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Diplomacy, Security, and U.S. Leadership: The State of American Foreign Policy with Ambassador Thomas Pickering and Suzanne DiMaggio
12:15 PM - 1:30 PM
Perry World House | World Forum

Please join us for the first event of the spring semester, a conversation with Ambassador Thomas Pickering and Suzanne DiMaggio about the state of American global leadership. In a moderated conversation with Perry World House’s William Burke-White, Pickering and DiMaggio will discuss what really happens behind the scenes of high-stakes negotiations with countries like Russia, Iran, North Korea, and India; and what role U.S. diplomacy can play at a time of change and crises both within the United States and around the world. Space is limited.

 

Registration is required. Lunch will be provided.

Given demand, priority will be given to Penn students and faculty.

 

Ambassador Thomas Pickering

Ambassador Thomas R. Pickering is Vice Chairman of Hills and Company where he has worked since December 2006. The firm provides consultancy services on a wide variety of international activities.

Tom served as the U.S. Ambassador and Representative to the United Nations in New York under President George H.W. Bush.  Tom led the U.S. effort to build a global coalition in the UN Security Council during and after the first Gulf War.  He also was the U.S. Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs under President Bill Clinton. Tom holds the personal rank of Career Ambassador, the highest in the U.S. Foreign Service.  In a diplomatic career spanning five decades, he was U.S. ambassador to the Russian Federation, India, Israel, El Salvador, Nigeria, and the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan.  He also served on assignments in Zanzibar and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.  In Washington, Tom was Assistant Secretary of State for the Bureau of Oceans, Environmental and Scientific Affairs, Executive Secretary of the Department of State, and Special Assistant to Secretaries of State William P. Rogers and Henry A. Kissinger.

After government, he was the Senior Vice President, International Relations, of The Boeing Company from 2001 to 2006.  In this role, Tom was responsible for Boeing’s relations with foreign governments and the company’s transition to a global organization.  Prior to that, he was briefly the president of the Eurasia Foundation, a Washington-based organization that makes small grants and loans in the states of the former Soviet Union.

In 2012, Tom chaired the Benghazi Accountability Review Board at the State Department. In 1956, Tom entered into active duty in the U.S. Navy, and later served in the Naval Reserve to the grade of Lieutenant Commander.  He was assigned to the Bureau of Intelligence and Research of the State Department, later to the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, and served in Geneva as political adviser to the U.S. Delegation to the 18-Nation Disarmament Conference.

Tom is a Distinguished Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution.  He is active in a number of not-for-profit boards, including the International Crisis Group, where he was previously Chairman and Co-Chairman of the Board; the current Chairman of the Boards of the American Academy of Diplomacy, the Washington Institute of Foreign Affairs, and the Institute for the Study of Diplomacy at Georgetown University.  He has been a Trustee at the Council on Foreign Relations and the Aspen Institute.  Tom maintains close, high-level contacts in all the countries in which he has served, as well as in Africa, Latin America and Europe. He has a bachelor's degree, cum laude, with high honors in history, from Bowdoin College.  Tom received a master's degree from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University.  He was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship to the University of Melbourne in Australia, and received a second master's degree there.  Tom received an honorary doctor-in-laws degree from Bowdoin College, and has received similar honors from 14 other universities. He received the Distinguished Presidential Award and the Department of State’s highest award, the Distinguished Service Award.  Tom is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and the International Institute of Strategic Studies.  He speaks French, Spanish, and Swahili and has some fluency in Arabic, Hebrew, and Russian.

 

Suzanne DiMaggio

Suzanne DiMaggio is a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, where she focuses on U.S. foreign policy toward the Middle East and Asia. She is one of the foremost experts and practitioners of diplomatic dialogues with countries that have limited or no official relations with the United States, especially Iran and North Korea. 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.

DiMaggio directs the U.S.-Iran Initiative, which is carried out through a combination of policy dialogue, research, and a series of private roundtables and public events, with the aim of exploring possible grounds for constructive engagement and generating diplomatic solutions to the issues that divide the two countries. The project’s centerpiece is a long-running dialogue that she established in 2002, which helped to provide the foundations for the secret talks between Iran and the Obama administration that led to the 2015 nuclear agreement. She is currently directing a U.S.-DPRK dialogue that has included several visits to North Korea. As part of that process, she facilitated the first official discussions between the Trump administration and North Korean government representatives in Oslo in May 2017. In 2009, DiMaggio launched and directed a task force and an accompanying U.S.-Myanmar dialogue aimed at generating policy options to advance the normalization of bilateral relations. In 2016, she initiated a U.S.-China dialogue focused on great power interests in Myanmar and Southeast Asia more broadly. She is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations’ Advisory Committee for Securing a Peaceful Transition in Myanmar.

Before joining Carnegie, DiMaggio was a senior fellow at New America (2014-2018), where she directed several high-level policy dialogues, including with Iran, North Korea, and China. She was the vice president of Global Policy Programs at the Asia Society (2007-2014), where she set the strategic direction for moving the Asia Society’s work in the policy arena from a public program-focused forum to a global think tank aimed at addressing the most critical challenges facing the United States and Asia. She was the vice president of Policy Programs at the United Nations Association of the United States of America (1998-2007), where she directed programs that advanced multilateral approaches to global problem solving and advocated in support of constructive U.S. international engagement. Before joining UNA-USA, she was a program officer at the United Nations University (1993-1998), a research institute that links the UN system with international academic and policy communities. First based in Tokyo, Japan, and later at UN headquarters in New York, her work at UNU focused on international security issues and development.

DiMaggio is an associate senior fellow in the Disarmament, Arms Control, and Nonproliferation Program at the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI). She holds a BA from New York University and an MA from City College of New York (CUNY). She is a frequent commentator in the news media and her op-eds have appeared in national and international press outlets. She resides in NYC’s Greenwich Village with her husband, jazz bassist and composer Ben Allison, and daughter.

 

William Burke-White

William Burke-White is a professor of law at Penn Law School, inaugural director of Perry World House, and a co-faculty lead for the Global Order:  Power, Technology, and Governance research theme. Burke-White is an expert on international law and global governance, served in the Obama Administration from 2009-2011 on Secretary Clinton’s Policy Planning Staff, providing the Secretary direct policy advice on multilateral diplomacy and international institutions. He was principal drafter of the Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review (QDDR), Secretary Clinton’s hallmark foreign policy and institutional reform effort. Burke-White has written extensively in the fields of international law and institutions, with focus on international criminal and international economic law. His work has addressed issues of post-conflict justice; the International Criminal Court; international human rights, and international arbitration. His current research explores gaps in the global governance system and the challenges of international legal regulation in a world of rising powers and divergent interests. In 2008 he received the A. Leo Levin Award and in 2007 the Robert A. Gorman award for Excellence in Teaching.

 

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