
This is a partner event with the Charleston Library Society. REGISTRATION IS REQUIRED.
register ON THE LIBRARY SOCIETY’S WEBSITE HERE.
Join us on April 17 departing at 5:15pm for world affairs council Charleston. Successive American administrations have attempted to pivot away from the Middle East for decades, or been drawn into vortexes from which they cannot extricate themselves. Rarely has that been more true than today. What are the implications for the regional actors, and for their friends and adversaries of this current and more profound turmoil?
The speaker will be Ambassador Barbara Bodine, expert in Middle Eastern affairs and distinguished professor at Georgetown University’s Institute for the Study of Diplomacy.
Prior to joining Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service, she taught and directed policy task forces and policy workshops on U.S. diplomacy in the Persian Gulf region, including Iraq and Yemen for seven years at Princeton University’s School of Public and International Affairs and served as Director of the School’s Scholars in the Nation’s Service Initiative, a fellowship program for students pursuing careers in federal service.
Amb. Bodine’s 30+ years in the U.S. Foreign Service were spent primarily on Arabian Peninsula and greater Persian Gulf issues, specifically U.S. bilateral and regional policy, strategic security issues, counterterrorism, and governance and reform. Her tour as ambassador to the Republic of Yemen (1997-2001) saw enhanced support for democratization and increased security and counterterrorism cooperation. Amb. Bodine also served in Baghdad as deputy principal officer during the Iran-Iraq War, Kuwait as deputy chief of mission during the Iraqi invasion and occupation of 1990-1991, and again, seconded to the Department of Defense, in Iraq in 2003 as the senior State Department official and the first coalition coordinator for reconstruction in Baghdad and the central government. Her first assignment in the Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs was as Country Officer for the two Yemens and security assistance coordinator for the peninsula. She later returned to that office as Deputy Director.
In addition to several other assignments in the State Department’s Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs, she was deputy for operations, Office of the Coordinator for Counterterrorism and subsequently acting Coordinator for Counterterrorism; Director of East African Affairs; Dean of the School of Professional Studies at the Foreign Service Institute; and Senior Advisor for International Security Negotiations and Agreements in the Bureau of Political-Military Affairs. Amb. Bodine is the recipient of numerous awards, including the Secretary of State’s Award for Valor for her work in Occupied Kuwait. She is a former member of the board of directors of the American Academy of Diplomacy, co-chair of the International Forum on Diplomatic Training, an associate fellow of the Geneva Centre for Security Policy, and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.
Since leaving the government, Amb. Bodine has been founding director of the Governance Initiative in the Middle East and senior fellow at the Kennedy School of Government and the Robert Wilhelm Fellow at MIT’s Center for International Studies. She is a past president of the Mine Awareness Group, America, a global NGO that provides technical expertise for the removal of remnants of conflict worldwide.
A native of St. Louis, Amb. Bodine is a Phi Beta Kappa and magna cum laude graduate of the University of California, Santa Barbara, in political science and East Asian studies, and earned her master’s degree at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy. A recipient of distinguished alumni awards from both UC Santa Barbara and the Fletcher School, she is a Regent Emerita of the University of California.