and deputy national security advisor. Mr. Blinken is a majority staff director of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and senior foreign policy advisor to the
Oct 20, 2007
In-Depth Reports
Homegrown Radicalism in the United States
On October 20, 2007, Mitchell Silber and Pam Byron addressed The Washington Institute's Weinberg Founders Conference. Pam Byron, deputy national intelligence officer for transnational threats at the National Intelligence, Council, spoke off the record. Mitchell Silber is a senior analyst in the Intelligence Division of the New York City Police
Oct 20, 2007
Brief Analysis
Promoting Arab Democracy (or Not):
What the Past Should Tell Us about the Future (Part I)
On October 3, 2007, J. Scott Carpenter addressed a Policy Forum at The Washington Institute marking the launch of Project Fikra, a new Washington Institute program focused on empowering Arab moderates and liberals in their struggles against extremism. Mr. Carpenter is a Keston Family fellow at the Institute and former
Oct 18, 2007
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  • J. Scott Carpenter
George P. Shultz
Multimedia
Brief Analysis
Inaugural Scholar-Statesman Award Dinner
In October 2007, George Shultz and Bernard Lewis were honored with The Washington Institute's inaugural Scholar-Statesman Awards at a ceremony in New York.
Oct 17, 2007
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  • George P. Shultz
  • Robert Satloff
Articles & Testimony
What Rice Must Do to Pave Way for Mideast Peace Deal
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is in the Middle East on a trip designed to help prepare for the meeting she intends to convene with Israelis, Palestinians and Arab states at the end of November. She has a great deal of work to do and not a lot of time
Oct 17, 2007
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  • Dennis Ross
Articles & Testimony
Lebanon's Government by Murder
Forty Lebanese members of parliament belonging to the pro-Western, anti-Syria March 14th majority bloc currently reside in Tower 3 at Beirut's Phoenicia Intercontinental Hotel. With plush couches, stereos and flat-screen TVs, the two-bedroom units at the Phoenicia are swank. But the lawmakers aren't guests; they're prisoners. To get into the
Oct 17, 2007
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  • David Schenker
Articles & Testimony
Condi's Keys
Secretary of State Rice is planning to convene an international meeting in Annapolis sometime in November. While President Bush has spent little time during his tenure on Arab-Israeli peacemaking, he has embraced Secretary Rice's ambitious desire to use the Annapolis meeting to endorse a statement of principles on how to
Oct 8, 2007
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  • Dennis Ross
Brief Analysis
Similar Threats, Similar Approaches:
Improving Transatlantic Counterterrorism Ties
Note: This PolicyWatch is based on the author's recent op-ed in Financial Times Deutschland. Read the original op-ed (in German). With U.S. government assistance, three "homegrown" terrorist suspects were arrested in Germany several weeks ago. Despite this success story, transatlantic counterterrorism ties have been seriously tested over the past three
Sep 27, 2007
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  • Michael Jacobson
Articles & Testimony
How We Can Bring Him Down
This week, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad again darkens the doorstep of America to address the United Nations. There he is likely to express outrage that New York refused his request to visit Ground Zero. Like that visit would have been, his speech will be designed to divert attention from what
Sep 24, 2007
Brief Analysis
Losing Traction against Syria
The September 6 Israeli bombing of a presumed North Korean-supplied nuclear weapons facility in Syria highlights the ongoing policy challenge posed by Damascus. More than three years after President Bush signed the Syria Accountability and Lebanese Sovereignty Restoration Act (SAA), Syria continues to support terrorism, destabilize Iraq, meddle in Lebanon
Sep 21, 2007
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  • David Schenker
Brief Analysis
Rice's Obstacles on the Road to an Israeli-Palestinian Breakthrough
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice recently visited Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert and Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas to get personal briefings from each leader regarding their sensitive discussions on peace. Such briefings are designed so that Rice can identify the existing gaps between the parties and fashion U.S. strategy in
Sep 20, 2007
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  • David Makovsky
Brief Analysis
Six Years after September 11: A 9-11 Commission Progress Report
An update on the work and recommendations of the 9-11 Commission.
Sep 17, 2007
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  • Michael Hurley
  • Chris Kojm
◆ Counterterrorism Lecture Series
Articles & Testimony
Getting Down to Business
Relations between the Syrian government and Americans who work with Syrians here are as bad as I have seen in the four years since I began working as the American editor of Syria Today, the country's first private-sector English language magazine. Last November, the Syrian authorities closed the Damascus offices
Sep 14, 2007
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  • Andrew J. Tabler
Brief Analysis
The Petraeus-Crocker Report:
An Assessment
A series of congressional hearings and media interviews by Gen. David Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan Crocker this week offered insights into the U.S. strategy in Iraq, and several yardsticks by which future progress there may be evaluated. Encouraging Numbers In his testimony to Congress, General Petraeus stated that "the military
Sep 13, 2007
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  • Michael Eisenstadt
Articles & Testimony
Back in the USSR
When surveying the challenges we face internationally, it is easy to put Russia on the back burner. Consider what the next president is likely to inherit internationally. In Iraq, disengaging in a way that contains the turmoil from spilling over into the region and still preserves some prospect of a
Sep 11, 2007
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  • Dennis Ross
Articles & Testimony
Tribal Engagement Lessons Learned
Engagement activities -- overt interactions between coalition military and foreign civilian personnel for the purpose of obtaining information, influencing behavior, or building an indigenous base of support for coalition objectives -- have played a central role in Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF). They have involved efforts to reach out to village
Sep 11, 2007
Articles & Testimony
Re-Enlist U.N. in War on Terror
The recent National Intelligence Estimate painted a troubling picture. While al-Qaida is resurgent, with an "undiminished" intent to attack the U.S. homeland, international counterterrorism cooperation is likely to wane as 9/11 grows more distant. Revitalizing the United Nations' counterterrorism role would be an important step to bolster the international effort
Sep 11, 2007
Articles & Testimony
Promote Liberal Democracy
It seems a very long time ago that President George W. Bush gave his second inaugural address. In January 2005, he proclaimed that "the best hope for peace in our world is the expansion of freedom in all the world." With this soaring idea, deeply rooted in America's Wilsonian political
Sep 9, 2007
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  • David Makovsky

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The Diane and Guilford Glazer Foundation Program on Great Power Competition and the Middle East focuses on the region as a setting for heightened competition between the United States and other world powers, such as China and Russia.

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Robert Satloff - source: The Washington Institute
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Robert Satloff is the Segal Executive Director of The Washington Institute, a post he assumed in January 1993.
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