The Iraq Study Group Report

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The Iraq Study Group Report Page 10

by James A. Baker, III


  Kofi Annan—Secretary-General of the United Nations

  * Dominic Asquith—British Ambassador to Iraq

  Tony Blair—Prime Minister of the United Kingdom

  Prince Turki al-Faisal—Ambassador of Saudi Arabia to the United States

  Nabil Fahmy—Ambassador of Egypt to the United States

  Karim Kawar—Ambassador of Jordan to the United States

  Nasser bin Hamad al-Khalifa—Ambassador of Qatar to the United States

  * Mukhtar Lamani—Arab League envoy to Iraq

  Sir David Manning—British Ambassador to the United States

  Imad Moustapha—Ambassador of Syria to the United States

  Walid Muallem—Foreign Minister of Syria

  Romano Prodi—Prime Minister of Italy

  * Ashraf Qazi—Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General for Iraq

  Anders Fogh Rasmussen—Prime Minister of Denmark

  Nabi Sensoy—Ambassador of Turkey to the United States

  Ephraim Sneh—Deputy Minister of Defense of the State of Israel

  Javad Zarif—Iranian Ambassador to the United Nations

  Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayad—Minister of Foreign Affairs of the United Arab Emirates

  Former Officials and Experts

  William J. Clinton—former President of the United States

  Walter Mondale—former Vice President of the United States

  Madeleine K. Albright—former United States Secretary of State

  Warren Christopher—former United States Secretary of State

  Henry Kissinger—former United States Secretary of State

  Colin Powell—former United States Secretary of State

  George P. Schultz—former United States Secretary of State

  Samuel R. Berger—former United States National Security Advisor

  Zbigniew Brzezinski—former United States National Security Advisor

  Anthony Lake—former United States National Security Advisor

  General Brent Scowcroft—former United States National Security Advisor

  General Eric Shinseki—former Chief of Staff of the United States Army

  General Anthony Zinni—former Commander, United States Central Command

  General John Keane—former Vice Chief of Staff of the United States Army

  Admiral Jim Ellis—former Commander of United States Strategic Command

  General Joe Ralston—former Supreme Allied Commander of NATO

  Lt. General Roger C. Schultz—former Director of the United States Army National Guard

  Douglas Feith—former United States Under Secretary of Defense for Policy

  Mark Danner—The New York Review of Books

  Larry Diamond—Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University

  Thomas Friedman—New York Times

  Leslie Gelb—President Emeritus, Council on Foreign Relations

  Richard Hill—Director, Office of Strategic Initiatives and Analysis, CHF International

  Richard C. Holbrooke—former Ambassador of the United States to the United Nations

  Martin S. Indyk—Director, Saban Center for Middle East Policy, The Brookings Institution

  Ronald Johnson—Executive Vice President for International Development, RTI International

  Frederick Kagan—The American Enterprise Institute

  Arthur Keys, Jr.—President and CEO, International Relief and Development

  William Kristol—The Weekly Standard

  * Guy Laboa—Kellogg, Brown and Root

  Nancy Lindborg—President, Mercy Corps

  Michael O'Hanlon—Senior Fellow, Foreign Policy Studies, The Brookings Institution

  George Packer—The New Yorker

  Carlos Pascual—Vice President and Director, Foreign Policy Studies, The Brookings Institution

  Robert Perito—Senior Program Officer, United States Institute of Peace

  * Col. Jack Petri, USA (Ret.)—advisor to the Iraqi Ministry of Interior

  Kenneth Pollack—Director of Research, Saban Center for Middle East Policy, The Brookings Institution

  Thomas Ricks—The Washington Post

  Zainab Salbi—Founder and CEO, Women for Women International

  Matt Sherman—former Deputy Senior Advisor and Director of Policy, Iraqi Ministry of Interior

  Strobe Talbott—President, The Brookings Institution

  Rabih Torbay—Vice President for International Operations, International Medical Corps

  George Will—The Washington Post

  * * * *

  Expert Working Groups and Military Senior Advisor Panel

  Economy and Reconstruction

  Gary Matthews, USIP Secretariat

  Director, Task Force on the United Nations and Special Projects, United States Institute of Peace

  —

  Raad Alkadiri

  Director, Country Strategies Group, PFC Energy

  —

  Frederick D. Barton

  Senior Adviser and Co-Director, International Security Program, Center for Strategic and International Studies

  —

  Jay Collins

  Chief Executive Officer, Public Sector Group, Citigroup, Inc.

  —

  Jock P. Covey

  Senior Vice President, External Affairs, Corporate Security and Sustainability Services, Bechtel Corporation

  —

  Keith Crane

  Senior Economist, RAND Corporation

  —

  Amy Myers Jaffe

  Associate Director for Energy Studies, James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy, Rice University

  —

  K. Riva Levinson

  Managing Director, BKSH and Associates

  —

  David A. Lipton

  Managing Director and Head of Global Country Risk Management, Citigroup, Inc

  —

  Michael E. O'Hanlon

  Senior Fellow, Foreign Policy Studies, The Brookings Institution

  —

  James A. Placke

  Senior Associate, Cambridge Energy Research Associates

  —

  James A. Schear

  Director of Research, Institute for National Strategic Studies, National Defense University

  Military and Security

  Paul Hughes, USIP Secretariat

  Senior Program Officer, Center for Post-Conflict Peace and Stability Operations, United States Institute of Peace

  —

  Hans A. Binnendijk

  Director and Theodore Roosevelt Chair, Center for Technology and National Security Policy, National Defense University

  —

  James Carafano

  Senior Research Fellow, Defense and Homeland Security, Douglas and Sarah Allison Center for Foreign Policy Studies, The Heritage Foundation

  —

  Michael Eisenstadt

  Director, Military and Security Program, The Washington Institute for Near East Policy

  —

  Michéle A. Flournoy

  Senior Advisor, International Security Program, Center for Strategic and International Studies

  —

  Bruce Hoffman

  Professor, Security Studies Program, Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University

  —

  Clifford May

  President, Foundation for the Defense of Democracies

  —

  Robert M. Perito

  Senior Program Officer, Center for Post-Conflict Peace and Stability Operations, United States Institute of Peace

  —

  Kalev I. Sepp

  Assistant Professor, Department of Defense Analysis, Center on Terrorism and Irregular Warfare, Naval Postgraduate School

  —

  John F. Sigler

  Adjunct Distinguished Professor, Near East South Asia Center for Strategic Studies, National Defense University

  —

  W. Andrew Terrill

  Research Profes
sor, National Security Affairs, Strategic Studies Institute

  —

  Jeffrey A. White

  Berrie Defense Fellow, Washington Institute for Near East Policy

  Political Development

  Daniel P. Serwer, USIP Secretariat

  Vice President, Center for Post-Conflict Peace and Stability Operations, United States Institute of Peace

  Raymond H. Close

  Freelance Analyst and Commentator on Middle East Politics

  Larry Diamond

  Senior Fellow, The Hoover Institution, Stanford University, and Co-Editor, Journal of Democracy

  Andrew P. N. Erdmann

  Former Director for Iran, Iraq and Strategic Planning, National Security Council

  Reuel Marc Gerecht

  Resident Fellow, American Enterprise Institute

  David L. Mack

  Vice President, The Middle East Institute

  Phebe A. Marr

  Senior Fellow, United States Institute of Peace

  Hassan Mneimneh

  Director, Documentation Program, The Iraq Memory Foundation

  Augustus Richard Norton

  Professor of International Relations and Anthropology, Department of International Relations, Boston University

  Marina S. Ottaway

  Senior Associate, Democracy and Rule of Law Project, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

  Judy Van Rest

  Executive Vice President, International Republican Institute

  Judith S. Yaphe

  Distinguished Research Fellow for the Middle East, Institute for National Strategic Studies, National Defense University

  Strategic Environment

  Paul Stares, USIP Secretariat

  Vice President, Center for Conflict Analysis and Prevention, United States Institute of Peace

  —

  Jon B. Alterman

  Director, Middle East Program, Center for Strategic and International Studies

  —

  Steven A. Cook

  Douglas Dillon Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations

  —

  James F. Dobbins

  Director, International Security and Defense Policy Center, RAND Corporation

  —

  Hillel Fradkin

  Director, Center for Islam, Democracy and the Future of the Muslim World, Hudson Institute

  —

  Chas W. Freeman

  Chairman, Projects International and President, Middle East Policy Council

  —

  Geoffrey Kemp

  Director, Regional Strategic Programs, The Nixon Center

  —

  Daniel C. Kurtzer

  S. Daniel Abraham Visiting Professor, Middle East Policy Studies, Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University

  —

  Ellen Laipson

  President and CEO, The Henry L. Stimson Center

  —

  William B. Quandt

  Edward R. Stettinius, Jr. Professor of Government and Foreign Affairs, University of Virginia, and Nonresident Senior Fellow, Saban Center for Middle East Policy, The Brookings Institution

  —

  Shibley Telhami

  Anwar Sadat Chair for Peace and Development, Department of Government and Politics, University of Maryland, and Nonresident Senior Fellow, Saban Center for Middle East Policy, The Brookings Institution

  —

  Wayne White

  Adjunct Scholar, Public Policy Center, Middle East Institute

  Military Senior Advisor Panel

  Admiral James O. Ellis, Jr.

  United States Navy, Retired

  —

  General John M. Keane

  United States Army, Retired

  —

  General Edward C. Meyer

  United States Army, Retired

  —

  General Joseph W. Ralston

  United States Air Force, Retired

  —

  Lieutenant General Roger C. Schultz, Sr.

  United States Army, Retired

  * * * *

  The Iraq Study Group

  —

  James A. Baker, III—Co-Chair

  James A. Baker, III, has served in senior government positions under three United States presidents. He served as the nation's 61st Secretary of State from January 1989 through August 1992 under President George H. W. Bush. During his tenure at the State Department, Mr. Baker traveled to 90 foreign countries as the United States confronted the unprecedented challenges and opportunities of the post-Cold War era. Mr. Baker's reflections on those years of revolution, war, and peace—The Politics of Diplomacy—was published in 1995.

  Mr. Baker served as the 67th Secretary of the Treasury from 1985 to 1988 under President Ronald Reagan. As Treasury Secretary, he was also Chairman of the President's Economic Policy Council. From 1981 to 1985, he served as White House Chief of Staff to President Reagan. Mr. Baker's record of public service began in 1975 as Under Secretary of Commerce to President Gerald Ford. It concluded with his service as White House Chief of Staff and Senior Counselor to President Bush from August 1992 to January 1993.

  Long active in American presidential politics, Mr. Baker led presidential campaigns for Presidents Ford, Reagan, and Bush over the course of five consecutive presidential elections from 1976 to 1992.

  A native Houstonian, Mr. Baker graduated from Princeton University in 1952. After two years of active duty as a lieutenant in the United States Marine Corps, he entered the University of Texas School of Law at Austin. He received his J.D. with honors in 1957 and practiced law with the Houston firm of Andrews and Kurth from 1957 to 1975.

  Mr. Baker's memoir—Work Hard, Study ... and Keep Out of Politics! Adventures and Lessons from an Unexpected Public Life—was published in October 2006.

  Mr. Baker received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1991 and has been the recipient of many other awards for distinguished public service, including Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson Award, the American Institute for Public Service's Jefferson Award, Harvard University's John F. Kennedy School of Government Award, the Hans J. Morgenthau Award, the George F. Kennan Award, the Department of the Treasury's Alexander Hamilton Award, the Department of State's Distinguished Service Award, and numerous honorary academic degrees.

  Mr. Baker is presently a senior partner in the law firm of Baker Botts. He is Honorary Chairman of the James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy at Rice University and serves on the board of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. From 1997 to 2004, Mr. Baker served as the Personal Envoy of United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan to seek a political solution to the conflict over Western Sahara. In 2003, Mr. Baker was appointed Special Presidential Envoy for President George W. Bush on the issue of Iraqi debt. In 2005, he was co-chair, with former President Jimmy Carter, of the Commission on Federal Election Reform. Since March 2006, Mr. Baker and former U.S. Congressman Lee H. Hamilton have served as the co-chairs of the Iraq Study Group, a bipartisan blue-ribbon panel on Iraq.

  Mr. Baker was born in Houston, Texas, in 1930. He and his wife, the former Susan Garrett, currently reside in Houston, and have eight children and seventeen grandchildren.

  —

  Lee H. Hamilton—Co-Chair

  Lee H. Hamilton became Director of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in January 1999. Previously, Mr. Hamilton served for thirty-four years as a United States Congressman from Indiana. During his tenure, he served as Chairman and Ranking Member of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs (now the Committee on International Relations) and chaired the Subcommittee on Europe and the Middle East from the early 1970s until 1993. He was Chairman of the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence and the Select Committee to Investigate Covert Arms Transactions with Iran.

  Also a leading figure on economic policy and congressional organization, he served as Chair of the Joint Economic Committee as well as the Joint Committee on the Organization of Congress, and was a member of the House
Standards of Official Conduct Committee. In his home state of Indiana, Mr. Hamilton worked hard to improve education, job training, and infrastructure. Currently, Mr. Hamilton serves as Director of the Center on Congress at Indiana University, which seeks to educate citizens on the importance of Congress and on how Congress operates within our government.

  Mr. Hamilton remains an important and active voice on matters of international relations and American national security. He served as a Commissioner on the United States Commission on National Security in the 21st Century (better known as the Hart-Rudman Commission), was Co-Chair with former Senator Howard Baker of the Baker-Hamilton Commission to Investigate Certain Security Issues at Los Alamos, and was Vice-Chairman of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States (the 9/11 Commission), which issued its report in July 2004. He is currently a member of the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board and the President's Homeland Security Advisory Council, as well as the Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Advisory Board.

  Born in Daytona Beach, Florida, Mr. Hamilton relocated with his family to Tennessee and then to Evansville, Indiana. Mr. Hamilton is a graduate of DePauw University and the Indiana University School of Law, and studied for a year at Goethe University in Germany. Before his election to Congress, he practiced law in Chicago and in Columbus, Indiana. A former high school and college basketball star, he has been inducted into the Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame.

  Mr. Hamilton's distinguished service in government has been honored through numerous awards in public service and human rights as well as honorary degrees. He is the author of A Creative Tension—The Foreign Policy Roles of the President and Congress (2002) and How Congress Works and Why You Should Care (2004), and the coauthor of Without Precedent: The Inside Story of the 9/11 Commission (2006).

  Lee and his wife, the former Nancy Ann Nelson, have three children—Tracy Lynn Souza, Deborah Hamilton Kremer, and Douglas Nelson Hamilton—and five grandchildren: Christina, Maria, McLouis and Patricia Souza and Lina Ying Kremer.

  —

  Lawrence S. Eagleburger—Member

  Lawrence S. Eagleburger was sworn in as the 62nd U.S. Secretary of State by President George H. W. Bush on December 8, 1992, and as Deputy Secretary of State on March 20, 1989.

  After his entry into the Foreign Service in 1957, Mr. Eagleburger served in the U.S. Embassy in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, in the State Department Bureau of Intelligence and Research, in the U.S. Embassy in Belgrade, and the U.S. Mission to NATO in Belgium. In 1963, after a severe earthquake in Macedonia, he led the U.S. government effort to provide medical and other assistance. He was then assigned to Washington, D.C., where he served on the Secretariat staff and as special assistant to Dean Acheson, advisor to the President on Franco-NATO issues. In August 1966, he became acting director of the Secretariat staff.

 

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