100 Names
100 Names
100 Names
Alison Kiehl Friedman is Executive Director of the International Corporate Accountability Roundtable, and a
longtime activist on human trafficking. She served as Deputy Director in the State Department’s Office to
Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons in the Obama administration, where she managed over $50 million
in federal grants and US interagency processes to combat human trafficking. She previously co-founded ASSET,
an organization that addressed human trafficking in global supply chains, where she helped author the
California Transparency in Supply Chains law. She also previously worked for California Representative Jane
Harman, where she managed security and transportation challenges around major ports and LAX. Friedman
holds a B.A. from Stanford University.
Education:
B.A., Political Science and Government, Stanford University, 2002; M.B.A., Oxford University, Saïd Business School, 2017
Affiliations:
US House of Representatives, Office of Jane Harman (District Director)
US Department of State, Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons (Deputy Director)
International Corporate Accountability Roundtable (Executive Director)
Free the Slaves (Interim Executive Director)
The Global Fund to End Slavery (Vice President)
Alliance to Stop Slavery and End Trafficking (Executive Director)
People for the American Way (San Francisco Office Director, California Policy Director, Legislative Coordinator)
Gore/Lieberman 2000 (National Student Director)
Key Publications:
Thompson Reuters Foundation News, "Trump does not need a wall to prevent human trafficking" (2019)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/alison-friedman-3137501/
Education:
M.P.P., Public Policy, Harvard Kennedy School of Government; A.B., Political Science, Stanford University
Affiliations:
Library of Congress (Specialist in Nuclear Policy); Georgetown University (Adjunct Assistant Professor); Institute for Defense Analyses (Researcher);
US Department of Defense (Employed)
Key Publications:
Russia’s Nuclear Weapons: Doctrine, Forces, and Modernization (2020)
Conventional Prompt Global Strike and Long-Range Ballistic Missiles: Background and Issues (2020)
U.S. Strategic Nuclear Forces: Background (2020)
See more (2020)
See more (2017)
Testified:
Before the Committee on Foreign Affairs, Subcommittee on Europe, Eurasia, Energy, and the Environment, the U.S. House of Representatives and the
Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe U.S. Joint Committee hearing on, “The Importance of the Open Skies Treaty” (2019)
Education:
B.A., Political Science and Women's Studies, University of Toronto, 1999; J.D., Georgetown University Law Center, 2003
Affiliations:
Human Rights Watch (Deputy Washington Director); US Department of Defense, Office of Military Commissions (Defense Attorney)
Key Publications:
"US Architects Join Movement Against Capital Punishment, Torture," Human Rights Watch (2020)
"U.S. War Crimes in Yemen: Stop Looking the Other Way," Foreign Policy in Focus (2020)
"US Claim of ‘No Civilian Casualties’ is Tested in Afghanistan," Women's eNews (2018)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/andrea-j-prasow-293b3936/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/andreaprasow
Annelle Sheline
Annelle Sheline is a Fellow at the Baker Institute Center for the Middle East and a Research Fellow for the
Middle East at the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft. She is a Middle East analyst with expertise in
violent extremism, religious and political authority, freedom of religion and expression, and human rights.
Sheline previously lived in the Middle East, where she conducted field research in Egypt, Jordan, Morocco,
Oman, Qatar, Yemen, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates. Sheline was an Advisor at Gulf State
Analytics, a geopolitical consulting firm that assesses risks and opportunities among Gulf Cooperation Council
states for traders, lenders, investors, and policymakers. She has advanced proficiency in Arabic, French, and
Spanish. Her analysis has been published by The Arab Gulf States Institute of Washington, Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace, Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy, and Georgetown
University’s Berkley Center for Religion, Peace, and World Affairs. Her public commentary has appeared in the
Washington Post, the Nation, the National Interest, Foreign Policy, and the Global Post. Sheline holds a B.A. in
Conflict Studies from New York University and an M.A. and Ph.D in Political Science from George Washington
University.
Education:
B.A., Conflict Studies, NYU; Ph.D., Political Science, George Washington University
Affiliations:
Gulf State Analytics, Advisor
Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, Fellow
National Security Education Program, Boren Fellow
Baker Institute for Public Policy, Fellow
Project on Middle East Political Science, Fellow
Loeb Institute for Religious Freedom, Fellow
Boniuk Institute for Religious Tolerance, Fellow
US Department of Education, Foreign Language and Area Studies Fellow
Elliott School of International Affairs, Director of Undergraduate Scholars
Georgetown, Researcher
The Brookings Institution, Research Assistant
The Daily News Egypt, Business Writer
Enigma Magazine, Staff Writer
Big Think, Editorial Assistant
Key Publications:
“Profits Over People: Trump White House Backs Arms Dealers” (2020)
MBS & religious authority, reform in Saudi Arabia (2019)
Politics, Religion and Tolerance (2019)
Saudi Arabia is changing, but don't give MbS all the credit (2019)
Public Opinion on the Religious Authority of the Moroccan King (2019)
Missteps in U.S. Govt's Muslim Outreach Plan (2019)
Royal Religious Authority: Morocco’s “Commander of the Faithful" (2019)
Mosque-building as Nation-building (2019)
‘Fake News’ Tool for Authoritarian Regimes to Silence Citizens (2018)
“Middle East regimes are using ‘moderate’ Islam to stay in power” (2017)
CV: http://rice.academia.edu/AnnelleSheline/CurriculumVitae
Twitter: https://twitter.com/AnnelleSheline
Annie Shiel
Annie Shiel is the Senior Advisor for US Policy & Advocacy at the Center for Civilians in Conflict (CIVIC),
where she conducts policy analysis and advocacy around the civilian harm implications of US military
operations and security sector assistance. She is also a Research Program Manager with Stanford University,
where she leads research on the second- and third-order effects of conflict on civilians. In the Obama
administration, Shiel served as a Policy Advisor in the US State Department’s Office of Security and Human
Rights, and before that as a Western Hemisphere Affairs Intern. She worked on human rights, civilian
protection, and security sector reform as a founding member of the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and
Labor’s Office of Security and Human Rights. Shiel was awarded a Security Fellowship with the Truman National
Security Project. She holds a B.A. in International Development from McGill University and an M.A. in
International Policy Studies from Stanford University.
Education:
B.A., International Development (Honors), McGill University, 2013; M.A., International Policy Studies, Stanford University, 2019
Affiliations:
Center for Civilians in Conflict (Senior Advisor, US Policy & Advocacy | Research & Advocacy Intern)
Truman National Security Project (Security Fellow)
US Department of State, Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor (Policy Advisor, Office of Security and Human Rights | Western Hemisphere
Intern)
Al Otro lado (Border Rights Team)
Organizing for Action (Fellow)
Dos Pueblos New York - Tipitapa Sister City Project (Development and Communications Intern)
Stanford University (Research Program Manager, Humanitarian Response and Civil Protection)
Key Publications:
"Great Responsibility: A Legislative Reform Agenda for U.S. Arms Transfers and Civilian Harm," Center for Civilians in Conflict (2020)
"DOD’s New Ex Gratia Policy: What’s Right, What’s Wrong, and What’s Next," Just Security (2020)
"Time to flip the script on congressional arms sales powers," The Hill (2020)
"In Coalition Ops, Civilian Protections Are Only as Strong as the Weakest Link," Defense One (2019)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/annieshiel/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/annieshiel
Anthony Weir
Anthony Weir is a Legislative Secretary for Nuclear Disarmament and Pentagon Spending at the Friends
Committee on National Legislation. Weir served at the US State Department as Deputy Assistant Secretary for
the Bureau of Legislative Affairs. Weir was a member of the Secretary of State’s policy planning staff for
international security policy and nuclear nonproliferation. Weir has advised the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee on nuclear weapons, arms sales, export controls, nuclear cooperation, and nonproliferation. He
helped craft and negotiate the resolution and committee report that provided Senate advice and consent for
ratification of the New START treaty. Weir was a Research Associate for the Project on Managing the Atom at
Harvard University. Weir holds an M.A. and an M.P.A. from the University of Texas at Austin.
Affiliations:
Friends Committee on National Legislation (Legislative Secretary for Nuclear Disarmament and Pentagon Spending); U.S. Department of State
(Deputy Assistant Secretary, Bureau of Legislative Affairs); U.S. Senate (Senior Staff Foreign Relations Committee)
Key Publications:
Arms Control Today, "Open Skies Treaty: A Quiet Legacy Under Threat" (2019)
The Hill, "It’s long past time to tie the president’s hands" (2018)
The Hill, "Voters will punish Congress for ignoring duty on war and peace" (2018)
FCNL, "75 Years After Hiroshima, Congress Must Speak Plainly About the Suffering Wrought by Nuclear Weapons" (2020)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/anthonywier/
Speaking Appearance (ex.): Friends Committee on National Legislation, "Breaking the Militarism Mindset," Lecture
Twitter: https://twitter.com/fcnl
Becca Heller
Becca Heller is the Co-Founder and Executive Director of the International Refugee Assistance Project, which
assists with applications, appeals, and resettlement processes under US and international law. As a human
rights lawyer, she works with law schools and law firms to defend the rights of refugees and improve protection
outcomes. Heller was named Foreign Policy’s Citizen Diplomat of the Year in 2017 and one of “30 Under 30”
changemakers by the Christian Science Monitor. Heller has received the McArthur Genius Award, Charles
Bronfman Prize, and the American Constitution Society’s Public Interest Award. Heller has appeared on CNN
and in the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Minnesota Post-Bulletin, Roanoke Times, and Stanford Social
Innovation Review. She holds a B.A. from Dartmouth College and a J.D. from Yale.
Education:
J.D., Yale Law School; B.A., Dartmouth College
Affiliations:
International Refugee Assistance Project (Co-Founder & Director)
Yale Law School (Visiting Clinical Lecturer)
Council on Foreign Relations (Term Member)
Cornell University (Lecturer)
Yale Journal of International Law (Articles Editor)
Fulbright Scholar
Key Publications:
The U.S. Is Taking in Fewer Refugees than ever, and It’s Our Loss (2019)
After the Missiles, Remember the Syrian Refugees (2017)
What Refugees and Other Newcomers Really Mean to America: Correcting Trump’s Hateful Lies (2018)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/becca-heller-6a915194/
Education:
B.A., History, University of California, Berkeley, 1981; M.A., Modern History, Oxford University, 1979
Affiliations:
US Department of State (Deputy Assistant Secretary, Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor | Senior Advisor to the Under Secretary for Economic and
Business Affairs | Deputy Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs and Chief Speechwriter to the Secretary)
Business for Social Responsibility (Senior Advisor)
Bennett Freeman Associates, LLC (Principal)
Calvert Investment (Senior Vice President, Sustainability Research and Policy)
RESOLVE (Strategic Partner)
Oxfam America Action Fund (Treasurer)
Council on Foreign Relations (Bernard L. Schwartz Senior Fellow in Business and Foreign Policy)
Critical Resource (Senior Advisor)
Global Witness (Chair, Advisory Board)
Global Network Initiative (Governing Board)
Clinton-Gore Presidential Campaign (Campaign and Communications Strategist)
Walter F. Mondale Presidential Campaign (Presidential Campaign Aid)
Skoll Foundation (Contributor)
Key Publications:
Shared Space Under Pressure: Business Support for Civic Business & Human Rights Resource Centre and International Service for Human Rights,
"Freedoms and Human Rights Defenders" (2018)
Presented at the Conference on the Growing Importance of African Oil (Co-Sponsored by the US Department of State and the National Intelligence
Council) "African Oil Development and USG policy challenges" (2003)
BSR Report, "Human Rights Policy Engagement: The Role of Companies" (2019)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/bennettfreeman/
Testified:
House Committee on Financial Services, Subcommittee on International Monetary Policy and Trade Hearing, "The Costs and Consequences of
Dodd-Frank Section 1502: Impacts on America and the Congo" (2012)
Senate Judiciary Committee, Subcommittee on Human Rights and the Law, testifying on the Voluntary Principles on Security and Human Rights
(2008)
Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee, "Combating Genocide in Darfur: The Role of Divestment and Other Policy Tools" (2007)
Education:
Ph.D., University of Virginia
LL.M., Georgetown University Law Center
M.P.A., State University of New York at Albany
J.D., Albany Law School
B.A., Amherst College
Affiliations:
U.S. State Department (Ambassador, Special Envoy Coordinator for Threat Reduction Programs)
Ford Foundation (Program Officer)
U.S. Navy Reserves (served)
US Air Force Reserves (served)
Brookings Institution (Fellow)
National Academy of Sciences (Committee Chair)
9/11 Commission (Counsel)
Woman of Color Advancing Peace and Security and Conflict Transformation (Founder/Executive Director)
Key Publications:
Now is the time to revisit the Global Health Security Agenda—Brookings (2020) (2020)
Redefining our concept of security- Brookings (2019) (2018)
CULTURAL BIAS CLOUDS US POLICIES ON WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION (2018) (2018)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/bonnie-jenkins-6650464/
Testified:
Bonnie Jenkins, Ph.D. Testimony before the House of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Terrorism, Nonproliferation,
and Trade (2018)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Jenkinsbd
Bruce Riedel
Bruce Riedel is the Director of the Intelligence Project at the Brookings Institution and a Senior Fellow at the
Center for Middle East Policy. Riedel has 30 years of experience with the CIA including overseas posts and has
received the Intelligence Medal of Merit and Distinguished Intelligence Career Medal. At the Pentagon, he was
Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for the Near East and South Asia. He was a Senior Advisor for NATO. He
was a Senior Advisor on the National Security Council for the last four US Presidents. President Obama asked
Riedel to chair a review of US policy towards Afghanistan and Pakistan. Prime Minister David Cameron asked
Riedel to brief the UK’s National Security Council on Pakistan. He served as an expert advisor to the
prosecution of Al Qaeda terrorist Omar Farooq Abdulmutallab. Riedel was a member of President Clinton’s
Camp David peace process team. He holds a B.A. from Brown and an M.A. from Harvard.
Education:
M.A., Harvard University; B.A., Brown University
Affiliations:
Special Advisor, NATO
Member, Royal College of Defense Studies
Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director for Near East and North African Affairs, Director for Gulf and South Asia Affairs- National
Security Council
Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Near East and South Asian Affairs, Office of the Secretary of Defense
Deputy Chief Persian Gulf Task Force, Central Intelligence Agency
Georgetown University School of Foreign Service (Professor)
Albright Stonebridge Group (Senior advisor)
2008 presidential campaign of Barack Obama (policy advisor)
Key Publications:
Beirut 1958 (2019) (2019)
Kings and Presidents (2017) (2017)
JFK’s Forgotten Crisis (2017) (2017)
A New Pakistan Policy: Containment by Riedel, The New York Times, October 15, 2011 (2011)
CV: https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/FP_20200304_riedel_cv.pdf
Testified:
Testimony of Bruce Riedel, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Near East and South Asian Affairs, before the House Committee on National
Security: (1996)
Education:
M.P.A., Columbia University; B.A., Pitzer College
Affiliations:
International Trade Union Confederation – ITUC (Deputy President, Representative)
AFL-CIO (Director)
American Center for International Labor Solidarity (Director)
Ford Foundation (Program Asst)
International Labor Rights Forum (Board Member)
International Corporate Accountability Roundtable (Board member)
Latin American Working Group (Board member)
Maryland Consumer Rights Coalition (Board member)
Trade Union Confederation of the Americas (Representative)
Key Publications:
A Renewed Call for a Robust Labor and Human Rights Agenda (2020) (2020)
German union's big win shows US labor the path forward – The Hill (2020) (2020)
Respect at Work Has to Become the New Normal: ILO Convention 190 and Rebuilding for a Fairer Economy (2020) (2020)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/catherine-feingold-b318136/
Testified:
Statement of Catherine Feingold on the TPP Labor Chapter to the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Ways and Means Democrats (2015):
(2015)
Testimony of Cathy Feingold before the House Ways and Means Committee on the opportunities and challenges presented by Mexico's labor law
reform for an improved NAFTA. (2019): (2019)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/CathyFeingold
Chantale Wong
Chantale Wong is currently a DC-based freelance photographer working with the Faith & Politics Institute. and
Advisor at Amida Technology Solutions Both President Obama and President Clinton appointed Wong to
Federal positions. With over 20 years experience in public service, Wong is a data and policy expert with a
focus on economic development in Asia and the Pacific Rim. In the Obama administration, Wong served as Vice
President of Administration & Finance and CFO at the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC). Under
Wong’s leadership, MCC was named the world's most transparent aid agency. She was also Budget Director at
NASA, Acting Budget Director at the US Treasury Department, and Chief of Staff at the Office of Management
and Budget. In the Clinton administration, Wong was appointed the US representative to the Asian Development
Bank’s governing board, and before that was Chief of Staff to the Deputy Secretary of the Department of the
Interior, OMB Chief of Staff, and Special Assistant to the Administrator at the Environmental Protection Agency.
In 2008, Wong received the Presidential Award for Management Excellence, which is the highest managerial
award given to Executive Branch agencies. Early in her career, Wong was an Environmental and Structural
Engineer. Wong holds a B.S. from the University of Hawaii at Manoa, an M.S. from the University of California,
Berkeley, and an M.P.A. from the Harvard Kennedy School.
Education:
B.S., Civil Engineering, University of Hawaii at Manoa, 1980; M.S., Environmental Engineering, University of California, Berkeley, 1982; M.P.A.,
Harvard Kennedy School of Government, 1988
Affiliations:
Conference on Asian Pacific American Leadership (Co-Founder)
Veterans in Global Leadership (Advisory Board)
Focus on the Story (Treasurer)
Millennium Challenge Corporation (Chief Financial Officer and Vice President, Administration and Finance)
NASA (Budget Director)
Office of Management and Budget, Bureau of Fiscal Service (Director)
US Department of the Treasury (Deputy Budget Director)
Asian Development Bank (Acting US Executive Director)
OMB Director Alice Rivlin (Chief of Staff)
US Environmental Protection Agency (Special Assistant to Administrator Carol Browner)
City and County of San Francisco (Environmental Engineer)
Boeing (Structural Engineer)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/chantale-wong-960148/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/chantalew
Cole Bockenfeld
Cole Bockenfeld is the Senior Foreign Policy Advisor to Senator Chris Murphy (D-CT). As a Senior Officer at
the International Rescue Committee, Bockenfeld led advocacy efforts that supported over 7 million Syrians. At
the Project on Middle East Democracy, Bockenfeld managed staff, testified before congress, and led advocacy
for targeted sanctions and humanitarian support. At the International Foundation for Electoral Systems,
Bockenfeld developed a $22 million budget for 27 projects in the Middle East and North Africa, developed a
$5.5 million voting program in Iraq, and provided electoral assistance in Lebanon, Morocco, and the West Bank
and Gaza. Bockenfeld’s writing has been published in The Hill, Washington Post, New York Times, and Foreign
Policy, and he has spoken to numerous media outlets. Cole received a B.A. in Middle Eastern Studies from the
University of Arkansas, studied Arabic in Jordan and public policy at Georgetown University, and earned an
M.A. in Global Diplomacy from the University of London.
Education:
M.A., Global Diplomacy, University of London; BA, Middle Eastern Studies, Political Science, University of Arkansas; Public Policy, Economics, and
Constitutional Law, Georgetown University; Arabic, Jami'at Al Al-Bayt in Mafraq, Jordan
Affiliations:
Senator Chris Murphy (Senior Foreign Policy Advisor)
International Rescue Committee (Senior Officer)
Project on Middle East Democracy (Advocacy Director, Deputy Director for Policy)
International Foundation for Electoral Systems (Program Coordinator)
Truman National Security Project (Partner)
Key Publications:
"The Return of Syrian Refugees," Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (2018)
"U.S. Silence On Continued Bahraini Repression," in Foreign Policy (2012)
"Meet Bahrain’s Lobbyists," in The Hill (2009)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/colebockenfeld/
Testified:
US Congress Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission: Human Rights in Bahrain (2016)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/colebockenfeld
Dan Mahanty
Dan Mahanty is the Director of the US Program at the Center for Civilians in Conflict, where he promotes
policies that protect civilians in conflict zones. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, Colin Powell
Fellow, and Truman National Security Fellow. Mahanty served 16 years in the US State Department, where he
created and led the Office of Security and Human Rights. As DOS Program Manager for the Middle East and
North Africa, he managed an annual budget of $35 million and developed rule of law, criminal justice, and law
enforcement programs in Lebanon, Libya, and Egypt. At the US Department of Homeland Security, Mahanty was
the Senior Policy Advisor for Critical Infrastructure. At the Center for Strategic and International Studies, he
was a Senior Associate of the International Security Program. Mahanty has appeared in Just Security, Defense
One, Oxford Research Group, and USA Today. He has taught at the University of Kansas, University of Missouri-
Kansas City, and Georgetown University. Mahanty holds a B.A. in Economics from George Mason University and
an M.A. in Security Studies and US National Security Policy from Georgetown University.
Education:
B.A., Economics, George Mason University; M.A., Security Studies and U.S. National Security Policy, Georgetown University
Affiliations:
Center for Civilians in Conflict (Director of US Program)
Center for Strategic and International Studies (Non-Resident Senior Associate)
Center for Global & International Studies, University of Kansas (Adjunct Professor)
University of Missouri (Adjunct Professor)
Georgetown University (Adjunct Associate Professor)
Deloitte (Manager)
U.S. Department of State (Director of the Office of Security and Human Rights)
U.S. Department of Homeland Security (Senior Policy Adviser)
International Relations Committee of Kansas City (Board Member)
Key Publications:
Reducing Civilian Casualties in Partnered Operations (2018)
Civilians and “By, With, and Through”: Key issues and Questions to Civilian Harm and Security Partnership (2018)
With Great Power: Modifying US Arms Sales to Reduce Civilian Harm (2018)
See more in Publications Section of Link
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/danielmahanty/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/danmahanty
Daphne Eviatar
Daphne Eviatar is Amnesty International USA’s Director of Security with Human Rights. Eviatar leads programs
related to detention, the use of lethal force, and interrogation. Before her current role, she was a Senior Counsel
at Human Rights First. Eviatar has experience as a journalist and is a Founding Editor of Just Security. She has
been published in the New York Times, the Washington Post, Reuters, Foreign Policy, HuffPost, Newsweek, and
Politico, and has appeared on CBS and NPR. Eviatar holds a B.A. from Dartmouth College, an M.S. in journalism
from Columbia University, and a J.D. from New York University.
Education:
B.A., Dartmouth College; M.S., Columbia University; J.D., New York University
Affiliations:
Amnesty International USA (Director of Security with Human Rights); Human Rights First (Senior Counsel); Just Security (Founding Editor)
Key Publications:
"Toward a Consistent and Coherent Ex Gratia Policy for Civilian Casualties" (2020)
"The Fatal Flaw in DOD’s Latest Civilian Casualties Report" (2020)
"Kill the Kill List" (2012)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/daphne-eviatar-1774051a/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/deviatar
Diala Jadallah-Redding
Diala Jadallah-Redding is a Policy Director at the Congressional Progressive Caucus. She is a member of
Women of Color Advancing Peace and Security, specializing in national security, human rights, global health
security, and global advocacy and diplomacy. As Legislative Director and Senior Policy Advisor for
Representative Barbara Lee (D-CA), she assisted with a Dear Colleague letter of the 2001 Authorization for the
Use of Military Force and congressional briefing from Brown University’s Costs of War Project. Previously, she
worked in the office of Representative Dennis Kucinich (D-OH). She was the Director of Advocacy at Americans
for Democracy and Human Rights in Bahrain and has traveled extensively in Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, and
Morocco. Jadallah-Redding holds a B.A. in International Studies from George Mason University.
Affiliations:
Congressional Progressive Caucus (Policy Director); Office of Rep. Barbara Lee (Senior Policy Advisor/ Legislative Director); Office of Rep. Dennis
Kucinich (Staff); Americans for Democracy and Human Rights in Bahrain (Director of Advocacy)
Diana Ohlbaum
Diana Ohlbaum is the Senior Strategist and Legislative Director for Foreign Policy at the Friends Committee on
National Legislation. Ohlbaum is the Chair of the Board of the Center for International Policy and serves as a
member of the Executive Committee of the Modernizing Foreign Assistance Network and the Advisory Council
of the United Nations Association of the National Capital Area. She has also worked as an independent
consultant specializing in advocacy, political strategy, and legislative impact. Ohlbaum has experience working
in Congress, having served as a senior professional staff member of both the House Foreign Affairs Committee
and the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and earlier as an aide to Maryland Senator Paul Sarbanes.
Ohlbaum served as Deputy Director of USAID's Office of Transition Initiatives, which advances peace and
democracy in priority conflict-prone countries. She was Director of Public Policy for InterAction, an alliance of
NGOs engaged in humanitarian relief and international development. Ohlbaum has been published in The Hill,
The Nation, Just Security, and LobeLog. Ohlbaum holds a B.A. in Russian Studies from Amherst College and a
Ph.D. in Political Science from Johns Hopkins University.
Education:
Ph.D., Political Science, Johns Hopkins University; B.A., Russian Studies, Amherst College
Affiliations:
Friends Committee on National Legislation (Senior Strategist and Legislative Director for Foreign Policy)
InterAction (Director of Public Policy)
USAID's Office of Transition Initiatives (Deputy Director)
US Senate Foreign Relations Committee (Senior Professional Staff)
US House Foreign Affairs Committee (Senior Professional Staff)
Center for International Policy (Chair of the Board)
Modernizing Foreign Assistance Network (Executive Committee)
United Nations Association of the National Capital Area (Advisory Council)
Forum on the Arms Trade (Expert)
Key Publications:
Don’t Let Congress Stick Its Head in the Sand on Pentagon Spending (2020)
Yes, Congress, There Is Something You Can Do About Reckless Arms Sales (2020)
The Afghanistan Exit Deal May Fail, the Withdrawal Shouldn’t (2020)
Five Ways To Reset Us Foreign Policy Amid The Covid-19 Crisis (2020)
Diplomacy Is Still The Best Option For Dealing With Iran (2020)
An “Emergency” Arms Deal: Will Congress Acquiesce in Another Blow to Its Authority? (2020)
U.S. Arms Sales in the Time of COVID-19 (2020)
Building the Movement for a New Peaceful Foreign Policy (2019)
Dismantling Racism in U.S. Foreign Policy (2018)
CV: https://www.internationalpolicy.org/diana-ohlbaum
Twitter: https://twitter.com/dohlbaum
Eli Clifton
Eli Clifton is a Senior Advisor at the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft and an Investigative Journalist at
Large at Responsible Statecraft, the Quincy Institute’s publication. Clifton has previously served as a reporter at
the American Independent News Network, ThinkProgress, and Inter Press Service. Clifton is co-author of the
Center for American Progress’s report “Fear Inc.: The Roots Of the Islamophobia Network In America.” He has
been a fellow at the Nation Institute and the Type Media Center. Clifton has been published in Foreign Policy,
the Intercept, LobeLog, Huffpost, the Daily Beast, and Salon. He holds a B.A. from Bates College and an M.A. in
international political economy from the London School of Economics.
Education:
B.A., Bates College; M.A., London School of Economics
Affiliations:
Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft (Senior Advisor)
Responsible Statecraft (Investigative Journalist at Large)
American Independent News Network (Reporter)
ThinkProgress (Reporter)
Inter Press Service (Reporter)
Nation Institute (Fellow)
Type Media Center (Fellow)
Key Publications:
"Trump’s biggest donors will continue to shape hawkish GOP foreign policy" (2020)
"Collective punishment has always been the stated goal of Iran sanctions hawks" (2020)
"Fear, Inc.: The Roots of the Islamophobia Network in America" (2011)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/EliClifton
Elizabeth Shackelford
Elizabeth Shackelford is an independent consultant on democracy, governance, and human rights. She spent
seven years working in the US State Department, where she received recognition for overseeing the evacuation
of 1,000 Americans and foreign nationals from South Sudan in 2013. At Booz Allen Hamilton, Shackelford
managed $4 million for project assessments, led and managed teams in the field, co-authored and edited
reports, and recommended legal and institutional reform actions. She managed USAID’s Tanzania Secured
Transactions and worked with local and international experts to draft legislation for financial reform.
Shackelford served as a legal technical expert on USAID projects to improve business and trade environments
in developing economies including the West Bank, Liberia, Nigeria, Kenya, Uganda, and Zimbabwe.
Shackelford holds a B.A. from Duke and a J.D. from the University of Pittsburgh.
Education:
B.A., Duke University; J.D., University of Pittsburgh
Affiliations:
US State Department (Diplomat/Political Officer); Booz Allen Hamilton (Associate); Special Court for Sierra Leone (Legal Assistant); Covington and
Burling, LLP (Associate)
Key Publications:
The Dissent Channel: American Diplomacy in a Dishonest Age- Book (2020) (2020)
Trump’s Inspector General Purge and the Death of Dissent- Common Dreams (2020) (2020)
U.S. Diplomat’s Resignation Signals Wider Exodus From State Department – Foreign Policy (2017) (2017)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/elizabeth-shackelford/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/lizzyshackelfor
Emily Manna
Emily Manna is the Policy Director for Open the Government, where she works on transparency and
accountability in US military and national security programs, including data preservation, proactive disclosure,
and the public’s right to know. Manna was a consultant for Cambridge Global Advisors, which identifies
venture capital opportunities in national security, cybersecurity, and the defense sector. Manna was a
Community Relations Associate at the Arab American Institute and a Research Fellow at American University’s
Ibn Khaldun Chair of Islamic Studies. In both of these roles, she focused on civil liberties and human rights in
national security and foreign policy. Manna’s research has focused on the US drone program. Manna has
published or been quoted in The Hill, The Nation, Cato Institute, Common Dreams, InsideSources, and
newspapers across the country. Manna holds a B.A. from American University and an M.P.P. from Georgetown
University.
Education:
B.A., American University; M.P.P, Georgetown University
Affiliations:
Cambridge Global Advisors (Consultant)
American University (Research Fellow)
Arab American Institute (Community Relations Associate)
Open the Government (Policy Director, Policy Analyst)
National Defense University Foundation (Program Asstistant)
Utica Phoenix Newspaper (Intern)
Office of Congressman Michael Arcuri (Intern)
Boys and Girls club (Volunteer)
Key Publications:
Full List (2020)
Government Inc: Amazon, Government Security, and Secrecy (2019)
The New Face of American War Is a Robot- The Nation (2019) (2019)
Secrecy, democracy and the TPP: trade transparency is what the public wants-and needs- The Hill (2016) (2016)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/emily-manna-b5619331/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/emilymanna
Erica Fein
Erica Fein is the Advocacy Director at Win Without War, engaging Congress, policymakers, the NGO
community, the media, and grassroots partners to advance a progressive foreign policy and national security
agenda. Previously, she served as Director of Government Affairs at Women’s Action for New Directions,
focusing on U.S. nuclear weapons policy and international nuclear agreements. As a Legislative Assistant to
former Congressman John D. Dingell, she handled national security, foreign policy, veterans affairs, and other
issues. Fein has deep experience in legislative strategy and campaigns focused on defense, foreign, and
budget policy. Her analysis and commentary has been featured in the New York Times, the Daily Beast, U.S.
News and World Report, Defense One, Defense News, Huff Post, the Intercept, and Responsible Statecraft,
among others. She is a Truman National Security Project Partner. Fein holds a B.A. in International Studies from
the University of Wisconsin-Madison and an M.A. in International Security from the Josef Korbel School of
International Studies at the University of Denver.
Education:
M.A., International Security, University of Denver; B.A., International Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Affiliations:
Win Without War (Advocacy Director)
Women's Action for New Directions (Nuclear Weapons Policy Director)
Center for the Study of Europe and the World (Graduate Assistant)
Congressman John Dingell (Legislative Assistant)
US House of Representatives (Legislative Correspondent)
Jews United for Justice (Jeremiah Fellow)
Key Publications:
The Coronavirus Threatens Nato. Let’s Move To Protect The Alliance. (2020)
Why We Will Win the Fight to Cut the Pentagon Budget (2020)
Democrats, Be Bold on National Security (2020)
After Trump Vetoed the Iran War Powers Resolution, Congress Must Continue to Act (2020)
America Should Save Emergency Spending for Emergencies (2020)
Why House Democrats Passed Bills Reining in Trump’s War Machine (2020)
See more
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/enfein/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/enfein
Erik Sperling
Erik Sperling is the Executive Director of Just Foreign Policy. He previously worked as Senior Adviser and
Counsel in the offices of Representative Ro Khanna (D-CA) and Representative John Conyers (D-MI). Sperling
was the first Congressional staffer to help pass amendments regarding US participation in the war on Yemen in
early 2015, and was the staff lead for efforts to end the transfer of cluster bombs to the Saudi-led coalition. He
supported the Obama administration's Syria policy by working to pass amendments prohibiting anti-aircraft
missiles from being sent to Syria and crafted the only congressional letter in support of Obama's diplomatic
approach. He led a multi-year campaign to codify a ban on arms and training for a foreign far-right militia. He
also took the lead on legislative efforts to reduce tensions and promote a formal end to the Korean War, as well
as a range of initiatives to scrutinize broad-based sanctions that harm civilians. Sperling holds a B.A. from the
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and a J.D. from Georgetown University.
Education:
J.D., Georgetown University; B.A., University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Affiliations:
Just Foreign Policy (Executive Director); Congressman Ro Khanna (Senior Adviser and Counsel); Congressman John Conyers (Senior Adviser and
Counsel); JobsJusticePeace (Counsel)
Key Publications:
Iran War Powers Vote Today -- We Need Republican Votes (2020)
Letter from 50 organizations to Joe Biden (2020)
Letter to Rep. Adam Smith (2019)
Speaking Appearance (ex.): Korea Peace Now, Path to Peace with North Korea
Twitter: https://twitter.com/eriksperling
Fulton Armstrong
Fulton Armstrong teaches at American University and is a Senior Fellow at its Center for Latin American and
Latino Studies. Armstrong specializes in intelligence, foreign policy, and Latin America. Before entering
academia, Armstrong was the Chief Intelligence Advisor to a US military commander in Europe and NATO, a
member of the US National Intelligence Council, and Chief of Staff to the Director of Central Intelligence Crime
and Narcotics Center. Armstrong served two terms as a Director for Inter-American Affairs at the White House
National Security Council. He held senior staff positions on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and
worked closely with the committee’s investigations team. In the early years of his career, he was a
congressional Legislative Assistant on foreign affairs and a reporter and editor in Taiwan. He speaks English,
Spanish and Chinese. Armstrong holds a B.S. in Linguistics and Spanish from Georgetown University.
Affiliations:
American University (Research Fellow)
Senate Foreign Relations Committee (Senior Professional Staff on Latin America)
National Intelligence Council (National Intelligence Officer for Latin America)
DCI Crime and Narcotics Center (Chief of Staff)
National Security Council (Director for Inter-American Affairs)
Cuba Initiative at American University (Contributor)
School of International Service at American University (Adjunct Professorial Lecturer)
Key Publications:
Foreign Policy, "End the Drug War" (2012)
American University Center for Latin American and Latino Studies, "Challenges to “Safe Country” Strategy in Central America Mounting" (2020)
The Dialogue, "Is Political Risk in Latin America on the Rise for 2020?" (2019)
HuffPost, "U.S.-Cuba: Time to Push the Door" (2015)
CS Monitor, "How will Cuba react if relations with the US reverse under Trump?" (2016)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/fulton-armstrong-0372a079/
Education:
B.A., Political Science, Stanford University, 2015; M.Phil., International Relations, Cambridge University, 2016
Affiliations:
US House of Representatives, Office of Representative Ro Khanna (Legislative Director)
MENA-American National Security Expert - Expert--Diversity in National Security Network and New America Think Tank (Diversity)
US Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice (Research Assistant)
White House Office of Management and Administration (Intern)
Gates Cambridge Scholarship
CV: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1d7VWpUc17_teIgTFLkJcRn0FyT2mwaCh/view?usp=sharing
Speaking Appearance (ex.): The Mercury News, "Geo Saba goes to Washington," profile of Geo Saba, including interview with Rep. Ro Khanna
Gordon Adams
Gordon Adams is a Fellow at the Quincy Institute and a Fellow at the Stimson Center. He is an expert in grand
strategy, military spending, and diplomacy. Adams has taught international relations at American University’s
School of International Service and at George Washington University’s Elliott School of International Affairs,
where he was Director of the Security Policy program. Adams was Deputy Director of the International Institute
for Strategic Studies in London. He was the Founder and Director of the Defense Budget Project. Adams has
worked in federal government as Associate Director for National Security Programs at the Office of
Management and Budget, the senior White House official for diplomacy, foreign assistance, defense, and
intelligence budgeting. His work was recognized with the Defense Department’s Medal for Distinguished
Public Service. Adams is author of “The Iron Triangle: the Politics of Defense Contracting” and several
additional books on foreign policy. He has published in The Hill, The Conversation, New York Times, War on the
Rocks, Washington Spectator, and Foreign Policy. He speaks French, German, and Spanish. Adams holds a B.A.
from Stanford University, and an M.A. and Ph.D. from Columbia University.
Education:
B.A., Stanford University; Ph.D., Columbia University
Affiliations:
Office of Management and Budget (Associate Director for National Security Programs)
Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft (Fellow)
Stimson Center (Fellow)
International Institute for Strategic Studies (Deputy Director)
Defense Budget Project (Founder and Director)
American University School of International Service (Professor Emeritus)
George Washington University Elliott School of International Affairs Security Policy Program (Director)
Key Publications:
"Penny Wise, Pound Foolish: Trump’s Misguided Views of European Defense Spending" (2017)
"Donald Trump’s Military Government" (2016)
“The Iron Triangle: the Politics of Defense Contracting” (1982)
Testified:
Testimony Before the House Budget Committee on "Strategic and Fiscal Discipline: The Defense Budget and America’s Fiscal Crisis" (July 2011)
Hady Amr
Hady Amr is a member of the Biden-Harris Transition Agency Review Team, Fellow at the Brookings Institution,
Fellow at the Center for a New American Security, and member of the Council on Foreign Relations. Amr is an
expert in US foreign policy in the Middle East and public diplomacy. During the Obama administration, Amr
served as USAID’s Deputy Assistant Administrator for the Middle East and then as the State Department’s
Deputy Special Envoy for Israeli-Palestinian Negotiations. Amr has also served as the founding Director of the
Brookings Institution’s Doha Center. He has worked on human development, institution-building, and public-
private partnership issues with international organizations including the World Bank, the World Economic
Forum, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, and the UN. In the 2020 presidential
campaign, Amr Co-Founded Arab Americans for Biden, which mobilized voters nationally and in battleground
states. He also worked on the campaigns of Bill Clinton, Al Gore, John Kerry, and Barack Obama. Amr holds a
B.A. from Tufts University and an M.P.A. from Princeton University.
Education:
B.A., Economics, Tufts University, 1988; M.P.A., Economics & Public and International Affairs, Princeton University, 1993
Affiliations:
US Department of State (Deputy US Special Envoy for Israeli-Palestinian Negotiations for Economics and Gaza | Senior Economic Advisor)
Center for a New American Security (Senior Fellow)
USAID (Deputy Assistant Administrator for the Middle East)
Word Economic Forum (Senior Advisor for Muslim-West Relations)
The Brookings Institution (Fellow | Director, Brookings Doha Center)
Council of Foreign Relations (Member)
iEARN-USA, International Education and Resource Network (Chair, Board of Directors)
Princeton University School of Public & International Affairs Advisory Council
US Department of Defense (Defense Fellow/Clinton Administration Appointee)
Key Publications:
"We Know Peace Plans—This Isn’t One of Them," Center for a New American Security (2020)
"Ending Gaza’s perpetual crisis: A new U.S. approach," Brookings Institution (2018)
"Bloody October shows our flaws in confronting mass killings," The Hill (2017)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hady-amr-5aa997/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/HadyAmr
Heather Brandon-Smith
Heather Brandon-Smith is the Legislative Director for Militarism and Human Rights for the Friends Committee
on National Legislation, where she leads work to repeal the 2001 authorization for war, reduce US armed
interventions around the world, and promote respect for human rights and international law. Brandon-Smith
previously served as the Advocacy Counsel for National Security at Human Rights First, where she worked to
advance US national security policies consistent with human rights and the rule of law. Brandon-Smith teaches
law at Georgetown University. Her writing has appeared in The Hill, Just Security, Lawfare, and the blog of the
International Committee of the Red Cross.
Education:
LLB, LMM, University of New South Wales; LMM, Georgetown University
Affiliations:
Friends Committee on National Legislation (Legislative Director); Georgetown University Law Center (Adjunct Professor); Human Rights First
(Counsel)
Key Publications:
Congress needs to repeal the 2002 Iraq Authorization for Use of Military Force (2019) (2019)
The 2001 AUMF and Afghanistan, 18 Years Later (2019) (2019)
Full List (2019)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hebrandon/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/HBrandonSmith
Heather Hurlburt
Heather Hurlburt is the Director of the New Models of Policy Change for New America's Political Reform
program, where she concentrates on solutions for national security and climate change. Hurlburt held senior
positions in the White House and State Department under President Clinton and has worked on Capitol Hill and
for the International Crisis Group. Hurlburt directed the National Security Network. Hurlburt is a contributor to
New York Magazine and has published in Politico, Foreign Affairs, The National Interest, Fortune, Vox, and Time.
Hurlburt co-hosts the Drezburt podcast and is frequently quoted in print and broadcast media. Hurlburt holds a
B.A. in International Relations and Affairs from Brown University and an M.A. in International Relations and
Affairs from George Washington University.
Education:
B.A., Brown University; M.A., George Washington University
Affiliations:
New America (Director)
National Security Network (Executive Director, Advisor)
International Crisis Group (Deputy Director)
Clinton Administration (Special Asst to President, Speechwriter)
US State Department (Speechwriter, Policy Staff)
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (Director)
Helsinki Commission (Advisor)
Key Publications:
The World Is Helping Americans Who Don’t Always See It – New York Times (2020) (2020)
Trump’s North Korea Peace Drive Is Over- New York Magazine (2020) (2020)
Trump Has Already Put Himself in No Position to Help Hong Kong – New York Magazine (2020) (2020)
Full New York Magazine List (2020)
Full List articles (2020)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/heather-hurlburt-78a3584/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/natsecHeather
Hina Shamsi
Hina Shamsi is the Director of the ACLU’s National Security Project. Hina Shamsi previously served as Senior
Advisor to the UN Special Rapporteur on Extrajudicial Executions. Shamsi has litigated cases on freedom of
speech and association as well as post-9/11 targeted killing, torture, unlawful detention, and discrimination
against racial and religious minorities. She works at the intersection of national security, counterterrorism,
international human rights, and humanitarian law. Shamsi has been published or quoted as a national security
expert in the Guardian, Atlantic, Salon, Slate, New York Times, Washington Post, HuffPost, Los Angeles Times,
Associated Press, Reuters, and Politico. Shamsi has also appeared on NPR, ABC, BBC, CNN, Fox, and MSNBC.
Shamsi holds a B.A. from Mount Holyoke College and a J.D. from Northwestern University School of Law.
Education:
B.A., Mount Holyoke College; J.D., Northwestern University School of Law
Affiliations:
ACLU (Director, National Security Project); New York University School of Law (Senior Advisor to the UN Special Rapporteur on Extrajudicial
Executions); Columbia Law School (Lecturer-in-Law)
Key Publications:
“The Real Way to Prevent a Repeat of What Just Happened With Iran,” Politico (2020)
“White Supremacist Violence is on the Rise. Expanding the FBI’s Powers Isn’t the Answer,” ACLU Blog (2019)
"The NYPD spied on Muslim Americans. Will a court settlement change anything?" The Guardian (2016)
"Trump pledged to end ‘endless wars.’ His executive order suggests just the opposite," Washington Post (2019)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/hinashamsi
Iram Ali
Iram Ali is the Kairos Foundation’s Interim Director of Campaigns, where she is responsible for reconfiguring
the organization’s digital strategy. Before joining Kairos, Ali was the Senior Content Strategist for Elizabeth
Warren’s presidential campaign. She was widely quoted for successfully urging Democratic presidential
candidates to boycott the 2020 American Israel Public Affairs Committee's policy conference. As a 2016 Kairos
Fellow, Ali served as Senior Campaign Director at MoveOn. She spearheaded the Muslims Rising newsletter, a
digital campaign to organize diverse Muslim communities in the US, and led MoveOn’s effort to end post-9/11
Muslim registry programs. Ali was previously the Associate Director of Operations and Development with Iraq
Veterans Against the War.
Affiliations:
Kairos Foundation (Interim Director of Campaigns); Elizabeth Warren 2020 Presidential Campaign (Senior Content Strategist); Senior Campaign
Director (Move On); Associate Director of Operations and Development (Iraq Veterans Against the War)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/iramfali/
Jackie Quiñones
Jackie Quiñones is the Senior Director of US Government Relations for the ONE Campaign, an international
nonpartisan nonprofit which fights extreme poverty and preventable disease, particularly in Africa. Previously,
Quiñones served as Professional Staff for the House Committee on Foreign Affairs for international finance and
economics for five years. Quiñones advised the Ranking Member, Representative Howard Berman (D-CA), on
issues related to sub-Saharan Africa and counter-narcotics. Quiñones worked with Administration officials, the
African diplomatic corps, think tanks, and NGOs to track developments in Africa and the status of US
assistance. Quiñones interned in the US Department of State in the Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs.
Quiñones holds a B.A. from the University of Chicago and an M.A. from Johns Hopkins University.
Education:
B.A., International Studies, University of Chicago; M.A., Conflict Management and International Economics, Johns Hopkins School of Advanced
International Studies
Affiliations:
The ONE Campaign (Senior Director of Government Relations)
Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies (Editor for Bologna Center Journal, Volunteer)
U.S. Department of State (Intern with the Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs)
Kempster, Keller, & Lenz-Calvo, Ltd. (Legal Assistant)
House Committee on Foreign Affairs (Professional Staff)
Key Publications:
How a Huge Bipartisan Effort Made Electrify Africa a Reality (2016)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jacqueline-quinones-512a7b13/
Speaking Appearance (ex.): The Better World Campaign: Global Oval RNC
Jamal Abdi
Jamal Abdi has been the Policy Director of the National Iranian American Council for over a decade and
Executive Director of NIAC Action for over five years. Abdi was previously a Policy Advisor in the House of
Representatives on foreign policy, national security, and immigration issues. Earlier in his career, Abdi was a
field organizer for Congressional elections in Seattle and Bellevue, Washington. Abdi has written for the Hill,
the New York Times, HuffPost, USA Today, Foreign Policy, and CNN. He is a frequent guest contributor in print,
radio, and television, including Al Jazeera, BBC, VOA, and NPR. He received his B.A. in Political Science with a
focus on International Relations from the University of Washington in Seattle.
Affiliations:
National Iranian American Council (Policy Director); National Iranian American Council Action (Executive Director); House of Representatives
(Policy Advisor)
Key Publications:
"Sanctions at the Genius Bar" (2012)
"Sanctions cripple Iran’s middle class, not the regime" (2012)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jamal-abdi-a5310619/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/jabdi
Jarrett Blanc
Jarrett Blanc is a Senior Fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace’s Geoeconomics and
Strategy Program. Blanc served in the US State Department under President Obama, where he was responsible
for the implementation of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action on Iran’s nuclear program, including
sanctions. Blanc spent many years working for the UN and has advised senior decision-makers on conflict
termination and political transitions. Blanc managed the first elections in Afghanistan and Iraq and complex
governance operations in conflict areas including Kosovo, the Palestinian Authority, Lebanon, and Nepal. In
these positions, Blanc oversaw bureaucratic organizations with thousands of employees and offices around the
world. As Principal Deputy Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, Blanc oversaw the
management and administrative support of two of the largest and most insecure US Embassies in the world. He
has lectured at West Point, Harvard, and Princeton and published a number of book chapters and articles. Blanc
has appeared in The Hill, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, Politico, Reuters, Daily Mail, Axios, Foreign Policy
Magazine, Real Clear Politics, and Die Welt. Blanc holds a B.A. from Harvard University and an M.S. in
Environmental Science and Policy from Johns Hopkins University.
Education:
A.B., Harvard University; M.S., Environmental Science and Policy, Johns Hopkins University
Affiliations:
U.S. Department of State (Deputy Lead Coordinator and State Department Coordinator for the Iran Nuclear Implementation)
United Nations (Adviser)
Council on Foreign Relations (International Affairs Fellow)
U.S. Institute of Peace (Visiting Scholar)
Open Society Institute (Senior Policy Analyst)
George Washington University (Adjunct Professor)
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (Senior Fellow)
Foreign Policy for America (Senior Adviser)
Key Publications:
The World Faces Dangerous Reality With Iran Nuclear Deal Left for Dead (2018)
We Need to Take the Best Deal We Can Get in Afghanistan (2019)
Let Diplomats Handle China, Not Judges (2020)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jarrett-blanc-081516134/
Testified:
Before the Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee on Near Eastern and South and Central Asian Affairs (2014)
Before the House Committee on Government Oversight Reform (2015)
Before the Subcommittee on the Middle East and North Africa and the Subcommittee on Asia and the Pacific and the House Committee on Foreign
Affairs. After the Withdrawal: The Way Forward in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Part III. (2014)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/JarrettBlanc
Jeff Abramson
Jeff Abramson is a Senior Fellow for Conventional Arms Control and Transfers at the Arms Control Association.
He is the Founder and Director of the Forum on the Arms Trade. He is also the Coordinator of the US Campaign
to Ban Landmines-Cluster Munition Coalition. As an arms control and humanitarian disarmament expert, he has
testified before Congress on the dangers of re-designating the military status of firearms in order to ease their
export. He convenes several US policy working groups. Abramson previously directed research for the Nobel
Peace Prize-winning International Campaign to Ban Landmines, speaking frequently at international fora and
with global media outlets. As a Policy Advisor and Director to the Secretariat of Control Arms, he successfully
advocated for the first global regulations on conventional arms transfers. Abramson is a frequent author and
commentator on responsible arms policy. Abramson holds a B.A. in Religion from Princeton University and an
M.P.P. from the University of California, Berkeley.
Education:
B.A., Comparative Religion, Princeton University, 1993; M.P.P., University of California, Berkeley, 2003
Affiliations:
Arms Control Association (Senior Fellow for Conventional Arms Control and Transfers)
Forum on the Arms Trade (Founder and Director)
US Campaign to Ban Landmines-Cluster Munition Coalition (Coordinator)
International Campaign to Ban Landmines (Research Director)
Secretariat of Control Arms (Policy Advisor and Director)
Key Publications:
"Biden should embrace the humanitarian disarmament agenda" (2020)
"Process Changes Offered as Arms Sales Rise" (2020)
"U.S. Arms Deals Continue During Pandemic" (2020)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeffmabramson/
Testified:
Testimony Before the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations on "“Proposed Small Arms Transfers: Big Implications for
U.S. Foreign Policy” (March 2019)
Speaking Appearance (ex.): Stimson Center: "Beyond the Headlines: Redefining Responsibility in the Arms Trade"
Twitter: https://twitter.com/jeffabramson
Jennifer Mondino
Jennifer Mondino is the Director of Legal Programs at the Time’s Up Legal Defense Fund with the National
Women’s Law Center. She specializes in civil and women’s rights issues, with a focus on undocumented women
and survivors of sexual and domestic violence. Mondino was previously a Senior Trial Attorney with the Special
Litigation Section of the Civil Rights Division of the US Department of Justice. She worked on “pattern or
practice” discrimination investigations into law enforcement agencies. Mondino led the Department’s
investigation of the Baltimore Police Department; litigation against Sheriff Joseph Arpaio; the Division’s first
“pattern or practice” investigation of the collective law enforcement response to sexual assault allegations; and
the release of DOJ guidance on preventing gender bias in the law enforcement response to sexual assault and
domestic violence. Mondino has also worked at the Center for Reproductive Rights, the Civil Rights Bureau of
the New York State Attorney General’s Office, and the NYC Safe Horizon Domestic Violence Law Project. She
holds a B.S. from the University of Virginia and a J.D. from the New York University School of Law.
Education:
B.S., Commerce & English, University of Virginia; J.D., New York University School of Law
Affiliations:
National Women's Law Center (Director of Legal Programs | Time's Up Legal Defense Fund)
US Department of Justice, Civil Rights Division (Senior Trial Attorney)
US Department of Justice, Office on Violence Against Women (Attorney Advisor)
Center for Reproductive Rights (Staff Attorney, US Legal Program)
New York State Office of the Attorney General, Civil Rights Bureau (Assistant Attorney General)
Key Publications:
American Public Health Association 13th Annual Social Justice Meeting and Expo Conference Paper, "Social and Economic Justice: Access to
abortion for poor women in the United States" (2010)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jennifer-mondino-955110/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/JenniferMondino
Jessica Elledge
Jessica Elledge has been a Foreign Policy Advisor to Senator Chris Murphy since 2013. Elledge has advised
Murphy on several major foreign policy initiatives and the activities of the Foreign Relations Subcommittee on
Europe and Russia. Elledge has assisted with the Countering Foreign Propaganda and Disinformation Act and
legislation that would end military support to Saudi Arabia in Yemen’s civil war and require sanctions on Saudi
officials involved in the killing of Jamal Khashoggi. Elledge previously served for 6 years as a Legislative
Assistant for the House Foreign Affairs Committee and Middle East Subcommittee. Elledge interned for the
Carter Center, where she worked on the Global Development Initiative. Elledge has a B.A. in History and
International Relations from Emory University.
Affiliations:
U.S. Senate (Foreign Policy Advisor); The Carter Center (Intern); U.S. House of Representatives (Legislative Assistant)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jessica-elledge-30bb993/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/jessicacelledge
Jessica Lee
Jessica Lee is a Senior Research Fellow at the Quincy Institute, where she specializes in strategy and alliances
in East Asia, Japan, North Korea, and South Korea. Lee was the Senior Director of the Council of Korean
Americans. At the Asia Group, Lee was the Senior Manager and first philanthropy officer. She was also the
Director of Strategic Partnerships for the Impact Center. Lee managed the Asia region for the Chair of the
House Committee on Foreign Affairs. She served as a Senior Legislative Assistant for foreign policy and trade
on the House Ways and Means Committee. Lee has been published in the Nation, National Interest, Wall Street
Journal, USA Today, Washington Post, and Forbes. She regularly comments on television and radio on security
and economic issues related to East Asia. She is fluent in Korean. Lee holds a B.A. from Wellesley College and
an M.A. from Harvard University.
Education:
B.A., Wellesley College; A.M., Harvard University
Affiliations:
US Congress (Senior Legislative Assistant)
Council of Korean Americans (Executive Director)
Impact Center (Director)
The Asia Group (Manager)
Quincy Institute (Senior Research Fellow)
Pacific Forum CSIS (Fellow)
Key Publications:
How anti-Asian rhetoric harms US national security (2020) (2020)
Guesswork and Rumors Make for Bad North Korea Policy- Foreign Policy (2020) (2020)
How to Tell Whether Crazy North Korean Stories Are True- Foreign Policy (2020) (2020)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jessica-lee-dc-2018/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/jesslee_dc
Jonathan Rue
Jonathan Rue is the Senior Defense Policy Advisor to Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren. Rue previously
served in the US Marine Corps as a Legislative Affairs Specialist, where he provided congressional outreach
and managed the service's legislative agenda and testimony preparation. As a Marine Corps Intelligence
Officer, Rue deployed to Iraq for four years and was a Military Advisor to the Iraqi Army. Rue was Chief of Staff
and Senior Policy Advisor with the Punaro Group, a small consulting firm, where he specialized in defense
budget and legislative analysis. He was also an analyst at Science Applications International Corporation
supporting Department of Defense customers on issues including combating weapons of mass destruction,
defense support to civil authorities, and exercise design and support. Rue has published in Foreign Affairs,
World Politics Review, The National Interest,The Guardian, and War On The Rocks. He is a member of the
Truman National Security Project Defense Council and a 2016 Next Generation National Security Leader at the
Center for a New American Security. Rue holds a B.A. in History and Political Science from the University of
Georgia and an M.Sc. in International Relations from the London School of Economics and Political Science.
Education:
B.A., History and Political Science, University of Georgia, 2004; M.Sc., International Relations, London School of Economics and Political Science, 2007
Affiliations:
United States Marine Corps (Legislative Advisor | Intelligence Officer)
US Senate, Office of Sen. Elizabeth Warren (Senior Defense Policy Advisor | Military Legislative Assistant | Defense Fellow)
The Punaro Group (Chief of Staff and Senior Policy Advisor)
Truman National Security Project Defense Council (Member)
Center for a New American Security (2016 Next Generation National Security Leader)
Key Publications:
Foreign Affairs, "Iran's Navy Threatens the Security of the Persian Gulf" (2011)
The Guardian, "What do we owe our veterans? Osama bin Laden shooter's story isn't unique" (2013)
The Guardian, "Auditing the US surge in Afghanistan" (2011)
World Politics Review, "Shell Game: Congress, the Pentagon and Defense Sequestration" (2015)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jonathan-rue-341128163/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/@wjrue
Joseph Cirincione
Joseph Cirincione is President of the Ploughshares Fund and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.
Cirincione has worked on nuclear weapons policy in Washington for over 35 years. Cirincione was a member
of the International Security Advisory Board for Secretaries John Kerry and Hillary Clinton. Cirincione was Vice
President for National Security at the Center for American Progress, Director for Nonproliferation at the
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, and Senior Associate at the Stimson Center. Cirincione worked
on the US House of Representatives Armed Services and Government Operations Committees for nine years.
He is the host of Press The Button, a weekly podcast on nuclear policy and national security. Cirincione's
commentary has been featured in The Hill, HuffPost, Washington Post, New York Times, Boston Globe,
Philadelphia Inquirer, Los Angeles Times, Financial Times, Daily Beast, Foreign Policy, Kyodo News, Moscow
Times, CNN, and MSNBC. Cirincione holds a B.A. from Boston College and an M.S. from the Georgetown
University School of Foreign Service.
Education:
B.A., Boston College; M.S., Georgetown School of Foreign Service
Affiliations:
House Armed Services Committee (Professional Staff)
House Government Operations Subcommittee on National Security and Legislation (Deputy Staff Director)
Henry L. Stimson Center (Senior Associate)
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (Senior Associate, Director)
Center for American Progress (Senior Vice President)
Ploughshares Fund (President)
Key Publications:
Deadly Arsenals: Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical Threats, Second Edition, Revised and Expanded (2005) (2005)
Politics of National Defense in National Elections (2000) (2000)
Repairing the Regime: Preventing the Spread of Weapons of Mass Destruction (2000) (2000)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/joecirin/
Testified:
Joe Cirincione testifies before the Democratic Platform Drafting Committee (2016): (2016)
Joseph Cirincione’s testimony before the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission at a hearing titled "China’s Proliferation and the
Impact of Trade Policy on Defense Industries in the United States and China (2007): https://www.americanprogress.org/issues/security/news/
2007/07/12/3248/chinas-proliferation-policies-and-practices-testimony-of-joseph-cirincione/ (2007)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Cirincione
Joy Drucker
Joy Drucker is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and Women in International Security, and Senior
Advisor to the Truman National Security Project. Drucker served as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for
Legislative Affairs under John Kerry and Hillary Clinton. Before that, Drucker was the Executive Director of
Partnership for a Secure America. She was also Executive Director of the Center for National Policy. As Director
of Government Relations and International Affairs for Stonebridge International, she handled outreach to the
executive and legislative branches and NGOs. As the Legislative Management Officer for Near Eastern Affairs
at the US Department of State, Drucker managed relations with Congress on all matters affecting the Middle
East. Drucker served as a Foreign Policy Adviser in the House of Representatives to Minority Leader Richard
Gephardt and as a Foreign Affairs Advisor in the British House of Commons. Drucker was also the Deputy
Director of the Council on Foreign Relations’ DC office. Drucker holds a B.A. in Government from the London
School of Economics and an M.A in War Studies from King's College, London.
Education:
B.Sc., Government, London School of Economics and Political Science, 1990; M.A., War Studies, King's College London, 1991
Affiliations:
U.S. Department of State (Deputy Assistant Secretary for Legislative Affairs)
U.S. Department of State (Legislative Management Officer for Near Eastern Affairs)
Drucker & Associates (Principal)
Truman National Security Project (Senior Advisor)
Glover Park Group (Managing Director)
Center for National Policy (Executive Director)
Stonebridge International (Vice President)
Office of Rep. Richard Gephardt (Foreign Policy Advisor)
Council on Foreign Relations (Deputy Director, Washington Program)
Partnership for a Secure America (Executive Director)
Women in International Security (Member)
Council on Foreign Relations (Member)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/joy-drucker-2a7a623/
Kate Kizer
Kate Kizer is the Policy Director at Win Without War, and a Steering Committee Member of the Forum on the
Arms Trade. As Director of Policy and Advocacy at the Yemen Peace Project, she was a key leader of the
campaign to end US military support for the Saudi intervention in Yemen. As the US Advocacy Officer at the
Project on Middle East Democracy, Kizer led engagement with the legislative and executive branches. As
Digital Campaigner for Demand Progress, Kizer mobilized citizens to influence US surveillance reform efforts
in Congress. Kizer was also Deputy Research Director for Florida Governor Charlie Crist. Kizer has expertise in
US foreign policy in the Middle East, the post-9/11 use of military force, counterterrorism strategy, arms export
policy, and democracy promotion. Kizer is a columnist at Inkstick Media and has been published in the
Intercept, HuffPost, Washington Post, Reuters, Foreign Policy, and Defense One. Kizer has been listed on
Washington Life Magazine's Young & the Guest List since 2019. Kizer holds an M.A. in Democracy and
Governance from Georgetown University and a B.A. in Middle Eastern and North African Studies from the
University of California, Los Angeles.
Education:
B.A., UCLA; M.A., Georgetown University; Studied Arabic at the American University in Cairo
Affiliations:
Dropbox (Legal Analyst)
Charlie Crist for Governor (Deputy research director)
Mayor Muriel Bowser, Washington, D.C. - Transition Team (employed)
Project On Middle East Democracy (Policy and Advocacy Asst)
Americans for Democracy and Human Rights in Bahrain (US Advocacy Officer)
Demand Progress (Campaigner)
The Yemen Peace Project (Director)
Win Without War (policy director)
Key Publications:
The Votes Are There for a Congressional Reckoning on Yemen (2018)
How Dangerous—and How New—Is the Defense Department’s “Collective Self-Defense” Theory? (2018)
America’s Gulf Allies Are Making the World a More Dangerous Place- The Nation (2018)
See more (2020)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/katekizer/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/KateKizer
Kate Gould
Kate Gould is the Senior Policy Advisor to Representative Ro Khanna (CA-17) on national security issues. As the
Legislative Director for Middle East Policy at the Friends Committee on National Legislation, Gould advocated
for human rights and diplomatic solutions in disputes with Iran and conflicts in Iraq, Israel/Palestine, Syria, and
Yemen. Gould’s analysis on Middle East policy has been cited by the Guardian, New York Times, Washington
Post, Daily Beast, Reuters, USA Today, and CNN. Gould has appeared as an on-air analyst for various TV and
radio programs, including the Thom Hartmann Show, Real News Network, Big Picture RT, CCTV, Political
Context, Background Briefing, and NPR. Gould holds a B.A. in International Development, International
Relations, and Political Science from Western Washington University.
Affiliations:
Representative Ro Khanna (Senior Policy Advisor)
Friends Committee on National Legislation (Legislative Director)
Truman National Security Project (Political Partner)
Herbert Scoville Jr. Peace Fellowship (Board Member)
Churches for Middle East Peace (Board Member)
US House of Representatives (Congressional Progressive Caucus Center Legislative Fellow, Foreign Policy)
US Senate (Intern)
Key Publications:
“Stop the Saudi Slaughter,” co-author with Leah Muskin-Pierret, U.S. News & World Report, 10/21/2016 (2016)
“A ‘safe zone’ in Syria sounds like a great idea. It would be a disaster.“, Vox, 8/30/2016 (2016)
“At one year mark, Iran deal has already made world safer,” The Hill, 7/14/2016, co-author with Rep. Keith Ellison (D-MN) (2016)
Summary (2016)
Full list (2019)
CV: http://kategould.com/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/K8Gould
Keane Bhatt
Keane Bhatt serves as Policy Advisor and Communications Director for Senator Bernie Sanders. Bhatt has
expressed opposition to defense contracts that lack accountability measures and advanced measures in
Congress that promote restraint and human rights, including the bipartisan, bicameral War Power Resolution to
end US military participation in the Saudi-led war in Yemen. Bhatt previously served as the Policy Director for
the Congressional Progressive Caucus, where he coordinated the alternative budget process, including tariff
proposals. Bhatt was also a Fellow for Representative Raúl Grijalva (D-AZ). Earlier in his career, he was a
Community Development Associate at the Democracy Collaborative and an organizer for several social justice
campaigns in the US and Latin America. Bhatt’s opinions have appeared in the Nation, St. Petersburg Times,
Providence Journal, Pacifica Radio, NPR, and CNN.
Affiliations:
Senator Bernie Sanders (Communications Director and Policy Advisor); Congressional Progressive Caucus (Policy Director); Democracy
Collaborative (Associate); Representative Raúl Grijalva (D-AZ) (Fellow)
Key Publications:
Congresswoman Barbara Lee And Sen. Bernie Sanders Introduce Inclusive Prosperity Act To Curb Wall Street Greed (2019)
What the Story of Black Economic Cooperation Means for Us Today (2015)
How the Media Sanitize Honduras’s Brutal Regime (2013)
Employee-Owned Businesses Ignored by Mainstream Media (2012)
Noam Chomsky Post-Earthquake: Aid Should go to Haitian Popular Organizations, not to Contractors or NGOs (2010)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/keanebhatt
Keifer Buckingham
M.A. Keifer Buckingham is the Senior Policy Advisor for International Public Health at Open Society
Foundations (OSF) in Washington, DC. Buckingham leads OSF’s US foreign policy advocacy work relating to
global health, sexual and reproductive health and rights, and HIV/AIDS. She previously served as a Legislative
Assistant for Representative Barbara Lee (CA-13), where she was responsible for policy on HIV/AIDS, global
and domestic health, reproductive justice, LGBTQ rights, immigration, and international development.
Buckingham has also worked on public health diplomacy with Ipas, Advocates for Youth, and the Public Health
Institute. She holds a B.A. in International Development from Hendrix College and an M.P.H. in Global Health
from George Washington University.
Education:
B.A., International Development, Hendrix College, 2010; M.P.H., Global Health - Health Policy, George Washington University, 2012
Affiliations:
Open Society Foundations (Senior Policy Advisor)
US House of Representatives, Office of Representative Barbara Lee (Legislative Assistant)
US Department of Agriculture (Intern, Foreign Agriculture Service)
Advocates for Youth (International Policy Analyst)
Ipas (Policy Coordinator)
Public Health Institute (Policy Assistant | Global Health Policy Intern)
The Coalition for a Feminist Foreign Policy in the United States (Signatory)
Key Publications:
"Helms 45 years later: It’s time for Congress to repeal it" (2018)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/m-a-keifer-buckingham-25643517/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/KeiferMA
Kelsey Davenport
Kelsey Davenport is the Director for Nonproliferation Policy at the Arms Control Association, where she focuses
on international efforts to counter nuclear terrorism, nuclear proliferation, and nuclear development in Iran,
North Korea, India, and Pakistan. Davenport is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and National
Committee on North Korea. Davenport researched Middle East security issues while working at a think tank in
Jerusalem. Davenport is the lead author of the P4+1 and Iran Nuclear Deal Alert newsletter and North Korea
Denuclearization Digest. She has written seven reports assessing the impact of the Nuclear Security Summits
on efforts to prevent nuclear terrorism. Davenport has published op-eds in Time, Reuters, Defense One,
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, and CNN. She has also been featured in the Guardian, Washington Post, New
York Times, Foreign Policy, Christian Science Monitor, Vox, and appeared on NPR, CBC, ABC, MSNBC, Fox, C-
Span, and Al-Jazeera. Davenport holds a B.A. from Butler University and an M.A. from the University of Notre
Dame.
Education:
B.A., Butler University; M.A., University of Notre Dame
Affiliations:
U.S. Senate (intern)
Teach for America (5th Grade Teacher)
Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies, University of Notre Dame (research asst)
Israel Palestine Center for Research and Information (research asst)
Arms Control Association (Director, Analyst, Fellow)
Key Publications:
Trump's Reckless Violation of the Iran Deal Jeopardizes U.S. National Security -Time Magazine (2018) (2018)
Trump's 'maximum pressure' strategy is dangerous and should end (2020) (2020)
Iran Continues to Stockpile Uranium- Arms Control Today (2020) (2020)
Nuclear disarmament summits: A proposal to break the international impasse (2017); (2017)
Full list (2020)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kelsey-davenport-a7ab952a/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/KelseyDav
Khaled Elgindy
Khaled Elgindy is a Senior Fellow and Director of the Program on Palestine and Palestinian-Israeli Affairs at the
Middle East Institute. He is the author of “Blind Spot: America and the Palestinians, from Balfour to Trump.”
Elgindy previously served as a Resident Scholar in the Foreign Policy program at the Brookings Institution, and
before that was an Advisor to the Palestinian leadership in Ramallah on permanent status negotiations with
Israel. Elgindy has experience as a professional staff member for the US House of Representatives International
Relations Committee and the US Commission on International Religious Freedom. He has also held positions at
the Arab American Institute and the National Democratic Institute. Elgindy holds an M.A. in Arab Studies from
Georgetown University and a B.A. in Political Science from Indiana University-Bloomington.
Education:
M.A, Arab Studies, Georgetown University; B.A., Political Science, Indiana University-Bloomington
Affiliations:
Middle East Institute (Director and Senior Fellow)
Georgetown University (Adjunct Professor)
Brookings Institution (Senior Fellow)
Adam Smith International (Policy Advisor)
US House of Representatives, International Relations Committee (Professional Staff)
US Commission on International Religious Freedom (Policy Analyst)
Arab American Institute (National Coordinator for Political Action)
US House of Representatives (Press Secretary)
National Democratic Institute for International Affairs (Program Officer)
Key Publications:
Trump’s Peace Plan Aims to Make Israeli Occupation Permanent (2020)
Blind Spot: America and the Palestinians, from Balfour to Trump (2019)
The Us Blind Spot In The Israeli-Palestinian Peace Process (2019)
Is The Israeli-Palestinian Peace Process Dead? (2019)
See more
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/khaled-elgindy-9071132b/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/elgindy_
Laurel Miller
Laurel Miller is the Director of the International Crisis Group’s Asia Program, where she leads research,
analysis, and policy advocacy for the region. At the US State Department, Miller served as Special
Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, Deputy to the Ambassador-at-Large for War Crimes, Senior
Advisor to the US Special Envoy for the Balkans, and Senior Advisor to the Assistant Secretary of State for
European Affairs. At the National Security Council, Miller was Director for Western Hemisphere Affairs. She was
directly involved in peace negotiations in Bosnia, Kosovo, and Macedonia. As a senior foreign policy expert at
the RAND Corporation, Miller advised on conflict resolution, democratization, institution-building, and anti-
corruption in countries throughout the world. As a senior expert at the US Institute of Peace, she focused on
constitution-making, rule of law development, and transitional justice. She has published commentaries in the
National Interest, New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Washington Post, and Foreign Policy. Miller has been
interviewed by the Wall Street Journal, NPR, PBS, CNN, MSNBC, and BBC. She holds a B.A. from Princeton
University and a J.D. from the University of Chicago School of Law.
Education:
B.A., Princeton University; J.D., Chicago Law School
Affiliations:
US Department of State (Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan)
National Security Council (Director for Western Hemisphere Affairs)
International Crisis Group (Director of Asia Program)
Georgetown School of Foreign Service (Faculty)
Georgetown Law School (Faculty)
Council on Foreign Relations (International Relations Fellow)
RAND Corporation (Senior Foreign Policy Expert)
US Department of State (Senior Advisor to the Assistant Secretary of State for European Affairs)
US Department of State (Senior Advisor to the US Special Envoy for the Balkans)
US Department of State (Deputy to the Ambassador-at-Large for War Crimes)
US Institute of Peace (Senior Expert)
Key Publications:
Framing the State in Times of Transition (2010)
Envisioning A Comprehensive Peace Agreement for Afghanistan (2009)
Democratization in the Arab World (2012)
See more
Testified:
Before the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs. “The Trump Administration’s Afghanistan Policy” (2019)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/LaurelMillerICG
Leon Fresco
Leon Fresco is an immigration attorney at the law firm of Holland & Knight, where he provides global
immigration representation to businesses and individuals. During the Obama administration, he served in the
Justice Department as Deputy Assistant Attorney General for the Office of Immigration Litigation. Before this,
Fresco was the Staff Director for the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Immigration and a Policy Advisor to
Senator Chuck Schumer. Fresco was the primary drafter of S.744, the US Senate's comprehensive immigration
reform bill of 2013. He belongs to the American Immigration Lawyers Association and the Hispanic National
Bar Association, and has been published in The Hill and Law360. Fresco clerked for Judge Daniel T.K. Hurley of
the US District Court for the Southern District of Florida. Fresco holds a B.A. from the University of Pennsylvania
and a J.D. from Yale Law School.
Education:
B.A., University of Pennsylvania; J.D., Yale University
Affiliations:
Holland & Knight (Partner)
Department of Justice Office of Immigration Litigation (Deputy Assistant Attorney General)
Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Immigration (Staff Director)
Office of Sen. Chuck Schumer (Policy Advisor)
Judge Daniel T.K. Hurley of the US District Court for the Southern District of Florida (Clerk)
Hispanic National Bar Association (Member)
American Immigration Lawyers Association (Member)
Key Publications:
"The Curious Case of DACA and Where the Long and Winding Road Leads Now" (2020)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/leon-fresco-00059618/
Speaking Appearance (ex.): National Press Foundation, "Immigration Issues Beyond the Wall"
Twitter: https://twitter.com/FrescoLeon
Lucas Kunce
Lucas Kunce is National Security Director at the American Economic Liberties Project. He previously served in
the US Department of Defense as the Deputy General Counsel at the Defense Innovation Unit, which was
launched in 2015 to help the US military make faster use of emerging commercial technologies. As a Marine
Officer, Kunce was an International Negotiator for the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Foreign Affairs Officer for the Marine
Special Operations Command, and prosecutor and defense attorney for the US Marine Corps. He specializes in
national security, economics, tech, and finance, especially the impact that financialization and consolidation
have on national security. Kunce has shown how Department of Defense contracts put troops at risk by
preventing soldiers from repairing equipment and supports “right to repair legislation” so the military can fix
its own equipment. Kunce has published in The American Conservative, RealClearPolicy, and the New York
Times. He holds a B.A. in Classical Civilizations from Yale University, a J.D. from University of Missouri-
Columbia, and an LL.M. from Columbia Law School.
Education:
B.A., Classical Civilizations, Yale University; J.D., University of Missouri-Columbia; L.L.M., Columbia Law School
Affiliations:
U.S. Department of Defense (Deputy General Counsel)
U.S. Department of Defense (International Negotiations Officer)
U.S. Marine Special Operations Command (Staff Judge Advocate and South Asia Foreign Affairs Officer)
United States Marine Corps (Team Leader)
Prosecutor and Defense Attorney)
American Economic Liberties Project (Senior Fellow)
Key Publications:
America’ Monopoly Crisis Hits the Military (2019)
Dear Tech Workers, U.S. Service Members Need your Help (2019)
Tech Monopolies Are the Reason the US Now Has a TikTok Problem (2020)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lucaskunce/
Affiliations:
U.S. House of Representatives (Legislative Aide)
NetApp (Environmental Research Assistant)
United Nations (Project Coordinator: Friends Committee on National Legislation)
Mercy Corps (Advisor)
Alliance for Peacebuilding (Director)
Pacific Environment (Campaign Director)
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (National Security Fellow)
Senator Bernie Sanders (employed)
Key Publications:
It’s Time for the United States to Adopt a New Humanitarian Grand Strategy – The Nation (2018) (2018)
Stop atrocities before they start – CNN (2013) (2013)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/madeline-rose-she-her-97154a14/
Testified:
Central African Republic Conflict - State Department officials and others testified on the worsening situation in the Central African Republic (CAR)-
House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee (2014)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MadRose_
Mandy Smithberger
Mandy Smithberger is the Director of the Straus Military Reform Project with the Project on Government
Oversight’s Center for Defense Information. Smithberger was part of an investigative team which received the
Society of Professional Journalists' Sunshine Award for contributions to open government. As a national security
policy adviser to Representative Jackie Speier of California’s fourteenth district, Smithberger worked on
passing key provisions of the Military Whistleblower Protection Enhancement Act into law. This law increases
the level of Inspector General review for complaints, increases the amount of time that whistleblowers have to
report reprisals, and requires timely action on findings of reprisal. Smithberger holds a B.A. from Smith College
and an M.A. from Johns Hopkins University.
Education:
B.A., Smith College; M.A., Johns Hopkins University
Affiliations:
U.S. House of Representatives - National security policy adviser to U.S. Rep. Jackie Speier (D-Calif.); Defense Intelligence Agency (Analyst); U.S.
Central Command (Analyst)
Key Publications:
COVID-19 Means Good Times for the Pentagon (2020) (2020)
Washington Is Still Putting the Military Before Public Health- The Nation (2020) (2020)
Full List – The Nation (2020)
Creating a national insecurity state: spending more, seeing less- Salon (2020) (2020)
Full list articles (2020)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mandy-smithberger-9186b8173/
Testified:
Testimony of Mandy Smithberger, before the House Appropriations Committee’s Legislative Branch Subcommittee (2019): (2019)
Testimony of Mandy Smithberger, Director of the Center for Defense Information before the House Appropriations Committee, Legislative Branch
Subcommittee (2020): (2020)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/POGOBlog
Manish Bapna
Manish Bapna is the Executive Vice President and Managing Director of the World Resources Institute. In this
role, he established offices in China, India, and Brazil and helped launch programs for cities on climate
adaptation, energy, and finance. Bapna is an Ambassador of the Open Government Partnership and sits on the
board of Meridian Institute. Bapna was previously the Executive Director of the nonprofit Bank Information
Centre, which promotes sustainability in the policies and projects of international financial institutions. Bapna
was a lead architect of several multi-stakeholder platforms, including the NDC Partnership, New Climate
Economy, Global Commission on Adaptation, and the International Research Forum on the Sustainable
Development Goals. Bapna also served as a senior economist and task team leader at the World Bank, where
he led watershed and rural development projects in Asia and Latin America. He has testified before Congress
numerous times, published in national and international media, and been cited in front-page stories in the New
York Times, Wall Street Journal, and International Herald Tribune. Bapna holds a B.S. in Electrical Engineering
from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, an M.B.A in Finance from Harvard University, and an M.P.A in
International Development from Harvard University.
Education:
MBA, Finance, Harvard Business School; MPA, International Development, Harvard Kennedy School; SB, Electrical Engineering, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology
Affiliations:
World Resources Institute (Executive Vice President and Managing Director)
Bank Information Centre (Executive Director)
World Bank (Senior Economist and Task Team Leader)
Open Government Partnership (Ambassador)
Meridian Institute (Member of the Board)
Key Publications:
Climate Week NYC: As The UN Turns 75, Nations Should Embrace A Fairer, Safer And More Sustainable Future (2020)
City Leaders Must Prioritize Climate Resilience of Vulnerable Communities (2020)
How Can China Lead The Global Green Trade Drive? (2020)
This summary reflects the discussion of participants as captured by WRI and BMU staff and does not necessarily represent the views of the
sponsoring institutions. The discussion was held according to the Chatham House Rule and therefore does not indicate the viewpoints of
individuals.Global Dialogue on Responding to the COVID-19 Pandemic and Economic Crisis:Building Back Better Aligned to the SDGs and the Paris
Agreement (2020)
Global Green Value Chains: Greening China's “Soft Commodity” Value Chains (2020)
Adapt Now: A Global Call For Leadership On Climate Resilience (2019)
See more
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/manish-bapna-9120975/
Testified:
Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, Infrastructure, Poverty, and the Role of the MDBs (2006)
Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, Combating Corruption in the Multilateral Development Banks (2004)
House Science, Space and Technology Committee, Climate Action (2017)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/ManishBapnaWRI
Marc Cohen
Marc Cohen is a Senior Researcher at Oxfam America, where he studies methods to improve aid effectiveness.
Cohen is a member of the Aid and Development Finance Issues Team of Oxfam International's Even it Up
Campaign. Cohen was a Research Fellow at the International Food Policy Research Institute. Cohen’s
background is in political science and development studies. He has conducted research on humanitarian
policy, climate change, rural development, global food security, and evaluations of humanitarian advocacy.
Cohen has carried out field research in the US, Haiti, Ethiopia, Rwanda, Uganda, Taiwan, and Thailand. He has
taught at American University, George Washington University, and Johns Hopkins University, as well as
internationally at the University of Florence and University of Oslo. Cohen holds a B.A. in French from Carleton
College, and an M.A. and Ph.D. in Political Science from University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Education:
PhD, Political Science, University of Wisconsin-Madison; BA, French, Carleton College
Affiliations:
Oxfam America (Senior Researcher for Aid Effectiveness); International Food Policy Research Institute (Research Fellow); Bread for the World
(Senior Researcher)
Key Publications:
Yes, Mr. President, We Do Need Haitian Immigrants In The United States (2018)
Can Aid Donors “Blend” Private Finance, Poverty Reduction, and Effective Development? (2017)
A Marathon Worth Running: Haiti Seven Years On (2017)
Five Places Secretary Kelly Should Have Seen On His Trip To Haiti (2017)
Dumping Peanuts On Haiti (2016)
Haiti’s Current Drought: An Opportunity To Build Climate Change Resilience? (2014)
Under Pressure: Reducing Disaster Risk and Enhancing US Emergency Response Capacity in an Era of Climate Change (2011)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/marc-cohen-1858bab0/
Education:
B.A., History, University of Oklahoma; M.A., International Affairs, American University
Affiliations:
Ploughshares Fund (Deputy Director of Policy); ReThink Media (Media Associate); American Security Project (Policy Analyst); Afghanistan Study
Group (Research Fellow)
Key Publications:
"The Path To War With Iran Is Paved With Sanctions" (2019)
"No, Iran is Not Sprinting Toward a Nuclear Bomb" (2019)
"Trump Is Misleading America Into a New War" (2019)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mary-kaszynski-b6805113/
Speaking Appearance (ex.): Arms Control Association 2020 Annual Meeting: "Repairing the Broken U.S. Policy on Iran"
Twitter: https://twitter.com/marykaszynski
Matt Blaze
Matt Blaze is the Chair of Computer Science and Law at Georgetown University, specializing in secure systems,
cryptography, and trust management. Blaze has given testimony before House and Senate committees
numerous times over the past 15 years, on such issues as election interference, cybersecurity of voting
machines, and on technology in law enforcement. He has also testified before the European Parliament. Blaze
was one of the inventors of Trust Management, which allows a computer system to decide whether to allow
potentially dangerous action, which led to KeyNote and PolicyMaker. Blaze was also a designer of swIPe, a
predecessor of the now-standard IPSEC protocol for protecting Internet traffic. While working for AT&T, Blaze
implemented a strong cryptographic package known as the Cryptographic File System. In the early 1990s, at
the height of the "crypto war," Blaze found a critical weakness in the wiretapping mechanisms in the US
Government’s Clipper chip. At the University of Pennsylvania, Blaze directed the Distributed Systems Lab. He is
a board member at the Tor Project and an author at Just Security. Blaze has appeared in Wired, Politico,
Medium, and the Electronic Frontier Foundation. Blaze holds a Ph.D. in Computer Science from Princeton
University.
Education:
B.S., City University of New York, Hunter College; M.S., Columbia University; Ph.D., Princeton
Affiliations:
Georgetown University (Chair of Computer Science and Law)
Pennsylvania University, Distributed Systems Lab (Director)
Tor Project (Board of Directors)
Institute for Medicine and Engineering (Member)
Council on Foreign Relations (Member)
Just Security (Author)
Key Publications:
The Architecture and Implementation of Network-Layer Security Under Unix (1993)
Insecure Surveillance: Technical Issues with Remote Computer Searches (2016)
It's Too Complicated: How the Internet Upends Katz, Smith, and Electronic Surveillance Law (2017)
CV: https://www.mattblaze.org/research.html
Testified:
House Committee on Homeland Security, Subcommittee on Cybersecurity, Defending Against Election Interference (2019)
House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform (2017)
Senate Committee on Commerce, encryption policy (1996)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/mattblaze
Matt Duss
Matt Duss is a Foreign Policy Advisor to Senator Bernie Sanders, and was an Advisor for Sanders’ 2020
presidential campaign. Representative Ro Khanna credited Duss as "the principal reason” that Senator Sanders
introduced the resolution to end US military support for Saudi Arabia's war on Yemen. Duss was President of the
Foundation for Middle East Peace, which promotes a just solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. At the
Center for American Progress, Duss was the editor of the national security team for ThinkProgress. His writing
has appeared in The Nation, American Prospect, New Republic, Daily Beast, Politico, Reuters, Democracy,
Foreign Policy, Los Angeles Times, Boston Globe, Washington Post, and New York Times. He holds an M.A. in
Near and Middle Eastern Studies from the University of Washington.
Affiliations:
Bernie Sanders (Foreign Policy Advisor); Foundation for Middle East Peace (President); Center for American Progress (Editor, ThinkProgress)
Key Publications:
The Iran Deal Is a Victory for Obama Diplomacy Over Bush Warmongering (2015)
What The U.S. Should Learn From The Beating Of An American Citizen In Jerusalem (2014)
What the growing U.S.-Israel crisis really means (2014)
See all posts on Think Progress
See all popular press
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/matt-duss-64090196/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/mattduss
Michelle Dover
Michelle Dover is the Program Director at the Ploughshares Fund, which awarded $1 million this year to 15
organizations working to reduce nuclear risks including the Middle East Institute, Union of Concerned
Scientists, and Women of Color Advancing Peace. At the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies,
Dover conducted research on nuclear, chemical, and biological cooperative threat reduction programs. As a
Nonproliferation Graduate Fellow at the National Nuclear Security Administration, Dover worked on
International Atomic Energy Agency safeguards. Dover has published in the HuffPost, Roll Call, Defense One,
War is Boring, and Steamboat Pilot. She has appeared in the Daily Beast, Common Dreams, Power Magazine,
National Interest, and CNBC. Dover holds a B.A. in International Studies and French from the University of
Denver and an M.S. in International Peace and Conflict Resolution from American University.
Education:
B.A., International Studies, French, University of Denver; M.A., International Peace and Conflict Resolution, American University
Affiliations:
Ploughshares Fund (Program Director)
James Martin Center for Nonproliferation (Researcher)
National Nuclear Security Administration (Graduate Fellow)
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (Graduate Fellow)
American University (Faculty Assistant)
UN Information Center (Intern)
Open World Family Services, Inc. / Americorps*Vista (Summer Associate)
Key Publications:
Congress Needs to Step Up and Support the Nuclear Negotiations With Iran (2014)
A Tough Nuclear Choice: Russia's Annexation of Crimea (2014)
Syria’s Chemical Weapons an Opaque but Alarming Risk (2011)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/michelle-dover/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/michelleedover
Mike Darner
Mike Darner serves as the Executive Director of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, which is the largest
caucus within the House Democratic Caucus. Darner previously served as Legislative Director and Legislative
Counsel for Congressman John Conyers, Jr. (D-MI) for six years. As a Staff Attorney at the Center for
Competitive Politics, Darner litigated campaign finance cases in state and federal court and drafted comments
on FEC rulemaking and enforcement. Earlier in his career, Darner interned for the ACLU, Freedom Forum,
Center for American Progress, and House Judiciary Committee. He holds a B.A. in Political Science from Miami
University and a J.D. with Certificate in Law and Public Policy from the Catholic University of America.
Education:
B.A, Political Science, Miami University; J.D., Catholic University of America
Affiliations:
Congressional Progressive Caucus (Executive Director); Office of Rep. John Conyers, Jr. (Legislative Director); Center for Competitive Politics (Staff
Attorney)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mike-darner-1777906/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/mikedarner
Neta Crawford
Neta Crawford is the Co-Founder and Director of the Cost of War Project at Brown University, where she leads a
team of 50 experts who publish the human and economic costs of the post-9/11 wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
and the related violence in Pakistan and Syria. She leads work to identify less costly and more effective ways to
prevent terrorist attacks and inform public policies. Crawford has served on the governing board of the
American Political Science Association and the Academic Council of the United Nations System. Crawford’s
research includes foreign policy decision making, sanctions, and post-conflict peacebuilding. Her book,
“Argument and Change in World Politics,” won the American Political Science Association Award for best book
in International History and Politics. She has published over two dozen scholarly articles, including in the Naval
War College Review, Security Studies, International Security, Ethics and International Affairs, Africa Today,
Press/Politics, Perspectives on Politics, International Organization, Journal of Political Philosophy. She has also
published in the Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Boston Globe, and Newsday. She regularly appears as an
expert on radio and television. Crawford holds a B.A. from Brown University and Ph.D. from Massachusetts
Institute of Technology.
Education:
B.A., Brown University; Ph.D., MIT; M.A., MIT
Affiliations:
Cost of War Project at Brown University (Co-Founder)
Academic Council of the United Nations System (Board Member)
Governing Council of the American Political Science Association (Board Member)
Slavery and Justice Committee at Brown University (Member)
International Studies Association (Chair)
Ethics Committee of the American Political Science Association
American Political Science Review (Editorial Board)
Journal of Political Philosophy (Editorial Board)
International Relations and Global Perspectives (Editorial Board)
University of Massachusetts, Amherst (Associate Professor of Political Science)
Brown University (Associate Professor)
Boston University (Professor of Political Science)
Department of Political Science (Chair)
Harvard University (Visiting Scholar)
Global Ethics Project at Brown University (Director)
BU Center for Humanities (Fellow)
Harvard University (Peace Fellow)
Key Publications:
Accountability for Killing: Moral Responsibility for Collateral Damage in America’s Post-9/11 Wars (2013)
Argument and Change in World Politics: Ethics, Decolonization, Humanitarian Intervention (2002)
How Sanctions Work: Lessons from South Africa (1999)
Toward a Theory of Peace: The Role of Moral Beliefs (2018)
To Make Heaven Weep: Civilians and the American Way of War
CV: https://www.bu.edu/polisci/files/2019/02/Crawford-Neta-2-23-19.pdf
Testified:
Commonwealth of Massachusetts Legislature, US military budget andforce (2013)
United States Congress, Congressional Briefing hosted by Senator Jack Reed on the Costs of U.S. Post-9/11 Wars (2018)
United States Congress, Congressional Briefing hosted by Senator Jack Reed on the Costs of U.S. Post-9/11 Wars (2017)
United States Congress, the Afghanistan war (2011)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/netaxt
Noah Gottschalk
Noah Gottschalk is Senior Policy Advisor for humanitarian response at Oxfam America, where he focuses on
Sudan, South Sudan, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Syria as well as broader conflict and human
rights issues. Before this, Gottschalk worked as the Associate Director, Campaigns & Public Mobilization at the
International Rescue Committee. Gottschalk has worked in various capacities for these two organizations for
over thirteen years. He has also worked at the Refugee law Project and AMERA Egypt. Gottschalk has testified
before the US House of Representatives and the European Parliament, and he has served as a witness and
given expert advice to the UN Security Council. European Union, and African Union. Gottschalk has been
quoted in NBC News, PBS Newshour, Univision, the Washington Post, the Guardian, and NPR. Gottschalk is a
Fellow at the Truman National Security Project. He holds a B.S.F.S. from Georgetown University and an M.A.
from the School of Oriental and African Studies at the University of London.
Education:
B.S.F.S., International Politics, Georgetown University, 2002; M.A., International & Comparative Legal Studies, Human Rights Law, SOAS University of
London, 2004
Affiliations:
Oxfam America (Global Policy Lead)
International Rescue Committee (Associate Director, Campaigns & Public Mobilization)
Truman National Security Project (Fellow)
Refugee Law Project (Research and Advocacy Associate)
AMERA Egypt (Refugee Legal Aid Project) (Legal Advisor/Supervisor)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/noah-gottschalk-47289a1/
Testified:
Testimony Before the House Subcommittee on Africa, Global Health, Global Human Rights, and International Organizations on "Fulfilling the
Humanitarian Imperative: Assisting Victims of ISIS Violence" (December 2015)
Affiliations:
Open Society Foundations (President)
US State Department (Ambassador to South Africa)
White House (Director of Political Affairs)
Obama for America (National Political Director)
Democratic National Committee (Executive Director)
SEIU - National (Political Director)
America Coming Together (National Field Director)
Howard Dean's presidential campaign (National Deputy Field Director)
New York City Council (Chief of Staff)
SEIU 1199 - New York City (Executive Vice President and Political Director)
New York Mayor David Dinkins (Senior Aide)
Jesse Jackson's presidential campaign (Organizer)
Key Publications:
The Strike for Black Lives Stands Up for Essential Workers, in Color Lines (2020)
A $220 Million Investment in Racial Justice (2020)
In Venezuela, US Sanctions Are Only Hurting, in CNN (2020)
See more
Testified:
US Senate Committee on Foreign Relations’ Nomination Hearing (2013)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/patrickgaspard
Paul Kawika Martin
Paul Kawika Martin is the Senior Director for Policy and Political Affairs at Peace Action, the largest grassroots
peace organization in the US. Martin uses his expertise in nuclear weapons, international relations, and US
foreign policy to mobilize Peace Action’s 200,000 supporters to lobby Congress for social change. Martin has
worked with numerous peace, human rights, animal rights, and environmental organizations, including
Physicians for Social Responsibility and the Rainforest Action Network. Martin spent a year campaigning in 20
countries on behalf of Greenpeace, and has traveled extensively in Afghanistan, Cuba, Iran, and Lebanon. He
served on a Presidential Commission during the Clinton Administration. Martin has appeared in the New York
Times, the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, Christian Science Monitor, CNN, and ABC’s Nightline.
Martin holds a B.A. in Environmental Studies and Global Peace and Security from the University of California,
Santa Barbara.
Education: BA, Environmental Studies and Global Peace and Security, University of California, Santa Barbara
Affiliations:
Peace Action (Senior Director for Policy and Political Affairs)
Physicians for Social Responsibility (Security Program Associate, National Conference Coordinator)
Greenpeace (Radio Officer, Production Assistant, Field Manager)
Oshman's Sporting Goods (First Assistant Manager)
National Priorities Project (Board Member)
EarthCulture (Board Chair)
Herbert Scoville Jr. Peace Fellowship (Board Member)
Council for a Livable World (PeacePAC Advisory Board)
Rainforest Action Network
Clinton Presidential Commission
Key Publications:
Senate Vote Takes Major Step to End US Support for Saudi-Led War in Yemen (2018)
End America’s Unauthorized War In Yemen, in The Hill (2018)
Trump’s North Korea Strategy Requires An Intervention From Congressm, in The Hill (2017)
Conservative Forces In Washington Are Trying To Eliminate The Iran Deal, in Think Progress (2017)
Promote Diplomacy with North Korea (2017)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/paulkawikamartin/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/PaulKawika
Paul Pillar
Paul Pillar is a Senior Fellow at the Center for Security Studies at Georgetown University. He is also an
Associate Fellow of the Geneva Center for Security Policy. He has had a 28-year career in the US intelligence
community. His senior government positions have included: National Intelligence Officer for the Near East and
South Asia, Deputy Chief of the Department of Central Intelligence Counterterrorist Center, and Executive
Assistant to the Director of Central Intelligence. Pillar was a Visiting Professor in the Security Studies Program
at Georgetown University. He is a retired officer in the US Army Reserve and Vietnam War veteran. He has
authored four books, including “Negotiating Peace: War Termination as a Bargaining Process” and “Why
America Misunderstands the World: National Experience and Roots of Misperception.” He is a contributing
editor of The National Interest. Pillar holds a B.A. from Dartmouth College, a B.Phil. from Oxford University, and
a Ph.D. from Princeton University.
Education:
B.A., Dartmouth College; B.Phil., Oxford University; Ph.D., Princeton University
Affiliations:
Georgetown University Center for Security Studies (Senior Fellow)
Geneva Center for Security Policy (Associate Fellow)
Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft (Non-Resident Fellow)
CIA Counterterrorist Center (Deputy Director)
National Intelligence Council (National Intelligence Officer for the Near East and South Asia)
Central Intelligence Agency (Executive Assistant to the Director of Central Intelligence)
U.S. Army Reserves (Officer)
Brookings Institution (Non-Resident Senior Fellow in Foreign Policy)
Council on Foreign Relations (Member)
Key Publications:
"Artificial Intelligence Reform: Social Amnesia and the Intelligence Community" (2012)
"Intelligence and U.S. Foreign Policy: Iraq, 9/11, and Misguided Reform" (2011)
Testified:
Testimony Before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee (January 2007)
Testimony Before the Senate Democratic Policy Committee Hearing (June 2006)
Speaking Appearance (ex.): CSPAN: Intelligence Policy and the War in Iraq
Peter Quilter
Peter Quilter is an experienced foreign policy professional who most recently was a 2020 Democratic primary
challenger in Arizona’s 2nd Congressional District. Previously, Quilter was a Senior Fellow at Harvard
University’s Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation and the Secretary for Administration and
Finance at the Organization of American States. Before this, Quilter worked for seven years as Democratic
Senior Professional Staff in the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, where he was the principal policy advisor
on all matters related to the Americas and policy in the Western Hemisphere. Quilter was the Latin America
Policy Advisor to both the Obama and Kerry presidential campaigns, and Deputy Director for Latino Outreach
at the Democratic National Committee during the Kerry campaign. Quilter was the chief US negotiator for the
Inter-American Convention Against Corruption, the world’s first anti-corruption treaty. Quilter received an
award from the Foreign Minister of Canada for work on Quebec Presidential Summit, and has has received two
State Department Superior Honor Awards. He has testified multiple times before the House. Quilter holds a B.A.
from Stanford University, an M.A. from Tufts University, and a J.D. from the University of California, Berkeley.
Education:
JD, University of California, Berkeley; MA, Tufts University; BA, Stanford University
Affiliations:
US State Department (Diplomat, Superior Honor Awards)
Organization of American States (Secretary for Administration and Finance)
Barack Obama’s 2008 and 2012 presidential campaigns (Latin America Policy Advisor)
John Kerry’s 2004 presidential campaign (Latin America Policy Advisor)
Democratic National Committee (Deputy Director for Latino Outreach)
Inter-American Convention Against Corruption (Chief US Negotiator)
Harvard University, Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation (Senior Fellow)
US House Committee on Foreign Affairs (Senior Professional Staff)
Key Publications:
Americas Watch as U.S. Democracy is Tested (2017)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/peter-quilter-8ba60580/
Testified:
House Committee On Foreign Affairs, Issues and Opportunities in the Western Hemisphere (February 24, 2017)
House Committee On Foreign Affairs, Advancing U.S. Interests Through the Organization of American States (February 14, 2018)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/pq4az
Rachel Esplin Odell
Rachel Esplin Odell is a Fellow at the Quincy Institute in the East Asia Program and an International Security
Fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School. Odell specializes in US strategy toward Asia, Chinese foreign policy,
and political, legal, and military issues in the Indo-Pacific. She has experience in the China Affairs Office of the
US Trade Representative and advanced proficiency in Mandarin Chinese. At the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace, Odell co-authored policy reports, led Track II workshops on the US-China crisis, and
presented briefings for officials in the White House, Congress, State Department, Pentagon, the intelligence
community, and foreign policy communities in Washington, Beijing, Tokyo, and Seoul. Odell was a member of
Governor Jon Huntsman’s foreign policy team and an international policy advisor for the Millennial Action
Project. Odell was featured in US-China Relations by Yale’s China Hands journal. She has written for the New
York Times, Deseret News, Idaho Statesman, Responsible Statecraft, and Real Clear Politics. She studied
Mandarin Chinese at Beijing Language and Culture University. Odell holds a B.A. in Government and East
Asian Studies from Harvard University, and a Ph.D. in Political Science from the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology.
Education:
B.A., Government & East Asian Studies, Harvard; Ph.D., Political Science, MIT; Mandarin Chinese, Beijing Language and Culture University
Affiliations:
US Trade Representative, China Affairs Office
Gov. Jon Huntsman, Foreign policy team
Millennial Action Project, International policy advisor
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Research Analyst
Harvard Kennedy School, International Security Fellow
Smith Richardson Foundation, World Politics and Statecraft Fellow
Waseda University, Tokyo, Visiting Research Fellow
Quincy Institute East Asia Program, Research Fellow
National Science Foundation, Research Fellow
Harvard College, Acting Assistant Dean
Key Publications:
Can the Democrats Avoid Trump’s China Trap? (2020)
How Beijing will respond to the anti-China fervor sweeping the US (2020)
The coronavirus crisis is a poor excuse for a new cold war (2020)
See more (2020)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rachelesplinodell/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/resplinodell
Rachel Stohl
Rachel Stohl is Vice President at the Stimson Center, where she directs the Conventional Defense Program. She
also teaches in the Security Studies Program at Georgetown University. Previously, Stohl was a Senior Analyst at
the Center for Defense Information, Associate Fellow at Chatham House, and Fellow at the British American
Security Information Council. She also worked at the UN Center for Disarmament Affairs in New York and the
Program for Arms Control, Disarmament, and Conversion in Monterey, CA. Stohl has advised the UN Group of
Governmental Experts, UN Arms Trade Treaty process, and UN Register for Conventional Arms. Stohl has
consulted for the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, Small Arms Survey, Project Ploughshares,
World Vision, and Oxfam. She has co-authored two books: “The International Arms Trade” and “The Beginners
Guide to the Small Arms Trade.” Stohl holds a B.A. in Political Science and German from the University of
Wisconsin-Madison and an M.A. in International Policy from the Monterey Institute of International Studies.
Education:
B.A., Political Science and German, University of Wisconsin-Madison; M.A., International Policy Studies, Monterey Institute of International Studies
Affiliations:
Henry L. Stimson Center (Vice President)
Chatham House (Associate Fellow)
UN Center for Disarmament Affairs
UN Group of Governmental Experts (Consultant)
Program for Arms Control, Disarmament, and Conversion
Center for Defense Information (Senior Analyst)
British American Security Information Council (Scoville Fellow)
Royal Institute of International Affairs (Fellow)
Oxfam (Consultant)
Project Ploughshares (Consultant)
Small Arms Survey (Consultant)
Key Publications:
"Trump’s decision to leave a global arms treaty was built on an NRA lie," Washington Post (2019)
"Stopping the Destructive Spread of Small Arms," Center for American Progress Report (2010)
The Small Arms Trade: A Beginner's Guide (Oneworld Publications) (2006)
The International Arms Trade (John Wiley & Sons) (2009)
"Defense Industry Cheers as the Trump Administration Is Poised to Loosen Restrictions on Drone Exports," Common Dreams (2020)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rachel-stohl-2978646/
Testified:
US Senate Judiciary Committee Subcommittee on Human Rights and the Law, "Casualties of War: Child Soldiers and the Law," Written Testimony
(2007)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/rachelstohl
Rita Siemion
Rita Siemion is the Director of National Security Advocacy at Human Rights First. She works to ensure respect
for human rights in US national security policy. Siemion has led campaigns on issues such as lethal force,
military commissions, detainee treatment, and war powers, and has been called upon to testify before
Congress. Before joining Human Rights First, she worked on national security issues as Senior Counsel at The
Constitution Project, including surveillance, privacy, and constitutional rights in the digital age. Previously, she
worked in private practice litigation on human and civil rights matters. Siemion is an editor at Just Security, an
online national security forum, and her writing has appeared in publications such as the New York Times, the
Washington Post, and the American Constitution Society. She holds a B.A. from Seattle University, an LL.M. from
Georgetown University, and a J.D. from George Washington University, where she Co-Founded the Human
Rights Law Society.
Education:
B.A., English, Seattle University; J.D., LL.M. in National Security Law, George Washington University School of Law
Affiliations:
Human Rights First (Director, National Security Advocacy)
Georgetown University Law Center (Adjunct Professor of Law)
American University Washington College of Law (Associate Adjunct Professor)
The Constitution Project (Senior Counsel)
Human Rights Law Society (Co-Founder)
Key Publications:
"Towards a New Approach to National and Human Security: Ending Endless War," Just Security (2020)
"The 9/11 War Authorization and Iran: An Important Lesson for Congress," American Constitution Society Expert Forum (2019)
"Trump vs. International Law: Koh’s Blueprint for Ending America’s Wars and Avoiding Perpetual War," OpinioJuris (2018)
Testified:
Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, testifying on Senate Joint Resolution 59 to authorize the use of military force (2018)
Amicus Brief in Ayman Latif v. Eric H. Holder, Jr., the FBI, and the FBI Terrorist Screening Center, filed in Oregon federal court (2013)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/ritasiemion
Robert Malley
Rob Malley is President and CEO of the International Crisis Group, where he was previously the Vice President
for Policy and the Program Director for the Middle East and North Africa. An expert on the Israeli–Palestinian
conflict, he has written extensively advocating rapprochement with Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood.
During the Obama administration, Malley served as a Special Assistant to the President and Senior Advisor to
the President for the Counter-ISIL Campaign. During the Clinton administration, Malley served on the National
Security Council, ultimately serving as Special Assistant to the President for Arab-Israeli Affairs. In this role,
Malley was a member of the US peace team and helped organize the 2000 Camp David Summit. Malley has
been published in the Washington Post, the New York Times, the Atlantic, the New Yorker, and Politico. He has
been a Senior Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and a Clerk for Supreme Court Justice Byron R. White.
He holds a B.A. and an M.A. from Yale University, a D.Phil. from the University of Oxford, and a J.D. from Harvard
University.
Education:
Rhodes Scholar, University of Oxford; J.D., Harvard University; B.A., M.A., Yale University
Affiliations:
National Security Council (Director for Democracy, Human Rights, and Humanitarian Affairs)
International Crisis Group (Director)
International Crisis Group (President/CEO, Vice President)
U.S. Supreme Court (Clerk to Justice Byron White)
President Clinton (Special Assistant, Arab-Israeli Affairs)
President Obama (Special Assistant, ISIS)
Council on Foreign Relations (Fellow)
Key Publications:
Full list articles (2020)
The International Order After COVID-19 (2020)
Why China must send Michael Kovrig home- Washington Post (2019) (2019)
The Real Goal of Trump’s Middle East Plan- Politico (2020) (2019)
Developing Countries Won't Find a One-Size-Fits-All Solution to Coronavirus (2020)
America Should Talk to the Houthis- New York Times (2019) (2019)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/robert-malley-285a01168/
Testified:
Impact of Palestinian Elections: The Senate Foreign Relations Committee held a hearing on the Middle East and the outcome of the Palestinian
elections. (2006)
Testimony by Robert Malley, Middle East and North Africa Program Director, International Crisis Group to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee,
“Middle East Peace: Ground Truths, Challenges Ahead” (2010)
Testimony by Robert Malley, Middle East and North Africa Program Director, International Crisis Group to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee,
“Middle East Peace: Ground Truths, Challenges Ahead”. (2010)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/CrisisGroup
Rose Jackson
Rose Jackson is a Truman National Security Project Fellow and directs its Africa expert group. Jackson is the
Senior Policy Advisor for the Secure Partnerships Initiative at the Open Society Foundations. She served the US
State Department as the Chief of Staff for the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor. She ran programs
in Somalia and Uganda. Jackson is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. Jackson was an advisor and
political analyst for the International Organization for Migration in Benghazi and Tripoli, Libya. She was a
Program Officer for the National Democratic Institute in Washington, DC and Nairobi, Kenya. She served as a
foreign policy advisor to Sen. Chris Coons as a Galloway Fellow. She has held key positions on several high-
profile US political campaigns. Jackson holds a B.A. from Wheaton College and an M.A. from United States
International University Africa, in Kenya.
Education:
B.A., Wheaton College; M.A., United States International University (Rotary Scholar in Kenya)
Affiliations:
Truman National Security Project (Fellow)
Beacon (co-founder, CEO)
Assemble (founder)
Open Society Foundation (Advisor)
U.S. Department of State (Chief of Staff)
U.S. Senate (Foreign Policy Fellow)
IOM (Governance Specialist)
National Democratic Institute (Program Officer)
Rhode Island Democratic Party (Organizer)
Key Publications:
Untangling the Web: A Blueprint for Reforming American Security Sector Assistance (2017) (2017)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/roseajackson/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Rosejackson3
Rosemary Kelanic
Rosemary Kelanic is a Fellow at the Quincy Institute. She is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at the
University of Notre Dame, where her research focuses on international security, coercive diplomacy, energy
politics, and US grand strategy. Kelanic previously taught political science at Williams College and held
research positions at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government and at the George Washington University
Elliott School of International Affairs. Her forthcoming book, “Black Gold and Blackmail: Oil and Great Power
Politics,” explores why great powers adopt different strategies to secure oil access in case of emergency or
war. Kelanic is also co-editor of “Crude Strategy: Rethinking the US Military Commitment to Defend Persian
Gulf Oil.” Kelanic holds a B.A. in Political Science from Bryn Mawr College, an M.S. in International Relations
from the University of Chicago, and a Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of Chicago.
Education:
B.A., Political Science, Bryn Mawr College, 2002; M.S., International Relations, University of Chicago; Ph.D., Political Science, University of Chicago,
2012
Affiliations:
University of Notre Dame (Assistant Professor of Political Science)
Notre Dame International Security Center (Associate Director)
Harvard Kennedy School, Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs (Predoctoral Fellowship in International Security)
George Washington University, Elliott School of International Affairs (Associate Director, Institute for Security and Conflict Studies)
Wiliams College (Assistant Professor of Political Science)
Quincy Institute (Fellow, Program on the Middle East, Ending Endless)
Women in International Security (WIIS-ND) (Faculty Advisor)
Key Publications:
The Washington Post, "Why Iran’s ‘oil weapon’ isn’t that scary" (2019)
Foreign Affairs, "Getting Out of the Gulf: Oil and U.S. Military Strategy" (2017)
National Interest, "The Saudi Alliance Must Go" (2018)
Black Gold and Blackmail: Oil and Great Power Politics (Cornell University Press) (2020)
Council on Foreign Relations, "Oil Security and Conventional War: Lessons From a China-Taiwan Air Scenario" (2013)
CV: https://politicalscience.nd.edu/assets/340549/fullsize/8_curriculum_vitae.pdf
Twitter: https://twitter.com/RKelanic
Sahar Nowrouzzadeh
Sahar Nowrouzzadeh is a Research Fellow with the Iran Project and Project on Managing the Atom at the
Harvard Kennedy School, where she focuses on Iran’s leadership decision-making and nuclear program. At the
National Security Council, Nowrouzzadeh was part of President Obama’s team responsible for the negotiation
and implementation of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action reached by the P5+1, European Union, and Iran
in 2015. She covered the Iran portfolio on the Secretary of State’s Policy Planning Staff from 2016 - 2017. She is
the recipient of the Secretary of Defense Medal for the Global War on Terrorism, State Department Superior
Honor Award, and National Intelligence Meritorious Unit Citation. She served as a Team Chief and Senior
Analyst at the US Department of Defense. She was a Foreign Affairs Officer and Persian Language
Spokesperson at the US State Department. Nowrouzzadeh has focused on Iran under three US administrations.
Nowrouzzadeh holds a B.A. from George Washington University and an M.A. from the University of Maryland,
and is earning her Ph.D. in Political Science at Boston University.
Education:
B.A., George Washington University; M.A., University of Maryland; Ph.D., Boston University, Political Science (in-progress)
Affiliations:
U.S. Department of State (Foreign Affairs Officer)
White House National Security Council (Staff)
US Department of Defense (Analyst)
National Iranian American Council (Intern)
Harvard Kennedy School (Associate, Research Fellow)
Key Publications:
Does the U.S. Have the Wrong Middle East Strategy? (2018) (2018)
Recognizing the Limitations of American Influence in Iran (2018) (2018)
Saudi Arabia’s Empty Oil Threats- (2018) (2018)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sahar-nowrouzzadeh-4918b312/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/saharnow
Salih Booker
Salih Booker is President of the Center for International Policy and was previously Vice President of the US
Institute of Peace. Booker served as the Executive Director of both Global Rights and Africa Action. At the
Council on Foreign Relations, he was Director of Africa Studies. He was Professional Staff for the House
Committee on Foreign Affairs. Booker was an advisor to the Executive Secretary of the UN Economic
Commission for Africa in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. He has consulted for the UN Development Program, Carnegie
Corporation, Asia Society, and International Committee of the Red Cross. He was Director of the Centre on
Housing Rights and Evictions, Associate Director for Catholic Relief Services in Southern Africa, Legislative
Assistant at TransAfrica, and Program Officer for the Ford Foundation in Eastern and Southern Africa. Booker
has appeared on PBS Newshour and in The Hill, Washington Post, Foreign Policy Magazine, Foreign Policy in
Focus, Daily Nation, Pioneer Press, Virginia Pilot, the Mail and Guardian, Tehran Times, All Africa, and South
Africa’s Daily Voice. Booker holds a B.A. in Africa Studies and Political Science from Wesleyan University and an
M.Phil in International Relations from The London School of Economics.
Education:
B.A., Africa Studies, Political Science, Wesleyan University; M.Phil, International Relations, The London School of Economics and Political Science
Affiliations:
House Committee on Foreign Affairs (Professional Staffer)
Center for International Policy (President)
US Institute of peace (Vice President of External Relations)
Global Rights: Partners for Justice (Executive Director)
Africa Action (Executive Director)
Council on Foreign Relations (Senior Fellow, Director of Africa Studies)
Centre on Housing Rights and Evictions, Geneva (Director)
Catholic Relief Services (Associate Director in South Africa)
TransAfrica (Legislative Assistant)
Ford Foundation (Program Officer)
Office of the Executive Secretary of the UN Economic Commission for Africa (Advisor)
UNDP (Consultant)
Carnegie Corporation (Consultant)
Asia Society (Consultant)
International Committee of the Red Cross (Consultant)
Key Publications:
Hearing on Africa: Questions Unanswered, Questions Unasked (2019)
America’s Disdain for Black Lives Extends to Africa (2020)
Genocide in Darfur (2004)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/salih-booker-666a3323/
Testified:
Before the Subcommittee on African Affairs, Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. Hearing on Democracy in Africa: The New Generation of
African Leaders (1998) Salih Booker’s testimony on page 34 (1998)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/salihbooker
Sarah Trister
Sarah Trister is a Foreign Policy Advisor for Massachusetts Senator Ed Markey. She specializes in international
affairs, national security, and human and civil rights, with experience in legislative processes and
appropriations. Trister was previously the Senior Manager for External Relations at Freedom House, an
independent watchdog organization that operates internationally to support democracy and accountable
governance. Trister managed US-based legislative, communications, and policy efforts, focusing primarily on
the Middle East and Eurasia. She has also served as Deputy Chief of Staff and Legislative Director to Rhode
Island Congressman David Cicilline, and as a Foreign Affairs and and National Security Advisor to
Massachusetts Representative John Olver. Trister has also interned with the US State Department’s Bureau of
Congressional Affairs, Florida Representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz, and the International Rescue
Committee. Trister holds a B.A. from University of Miami and an M.A. in American Government and
International Relations from Georgetown University.
Education:
B.A., University of Miami, 2005; M.A., American Government, International Relations, Georgetown University, 2006
Affiliations:
US Senate, Office of Senator Ed Markey (Foreign Policy Advisor)
US House of Representatives, Office of Representative David Cicilline (Deputy Chief of Staff & Legislative Director)
Freedom House (Senior Manager for External Relations | Manager of Congressional Affairs)
US House of Representatives, Office of Representative John Olver (Senior Legislative Assistant)
US Department of State (Intern)
International Rescue Committee (Research Intern)
Key Publications:
HuffPost, "Women’s Rights in the Middle East and North Africa: Supporting the Fight for Freedom and Equality" (2010)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sarah-trister-4923685/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/@SarahTrister
Sarah Margon
Sarah Margon is the Director of the US Foreign Policy program at the Open Society Foundations. She served as
Senior Foreign Policy Advisor to Senator Russ Feingold and Staff Director for the Senate Foreign Relations
Subcommittee on African Affairs. Margon was the DC Director for Human Rights Watch. At the Center for
American Progress, Margon served as Associate Director of Sustainable Security and Peacebuilding. She has
published in The Hill, Politico, Washington Post, New York Daily News, Clarion Ledger, USA Today, Slate, Salon,
Yahoo, Foreign Policy, Foreign Affairs, All Africa, and Just Security. She has been a guest on national and
international TV stations, including CNN. Margon holds a B.A. from Wesleyan University and an M.S. from
Georgetown University’s Walsh School of Foreign Service.
Education:
B.A., Wesleyan University; M.S., Georgetown University’s Walsh School of Foreign Service
Affiliations:
Office of Senator Russ Feingold (Foreign Policy Advisor)
Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee on African Affairs (Staff Director)
Open Society Foundation (Director of US Foreign Policy Team)
Human Rights Watch (Director in Washington)
Center for American Progress (Associate Director of Sustainable Security and Peacebuilding)
Key Publications:
Death by a Thousand (Small) Cuts. (2011)
Ivory Coast Teeters on the Brink (2011)
The Sarin Gas Attack is Just One Syrian Atrocity the ICC Should Pursue (2013)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/sarahmargon
Sarah Leah Whitson
Sarah Leah Whitson is the Executive Director of Democracy for the Arab World Now, a nonprofit founded by
Jamal Kashoggi that promotes dialogue between democracy promoters to achieve nonviolent solutions to the
Middle East conflicts. Whitson is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, and sits on the boards of the
Freedom Forward, Artistic Freedom Initiative, and ALQST for Human Rights. Whitson previously served as
Executive Director of Human Rights Watch’s Middle East and North Africa Division, where she oversaw
initiatives in 19 countries and staff located in 10 countries. Whitson has led dozens of advocacy and
investigative missions throughout the region, focusing on armed conflict, accountability, legal reform, migrant
workers, and human rights. Whitson has published in the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Foreign Policy,
and CNN. She appears regularly on Al-Jazeera, BBC, NPR, and CNN. She speaks Armenian and Arabic. Whitson
holds a B.A. from the University of California, Berkeley and a J.D. from Harvard Law School.
Education:
B.A., Middle Eastern Studies and Political Science, University of California, Berkeley, 1988; J.D., Harvard Law School, 1991
Affiliations:
Democracy for the Arab World Now (Executive Director)
Human Rights Watch (Executive Director, Middle East and North Africa Division)
Goldman, Sachs & Co. (Vice President and Assistant General Counsel)
Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen & Hamilton (Associate)
Council on Foreign Relations
Key Publications:
Group Denial: Repression of Kurdish Political and Cultural Rights in Syria (Human Rights Watch) (2009)
Foreign Policy, "Movie Theaters and Women Driving Won’t Placate Saudi Shiites" (2018)
New York Times, "When Elites Get a Taste of Their Own Medicine" (2017)
Reuters, "Why Iraq should limit Islamic State trials" (2017)
"They Hunt Us Down for Fun": Discrimination and Police Violence Against Transgender Women in Kuwait (Human Rights Watch) (2012)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sarah-leah-whitson-931388/
Testified:
United States Congress, Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission Briefing: Human Rights in Egypt (2015)
Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission Briefing: Women’s Human Rights Defenders in Saudi Arabia (2018)
Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission Briefing: Religious Freedom for Shia Populations (2018)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/sarahleah1
Sasha Baker
Sasha Baker is the National Security Advisor to Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren, advising on defense,
intelligence, and homeland security. During the Obama administration, Baker served as Deputy Chief of Staff
for Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter. In this role, she was responsible for preparing the $693 billion
Department of Defense budget as well as technology innovation and acquisition. Baker is a recipient of the
Department of Defense Distinguished Public Service medal. Baker worked for the Office of Management and
Budget, as Special Assistant to the Director and Program Examiner in the Homeland Security and National
Security divisions. Baker completed a six-month detail to the Joint Staff as a Special Assistant to the Chairman
for Strategy, with a focus on defense budgetary matters. Baker began her public service career at the House
Armed Services Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee, where she supported bipartisan congressional
reviews on a variety of national security topics. Baker holds a B.A. from Dartmouth College and an M.P.P. from
Harvard University.
Education:
M.P.P., Harvard University; B.A., Dartmouth College
Affiliations:
Warren for President (Deputy Policy Director for Foreign Policy)
U.S. Senate (National Security Advisor)
Department of Defense (Deputy Chief of Staff)
Office of Management and Budget (Special Assistant to the Director, Program Examiner)
Council on Foreign Relations (Member)
House Armed Services Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee (Research Assistant)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sasha-baker/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/sashanbaker
Scott Paul
Scott Paul is the Humanitarian Policy Lead at Oxfam America. Paul has spearheaded Oxfam America’s work on
a number of acute crises, including those in Yemen, Somalia, Nigeria, Myanmar, and Bangladesh. His advocacy
in these emergencies often focuses on the political drivers of violence and vulnerability, as well as the financial
exclusion of vulnerable individuals and the remittance companies and charities that serve them. Paul is also
responsible for Oxfam America’s approach to US foreign policy as it relates to multilateralism and global
governance. Paul was the UN representative for CIVIC and led campaigns at Citizens for Global Solutions to
strengthen the US government’s commitment to international cooperation and the rule of law. Paul has authored
blog posts for Just Security and Oxfam America and has been quoted in the Washington Post, Foreign Policy,
the New York Times, Huffpost, and ABC News. Paul has testified before the House of Representatives. He holds a
B.A. from Columbia University and a J.D. from New York University.
Education:
B.A., Columbia University; J.D., New York University
Affiliations:
CIVIC (UN representative); Citizens for Global Solutions (employed); SustainUS (co-founder, chair)
Key Publications:
Full List (2020)
Opinion | The Pandemic Proves the Need for Industrial Policy- New York Times (2020) (2020)
Trump is all bark, no bite on repairing crumbling roads and bridges- The Hill (2019) (2019)
Correcting Course: Avoiding the Collision Between Humanitarian Action and Counterterrorism – Just Security (2019) (2019)
Testified:
“Managing Terrorism Financing Risk in Remittances and Money Transfers”- House Committee on Financial Services (2017): (2017)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/ScottTPaul
Sean Carroll
Sean Carroll is President & Chief Executive Officer of Anera - American Near East Refugee Aid, where he
works with partner organizations in Palestine, Lebanon, and Syria to deliver health, education, and economic
development programs. He specializes in international development and diplomacy, educational and cultural
affairs, and refugee and migration issues. Under his leadership, Anera has doubled its assistance to refugees,
and vulnerable host communities. Carroll previously served the Obama administration as Chief of Staff and
then Chief Operating Officer at USAID, where led initiatives such as USAID Forward and the Quadrennial
Diplomacy and Development Review. He served on Elizabeth Warren’s presidential campaign in the Middle
East Policy task group. He has held senior positions at Creative Associates International, the Club of Madrid,
Inter-American Dialogue, the House International Relations Committee, and the National Democratic Institute
for International Affairs. He holds a B.S.F.S. from Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service and an
M.I.P.P. from Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies.
Education:
B.S.F.S., Georgetown University; M.I.P.P., Johns Hopkins University
Affiliations:
USAID (Chief of Staff, Chief Operating Officer)
American Near East Refugee Aid (President & Chief Executive Officer)
National Democratic Institute for International Affairs (Executive Officer)
House Foreign Affairs Committee (Staff Director)
Club de Madrid (Director of Programs)
Inter-American Dialogue (Senior Fellow, Director of Legislative Programs)
Creative Frontiers, Inc. (Chairman)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/seanccarroll/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/scarrolldc
Shukria Dellawar
Shukria Dellawar is the Legislative Representative for the Prevention of Violent Conflict for the Friends
Committee on National Legislation. Dellawar has focused on peacebuilding efforts in Afghanistan for a decade,
testified before the US Congress, and worked closely with policymakers to address security, corruption, and
human rights violations. Dellawar was the Director of the Afghanistan Study Group at the Center for
International Policy. She has led several fact-finding missions to Afghanistan as a policy expert, bringing
critical issues to the forefront of policy decisions. She has worked in the development sector on women’s
empowerment and in the defense sector as a political analyst and cultural advisor. She is fluent in Dari, Pashto,
and Urdu/Hindi. Dellawar holds a B.A and an M.A., both in Conflict Analysis and Resolution from George
Mason University.
Affiliations:
Friends Committee on National Legislation (Legislative Representative); Women Thrive Worldwide (Director); Center for International Policy (Fellow,
Director)
Key Publications:
We must do more than simply remember the Holocaust- The Hill (2019)
U.S. Credibility Around the World Damaged by Afghanistan War -US News and World Reports (2013)
Waking up to Afghanistan's realities- The Guardian (2008)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/shukria-dellawar-36958a11b/
Testified:
Congressional Briefing, “Afghanistan: Giving Women a Seat at the Table,” Afghan WIN Act (2019)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/shukriadellawar
Sina Toossi
Sina Toossi is a Senior Research Analyst at the National Iranian American Council, where he conducts research
and writes about US-Iran relations, Iranian politics and Middle East policy issues. Previously, he was a senior
research specialist at Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, where
he focused on nuclear and security policy issues related to the Middle East. Before that, he was an assistant
editor at the DC-based Institute for Policy Studies, where he researched and wrote about the US foreign policy
establishment. He has been published in the National Interest, Foreign Affairs, Foreign Policy, Al Monitor,
Responsible Statecraft, and Al Jazeera. He holds a B.A. in Political Science and Economics from the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and an M.A. in International Affairs from American University.
Education:
B.A., Political Science and Economics, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; M.A., International Affairs, American University, School of
International Service
Affiliations:
National Iranian American Council (Senior Research Analyst); Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs
(Senior Research Specialist); Institute for Policy Studies (Assistant Editor)
Key Publications:
"U.S.-Led Regime Change is not the Path," Iran Matters (Harvard Belfer Center) (2018)
"As Trump Era Looms, Many Iranian-Americans Fear Losing The Gains They’ve Made," HuffPost (2017)
"The Iran Nuclear Deal’s Fate is a Litmus Test for Multipolarity," Atlantic Council (2017)
"US sanctions have caused Iranians untold misery - and achieved nothing," Middle East Eye (2020)
CV: http://sinatoossi.com/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/sinatoossi
Stephen Miles
Stephen Miles is the Executive Director of Win Without War, a coalition of national organizations advancing
progressive national security solutions. Miles previously served as the Executive Director of the American
Hellenic Council, which advances Greek American concerns. Miles was a consultant for the global
campaigning organization Avaaz. He has worked for Obama For America, the Democratic National Committee,
and multiple federal, state, and local electoral campaigns. He has expertise in humanitarian interventions and
Middle Eastern politics. Miles has appeared in the Nation, Responsible Statecraft, Common Dreams, InkStick
Media, AlterNet, HuffPost, and US News & World Report. He holds a B.A. in History and Political Science from
Tulane University and an M.Sc. in International Relations from the London School of Economics.
Affiliations:
Win Without War (Executive Director)
American Hellenic Council (Executive Director)
Avaaz (Consultant)
WTUL Radio (General Manager)
Obama for America (Staff)
Democratic National Committee (Staff)
Key Publications:
The Progressive Foreign Policy Debate is Finally Here (2018)
Questions to the Next Commander-In-Chief (2017)
Arms Industry Ramps Up Lobbying Efforts as Budget Battles Continue (2016)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/SPMiles42
Stephen Wertheim
Stephen Wertheim is the Co-Founder of the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft. Wertheim is also a
Research Scholar at the Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies at Columbia University. He specializes in
US foreign relations and international order from the late 19-century to the present. He has conducted prize-
winning research on the origins of the League of Nations and written extensively on colonial empires,
international law and organization, and humanitarian intervention. His scholarly work has been published in
the Journal of Global History, Journal of Contemporary History, Journal of Genocide Research, Presidential
Studies Quarterly, and Diplomatic History. He has also published in the Nation, New Republic, Dissent, War on
the Rocks, National Interest, Foreign Affairs, Foreign Policy, New York Times, Washington Post, and the
Guardian. Wertheim earned his B.A. at Harvard University, and his M.Phil. and Ph.D. at Columbia University.
Education:
A.B., Harvard University; MPhil, Ph.d., Columbia University
Affiliations:
Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft (Co-Founder)
Saltzman Institute for War and Peace Studies/Columbia U. (Research Scholar)
Columbia University (Visiting Assistant Professor)
Birkbeck University of London (Permanent Lecturer)
King’s College/University of Cambridge (Junior Research Fellow)
Princeton University (Postdoctoral Research Associate)
Key Publications:
Tomorrow, the World: The Birth of U.S. Global Supremacy in World War II (2020)
Instrumentalism Internationalism: The American Origins of the United Nations, 1940-3 (2019)
The only way to End “Endless War” (2019)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/stephen-wertheim/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/stephenwertheim
Steven Simon
Steven Simon is a Fellow at the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft. He served on the National Security
Council staff as Senior Director for Middle Eastern and North African affairs at the White House during the
Obama and Clinton administrations. Simon served the US State Department for 15 years. He was also the
Executive Director of the International Institute for Strategic Studies and Corresponding Director of its Middle
East program. Between government assignments, he was an analyst at the RAND Corporation and a principal at
Good Harbor Consulting and Goldman Sachs. He was a Senior Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, and
has taught at Colby College, Amherst College, Dartmouth College, Princeton University, and Georgetown
University. His book, “The Age of Sacred Terror,” won the Arthur Ross Award for best book in international
relations. His book, “The Next Attack,” was called one of the “best books of the year” by the Washington Post
and Financial Times. Simon has extensive expertise on national security and terrorism. He holds a B.A. in
Classics and Near Eastern Languages from Columbia University, an M.T.S. from the Harvard Divinity School,
and an M.P.A. from Princeton University.
Education:
M.T.S., Harvard Divinity School; B.A., Classics and Near Eastern Languages, Columbia University; M.P.A., Princeton University
Affiliations:
US Department of State (employed)
United States National Security Council (Senior Director for the Middle East and North Africa)
Council on Foreign Relations (Hasib J. Sabbagh Senior Fellow for Middle Eastern Studies)
International Institute for Strategic Studies (Executive Director)
RAND Corporation (Analyst)
Middle East Institute (Senior Fellow)
Dartmouth College (Lecturer)
John J. McCloy ’16 Professor of History (Amherst College)
Colby College (Professor in the Practice of International Relations)
Key Publications:
The Age of Sacred Terror: Radical Islam's War Against America (Random House) (2002)
The Next Attack: The Failure of the War on Terror and a Strategy for Getting it Right (Macmillan) (2006)
The sixth crisis: Iran, Israel, America and the rumors of war (Oxford University Press) (2011)
“Trump’s epic coronavirus fail follows Bush’s 9/11 playbook,” Quincy Institute (2020)
"The Middle East: Trump Blunders In," New York Review of Books (2020)
Full List Articles – Foreign Affairs
Testified:
Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, testifying on cities as terrorist havens; weapons of mass destruction; and
building a cohesive society for America’s Muslim communities (2006)
Education:
Ph.D., MIT; M.S., Cornell University; B.A., Princeton University
Affiliations:
Association for Computing Machinery, American Association for the Advancement of Science (Member)
Forum on Cyber Resilience, National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (Member)
Journal of Cybersecurity (Editor, Political and Policy Perspectives)
IEEE Security and Privacy (Associate Editor in Chief)
Information Security and Privacy Advisory Board, National Institute of Standards and Technology (Member)
Notices of the American Mathematical Society (Associate Editor)
Computer Science and Telecommunications Board, National Academies of Sciences (Member)
Key Publications:
Surveillance or Security? The Risks Posed by New Wiretapping Technologies (2011)
Listening In: Cybersecurity in an Insecure Age (2017)
Privacy on the Line: The Politics of Wiretapping and Encryption (1998)
Full list
CV: https://engineering.tufts.edu/people/faculty/susan-landau
Testified:
Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board (2019)
House Judiciary Committee Hearing on “The Encryption Tightrope: Balancing Americans’ Security and Privacy” (2016)
Education:
B.A.,Economics and Russian, Bowdoin College; M.A., International Relations, Johns Hopkins University
Affiliations:
Department of State (Assistant Secretary for East Asian and Pacific Affairs)
Yale Law School (Senior Fellow and Research Scholar)
National Committee on American Foreign Policy (Director for Forum on Asia-Pacific Security)
U.S. Consulate Chengdu (Diplomat)
Beijing (Diplomat)
U.S. Embassy Ashgabat (Counselor)
Brookings Institute (Nonresidential Fellow)
Camden Conference (Member)
Council on Foreign Relations (Member)
Eurasia Foundation (Board Member)
National Committee on U.S.-China Relations (Board Member)
Key Publications:
On Hong Kong, the US Must Find Its Voice (2019)
Fear of Chinese Global Takeover are Greatly Exaggerated (2020)
China is No Enemy (2019)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/susan-a-thornton-foreignaffrs/
Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/suea_thornton
Suzanne DiMaggio
Suzanne DiMaggio is the Co-Founder and Chairman of the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, a Senior
Fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, and Senior Fellow in the Disarmament, Arms
Control, and Nonproliferation Program at the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. At New
America, DiMaggio led the US-Iran Initiative which helped provide the foundation for the secret talks between
the Obama administration and Iran that led to the 2015 nuclear agreement. DiMaggio facilitated the first official
discussions between the Trump administration and North Korea in 2017. DiMaggio initiated US-Myanmar and
US-China dialogue. She is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations’ Advisory Committee for Securing a
Peaceful Transition in Myanmar. DiMaggio is one of the foremost experts and practitioners of diplomatic
dialogues with countries that have limited or no official relations with the US. For nearly two decades, she has
led these track 1.5 and track 2 conversations to help policymakers identify pathways for diplomatic progress
on a range of issues, including regional security, nonproliferation, terrorism, and governance. She is a frequent
commentator in the news media and has published opinion pieces in national and international press outlets.
DiMaggio holds a B.A. from New York University and an M.A. from City College of New York.
Education:
B.A., New York University; M.A., City College of New York
Affiliations:
Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft (Co-Founder and Chair)
New America Foundation (Director and Senior Fellow)
Asia Society (Vice President of Global Policy Programs)
United Nations Association of the USA (Vice President)
United Nations University (Program Officer)
Key Publications:
Correcting course on Iran: Trump has left us painfully isolated; it's time to reorient our foreign policy (2019)
Trump Is Smart to Talk to Kim Jong Un (2018)
How Trump Should Talk to North Korea (2017)
See more (2017)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/suzanne-dimaggio-02711730/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/suzannedimaggio
Trita Parsi
Trita Parsi is the Co-Founder and Executive Vice President of the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft,
and Co-Founder and former President of the National Iranian American Council. Parsi has received numerous
awards for his books on the Middle East, including the Grawemeyer Award for Ideas Improving World Order.
He is frequently consulted by Western and Asian governments on foreign policy. Parsi has worked for the
Swedish Permanent Mission to the UN, where he served in the Security Council handling the affairs of
Afghanistan, Iraq, Tajikistan, and Western Sahara; and in the General Assembly’s Third Committee, addressing
human rights in Iran, Afghanistan, Myanmar, and Iraq. He has taught at NYU, Johns Hopkins, and George
Washington University. Parsi’s writing has been published in the Nation, the Washington Post, the Wall Street
Journal, the New York Times, the Financial Times, The Forward, The Jerusalem Post, and Jane’s Intelligence
Review. He is a frequent guest on CNN, PBS, NPR, BBC, and Al Jazeera. Parsi holds a B.A. and M.A. in Political
Science and Government from Uppsala University, an M.A. in Economics from the Stockholm School of
Economics, and a Ph.D. in Foreign Policy from Johns Hopkins.
Education:
Ph.D., Foreign Policy, Johns Hopkins University; M.A., Economics, Stockholm School of Economics; M.A. and B.A., Political Science and Government,
Uppsala University
Affiliations:
Quincy Institute (Executive Vice President)
National Iranian American Council (President Emeritus)
US House of Representatives (Foreign Policy Advisor)
Georgetown University (Faculty)
Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies (Faculty)
New York University (Faculty)
Key Publications:
The Clock Starts Now: Biden Must Make The Right Signals To Iran On Nuke Deal (2020)
Biden Should Refuse To Let Trump Define His Options (2020)
The Middle East Is More Stable When the United States Stays Away (2020)
John Bolton Can Stomach Kim Jong Un’s North Korea, but Not Iran (2020)
Argument: Don’t Let Democrats Become the Party of War (2019)
Treacherous Alliance: The Secret Dealings of Israel, Iran, and the United States (2007)
See 216 articles
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tritaparsi/
Testified:
US Congress Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission: Human Rights in Iran (2010)
House Committee on Financial Services, Subcommittee on International Monetary Policy and Trade: US-Iran Relations (2009)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/tparsi
Wardah Khalid
Wardah Khalid is a Security Fellow with the Truman National Security Project and an American Muslim Civic
Leadership Institute Fellow at the USC Center for Religion and Civic Culture. Khalid specializes in US foreign
policy in the Middle East, refugees and immigration, and national security. She was previously an APAICS
Congressional Fellow on civil rights, immigration, foreign affairs, and national security issues. Khalid is
the Founder and Board President of Poligon Education Fund, where she strengthens Muslim American
engagement with Congress. Khalid has advised Congress, the White House, and the State Department on the
Iran nuclear negotiations and human rights issues in Syria and on the Israel-Palestine border. She has worked
with the UN in several capacities, including as a Consultant to the Counter-Terrorism Committee Executive
Directorate and field work in Jordan with the UN Relief and Works Agency. Khalid was recognized
by ABC's Nightline as a top millennial activist. She has been featured in outlets including the Washington Post,
CNN, the Guardian, and NPR. Khalid holds a B.B.A. and M.S. from Texas A&M University and an M.I.A. from
Columbia University's School of International and Public Affairs.
Education:
B.B.A. and M.S., Accounting, Texas A&M University; M.A., International Affairs, Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs
Affiliations:
Poligon Education Fund (Founder and Board President)
Asian Pacific American Institute (Congressional Fellow)
White House (Advisor and analyst on US Foreign Policy in the Middle East)
Congress (Advisor)
State Department (Advisor on Iran nuclear negotiations and human rights for Syrian and Israel/Palestine conflicts)
UN CTED (consultant on lone wolf terrorism)
UNRWA in Jordan (field work)
UNDP (worked with)
Organization of the Islamic Cooperation (worked with)
Truman National Security Project (Security Fellow)
American Muslim Civic Leadership Institute at the USC Center for Religion and Civic Culture (Fellow)
Scoville Fellow
2020 AAPI National Security and Foreign Policy Next Generation Leader by New America and Diversity in National Security Network.
Key Publications:
Why American Muslims Should Look Beyond the White House (2016)
On Palestinian Human Rights, We in America Need to Move From Talk to Action (2016)
Don’t wait for the next war to rebuild Gaza (2015)
See more on her LinkedIn profile under "Featured" (2020)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/wardahkhalid/
Affiliations:
Center for International Policy Arms & Security Program (Director)
Center for International Policy Sustainable Defense Task Force (Co-Director)
New America Foundation Arms and Security Initiative (Director)
World Policy Institute Arms Trade Resource Center (Director)
Office of New York State Attorney General Robert Abrams (Speechwriter, Policy Analyst)
Key Publications:
"The Trump administration should not sell weapons to the UAE" (2020)
"Trump Is Leveraging Pentagon Spending to Get Reelected" (2020)
"Duterte uses Covid-19 response to broaden reign of fear and repression" (2020)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/william-hartung-30a19218/
Testified:
House International Relations Committee, The Role of U.S. Arms Transfers in Human Rights Violations (2001)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/WilliamHartung
Yasmine Taeb
Yasmine Taeb is a Senior Fellow at the Center for International Policy. Previously, she served as Senior Policy
Counsel at Demand Progress where she led the organization's advocacy on ending militarism at home and
abroad. She has also served as Senior Policy Counsel at the Center for Victims of Torture, where she led
advocacy on refugees and asylum seekers. Taeb was the Legislative Director for Human Rights at the Friends
Committee on National Legislation, Government Relations Manager at the Arab American Institute, and a
Commissioner on the Arlington County Human Rights Commission. At the Center for American Progress, Taeb
co-authored “Fear, Inc. 2.0: The Islamophobia Network's Efforts to Manufacture Hate in America.” She was the
first Muslim woman elected to the Democratic National Committee, a Field Manager for Obama for America,
Legislative Fellow in the US House of Representatives, and a Graduate Pickering Foreign Affairs Fellow at the US
Department of State. As a candidate for Virginia State Senate, Taeb was endorsed by US Representatives John
Conyers, Jan Schakowsky, Andre Carson, Don Beyer, and Mike Honda. Taeb has appeared in the New York
Times, the Washington Post, HuffPost, and The Hill. Taeb holds a B.A. in Political Science from the University of
Florida, a J.D. from Pennsylvania State University, an M.A. in Islam and Muslim-Christian Relations from
Georgetown University, and Graduate Certificate in International Human Rights Law from Oxford University.
Education:
Graduate Certificate, International Human Rights Law, Oxford University; M.A., Islam and Muslim-Christian Relations, Georgetown University; J.D.,
Pennsylvania State University; B.A., Political Science, University of Florida
Affiliations:
Center for International Policy (Senior Fellow)
Demand Progress (Senior Policy Counsel)
Center for Victims of Torture (Senior Policy Counsel)
Friends Committee on National Legislation (Legislative Director for Human Rights and Civil Liberties)
Arlington County Human Rights Commission (Commissioner)
Various D.C.-based law firms (Legal Consultant)
Center for American Progress (Manager of the Islamophobia Project)
Arab American Institute (Government Relations Manager)
Obama for America (Field Manager)
Navanti Group (Middle East and North Africa Analyst)
US House of Representatives (Legislative Fellow)
US Department of State (Foreign Affairs Fellow)
Hon. Yvette Kane, Chief U.S. District Judge for the Middle District of Pennsylvania (Judicial Extern)
Office of the Attorney General for the District of Columbia (Summer Associate, Office of Legal Counsel)
Democratic National Committee (Member)
Key Publications:
Coronavirus Makes Clear That Biden Should Overhaul The Hardline Approach Trump And Some Democrats Take On Iran -in Business Insider (2020)
More Than 50 Organizations Urge Biden To Adopt A Principled Foreign Policy (2020)
Don’t Reward Gina Haspel for the Torture of Muslims -with Khizr Khan, in The Daily Beast (2018)
Trump’s Muslim Ban — One Year Old And Still Discriminatory -in The Hill (2018)
Don’t Dismantle Our Refugee Resettlement Program, Write 20 Members of Congress (2017)
Combating Religious Intolerance While Protecting Freedom of Expression (2016)
Muslim American Organizations Are on the Wrong Side of History on the Armenian Genocide (2015)
Fear, Inc. 2.0 -Center for American Progress Report (2015)
70 Orgs to Dem Leadership: Next HFAC Chair Must Bring A New Vision of U.S. Foreign Policy (2020)
CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/yasmine-t-6a421424/
Testified:
House Committee On Homeland Security, Refugee And Visa Programs (2016)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/YasmineTaeb