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August 18 CSIS TO LAUNCH CENTER FOR GLOBAL HEALTH POLICY
The new CSIS Center for Global Health Policy has been made possible by a three-year, $6.4 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. It is the single largest foundation grant CSIS has received in its history, and is the successor to three previous Gates Foundation grants that supported the highly successful CSIS Task Force on HIV/AIDS from 2001 through the end of this summer. Designed to bridge the foreign policy and public health communities, the CSIS Center for Global Health Policy will define a long-term strategic plan for expanded U.S. engagement in global public health; cultivate new high-level American champions and create new mechanisms to better inform policymakers of important health discoveries; address the growing security dimensions to global public health; and build external support – from within Africa, Europe, China, Russia, India, the Middle East and Americas – for a strategic approach and for improving the governance of global health. “America is a generous nation and where America provides assistance during times of human tragedy, it changes attitudes about us,” said John J. Hamre, CSIS President and CEO. “It reflects the best of America, and it advances well-being around the world. The Center for Global Health Policy will greatly further these honorable ideals.” “Recent successes in addressing HIV/AIDS and malaria demonstrate the critical role of informed public policy in improving global health,” said Joe Cerrell, Director of Global Health Policy and Advocacy at the Gates Foundation. “Funding is important, but it has to be directed wisely in order to have a real and lasting impact. The new CSIS Center will help develop a comprehensive global health strategy that uses the financial, technical, and political resources of the U.S. as effectively as possible.” The Center will be led by J. Stephen Morrison, who will serve as its founding director. Morrison previously held the position of director of the CSIS Task Force on HIV/AIDS and helped advance U.S. leadership on HIV/AIDS on a bipartisan basis. He has also served as director of the CSIS Africa Program. “There is a major opportunity for the United States to take leadership on the issue of global public health and a major opportunity for the United States to help itself by doing good around the world,” said Morrison. “I am looking forward to working with the Gates Foundation to put the CSIS Center for Global Health Policy at the forefront of that effort.”
March 18 CSIS LAUNCHES NEW SOUTHEAST ASIA STUDIES INITIATIVE
WASHINGTON, March 12, 2008 – The Center for Strategic & International Studies (CSIS) today announced that it has launched a comprehensive Southeast Asia Studies Initiative headed by CSIS Senior Fellow Derek Mitchell to focus on this strategically important region. “Southeast Asia is a region of significant strategic importance and economic influence,” said CSIS Southeast Asia initiative director Derek Mitchell, “yet the U.S. policy community pays it remarkably little attention. This program will help to rectify that. It will provide a forum for closer examination and focused discussion on critical issues facing Southeast Asia, and the United States in the region.” Under Mitchell’s leadership, the new initiative will provide focus on evolving U.S. interests and strategy in Southeast Asia and the region’s increasingly important role in global security, political, and economic affairs. The initiative in particular will examine the status and direction of longstanding U.S. alliances with Thailand and the Philippines as well as increasingly important bilateral security partnerships with Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Vietnam. The initiative will hold regular Southeast Asia Roundtables and periodic conferences designed to bring together interested members of the Washington community and leading regional figures to examine key themes in depth. The initiative will also host leading government officials from the region periodically, inviting them to make public remarks in Washington, DC. To this end, CSIS hosted Surin Pitsuwan, the current secretary general of ASEAN, Singaporean defense minister Radm. (Ret.) Teo Chee Hean, and will host Thailand’s new foreign minister, Noppadon Pattama, at a public event at CSIS on Thursday, March 20. The program has already begun publishing a monthly newsletter entitled the Southeast Asia Bulletin. The newsletter provides a timely overview of key developments, events, and facts about the region, and offers a forum for short essays by official and unofficial commentators on regional affairs “Our new Southeast Asia Initiative will help the Washington policy community make great strides in understanding the crucial matters of public policy this area of the world presents,” said CSIS President and CEO John J. Hamre. “As matters of security and global prosperity become increasingly intertwined, I can think of no better time to examine the strategic significance of this vital, yet much overlooked region.” Contact: H. Andrew Schwartz, 202-775-3242, aschwartz@csis.org;
February 28 THE WASHINGTON QUARTERLY SPRING 2008 ISSUE - NOW ONLINE AT WWW.TWQ.COM
Contact: Andrew Schwartz, 202-775-3242, aschwartz@csis.org; Amanda Kozlowski, 202-775-3127, akozlowski@csis.org  The Spring 2008 issue of The Washington Quarterly  now online at www.twq.com  Five Years Later: Iraq’s Strategic Legacy  “[C]alls for “no more Iraqs” come from a nation wary of entangling commitments and from a world weary of U.S. power. The call will need to be heard not as a promise that there might be no more wars, for there will be, but as a commitment that the mistakes that were made in Iraq will not be repeated.”  —Simon Serfaty —James B. Steinberg urges a return to the bipartisan tradition of enlightened global leadership.  —Michael J. Green reveals that the Iraq War has not been as fundamental to Asian geopolitics as it has been elsewhere. Putin and Beyond  “[A] basic lesson stands out from the West’s disappointing experience with Putin: competitive courtship of the Kremlin leader’s ego is not as productive as coordinated shaping of a compelling geopolitical context for Russia.”   —Zbigniew Brzezinski   —Clifford G. Gaddy and Andrew C. Kuchins explain Putin’s calculus in choosing a successor who will continue to seek stability. —Sarah E. Mendelson and Theodore P. Gerber shed light on a young Russian generation that now reflects Putin’s values.  Provocations  “Islamabad’s inability to defeat the terrorist groups operating from its soil is rooted in many factors that go beyond its admittedly serious motivational deficiencies to combat terrorism.”  —Ashley J. Tellis  —Bruce Riedel and Bilal Y. Saab assess al Qaeda’s Saudi offensive.  —Former intelligence policymaker Nancy Bernkopf Tucker presents seven steps to transform the intelligence community culture. 
February 8 DAVID J. BERTEAU NAMED TO LEAD CSIS DEFENSE INDUSTRIAL INITIATIVES GROUP; PIERRE CHAO AND DAVID SCRUGGS TO SERVE AS SENIOR ASSOCIATES
WASHINGTON, February 8, 2008 - The Center for Strategic and International Studies is pleased to announce that David J. Berteau has been named Senior Adviser and Director of the Defense Industrial Initiatives Group (DIIG) in the Center’s International Security Program (ISP). He will assume his new responsibilities March 3. “David Berteau brings exceptional knowledge and just the right mix of experience in industry, government, and defense analysis to ensure that CSIS will remain engaged with those three communities and a leader in the national debate over critical defense business management and industrial base issues. He will build on the legacy for solid, dispassionate analysis that Pierre Chao and David Scruggs have established and lead our defense industrial group’s work in some new directions,” said CSIS President and CEO Dr. John Hamre. The Defense Industrial Initiatives Group focuses on issues related to the health and management of the defense-industrial base. It has recently conducted projects on export controls, the federal services industrial base, the U.S. defense software industrial base, defense acquisition reform, and complex program management. Pierre Chao, who established the group and served as Director the past four years, and Senior Fellow David Scruggs have been named Senior Associates and will retain an active engagement with CSIS as they pursue a new business venture. “I am very excited about David Berteau’s appointment and look forward to supporting him and CSIS’s important defense-industrial public policy work,” said Pierre Chao. David J. Berteau consults for Clark & Weinstock, where he has been Director of Homeland Security and National Defense since 2003. He has advised clients ranging from state governments and academic institutions to associations and private firms. From 1993 to 2001, he was Senior Vice President at Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC), where he managed operations for commercial and government customers on a wide range of issues, including cybersecurity, software development, law enforcement, and defense. Mr. Berteau served in the U.S. Department of Defense for 12 years. He was Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Production and Logistics and acting Assistant Secretary 1990-93, where he was responsible for weapons production readiness, industrial base, base closures, defense logistics, installations, procurement, and environment. From 1986 through 1989, Mr. Berteau was the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Resource Management & Support, with responsibility for military and civilian manpower and requirements. He was the Assistant to the Deputy Secretary (1984-85) and Special Assistant to the Comptroller (1983-84). Mr. Berteau has held a number of academic positions. He is currently an Adjunct Professor at Georgetown University’s Security Studies Program and at Syracuse University’s Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, and he serves on the Board of Visitors, Defense Acquisition University. From 2001-03 he was Director of Syracuse University’s National Security Studies Program. He has been a non-resident Senior Associate at CSIS for four years. He has also played a leadership role in several influential government commissions. He served as a member of the 2007 Commission on Army Acquisition and Program Management in Expeditionary Operations, as Chairman of the 1992 government-wide Defense Conversion Commission, and as Executive Secretary of the President’s Blue Ribbon Commission on Defense Management (Packard Commission, 1985-86). Mr. Berteau received the Secretary of Defense Medals for Distinguished Public Service in 1991 and Outstanding Public Service in 1987 and 1989 and the Secretary of the Army Medal for Exceptional Public Service in 2007. His column for Government Security News received the Gold Award in 2005 from the American Society of Business Publications Editors. He is a Fellow of the National Academy of Public Administration and a director of the Procurement Round Table. He served on the NASA Advisory Council and has been a member of several Defense Science Board task forces. He earned his B.A. from Tulane University in 1971 and received his Master’s degree in 1981 from the LBJ School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas, where he was the Lyndon B. Johnson Congressional Fellow. A native of Louisiana, he lives in Derwood, Maryland, with his wife, Jane Berteau; they have two grown children.  -##- The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) is a bipartisan, non-profit organization founded in 1962 and headquartered in Washington, D.C. It seeks to advance global security and prosperity by providing strategic insights and practical policy solutions to decision makers.
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