Category: Elisa Cherry

Peace Picks | February 1 – February 5, 2021

Notice: Due to public health concerns, upcoming events are only available via live stream.

  1. Human Rights and the Future World Order | February 1, 2021| 12:00 – 1:30 PM ET | Belfer Center Harvard Kennedy School | Register Here

The issue of human rights presents a special challenge for any effort to construct a workable world order. Can democracies and their publics remain true to their stated values within a world where human rights abuses are still widespread, without meddling into other nations’ domestic political affairs or presuming to know exactly how to achieve these ends globally? To what extent will differences over basic notions of human rights undermine efforts to cooperate on trade, climate, arms control, or other pressing global problems?

Speakers:

Hina Jialni: Former United Nations Special Representative of the Secretary-General on Human rights Defenders

Samuel Moyn: Henry R. Luce Professor of Jurisprudence, Yale Law School and Professor of History, Yale University

Zeid Ra’ad: Perry World House Professor of the Practice of Law and Human Rights, University of Pennsylvania

2. Maritime Security Dialogue: USN: Setting the Theatre in the Artic | February 2, 2021 | 10:00 -11:00 AM ET | Center for Strategic and International Studies  | Watch  Here

Please join CSIS and the U.S. Naval Institute for a Maritime Security Dialogue event featuring Admiral Robert P. Burke, Commander, U.S. Naval Forces Europe / Commander, U.S. Naval Forces Africa and Commander, Allied Joint Forces Command Naples. This event will be moderated by Heather A. Conley, Senior Vice President for Europe, Eurasia, and the Arctic; and Director, Europe Program. 

The Maritime Security Dialogue series brings together CSIS and the U.S. Naval Institute, two of the nation’s most respected non-partisan institutions. The series highlights the particular challenges facing the Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard, from national level maritime policy to naval concept development and program design. Given budgetary challenges, technological opportunities, and ongoing strategic adjustments, the nature and employment of U.S. maritime forces are likely to undergo significant change over the next ten to fifteen years. The Maritime Security Dialogue provides an unmatched forum for discussion of these issues with the nation’s maritime leaders.

Speakers:

Admiral Robert P Burke: Commander US Naval Forces Europe and Africa, Commander, Allied Joint Forces Command Naples

Heather A Conley: Senior Vice President for Europe, Eurasia and the Arctic; and Director for Europe, Russia and Eurasia Program, CSI

3. Crisis Group’s EU Watch List: 10 Cases Where the EU Can Build Peace in 2021 | February 2, 2021 | 9:30AM-12:15 PM ET | Crisis Group  | Watch Here

The International Crisis Group invites you to join the launch of our EU Watch List, the yearly publication identifying ten countries and regions at risk of conflict or escalation of violence, where a stronger engagement and early action driven or supported by the EU and its member states could help generate stronger prospects for peace and stability.

Crisis Group Senior staff will join representatives from the European Commission and the European External Action Service to analyse the relevance and the policy suggestions of the ten cases presented in the Watch List: Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Iran & the Gulf, Libya, Mexico & Central America, Nagorno-Karabakh, Somalia, Thailand and Venezuela.

The briefing will start with a high-level panel on global conflict trends, followed by a presentation of the Watch List with interventions from EU senior officials and Crisis Group Program Directors. A Q&A with participants will conclude the event.

Speakers:

Stefano Sannino: Secretary General of the European External Action Service

Richard Atwood: Chief of Policy, Crisis Group

Hilde Hardeman: Director, Head of Service for Foreign Policy Instruments, European Commission

Giuseppe Famà: Head of EU Affairs, Crisis Group

Elissa Jobson: Director of Global Advocacy, Crisis Group

Ivan Briscoe: Latin America & Caribbean Program Director, Crisis Group

Comfort Ero: Africa Program Director, Crisis Group

Joost Hiltermann: Middle East and North Africa Program Director, Crisis Group

Olga Oliker: Europe and Central Asia Program Director, Crisis Group

Stefano Tormat: Director, Integrated Approach for Security and Peace, European External Action Service

4. The Geopolitics of The Green Deal | February 3, 2021 | 9:00-10:00 AM ET | European Council on Foreign Relations | Register Here

This event will mark the launch of the eponymous paper co-written by Mark Leonard and Jeremy Shapiro of the European Council on Foreign Relations, as well as Jean Pisani Ferry, Simone Tagliapietra and Guntram Wolff of Bruegel. In the paper, the authors map out the geopolitical implications of the European Green Deal and lay out a foreign policy agenda to manage the geopolitical aspects of the European Green Deal and to lead climate change efforts globally. Join us as an invited panel provide their insight into the paper, chaired by co-author Guntram Wolff.

This event is organised in cooperation with Bruegel.  

Registration is not obligatory to watch the livestream. You are welcome to register if you wish to receive a reminder and updates about the event.

Speakers:

Anne Bergenfelt: Senior Advisor, Cabinet of Josep Borrell Fontelles

Mark Leonard: Director of the European Council on Foreign Relations

Simone Tagiapeitra: Research Fellow at Bruegel

Chaired by:

Guntram Wolff: Director of Bruegel

5. Syrian Requiem: The Civil War and its Aftermath | February 4, 2021 | 10:00-11:00 AM ET | Brookings Institution | Register Here

Pro-democracy protests began in Syria nearly 10 years ago. In response, the government escalated violence, which sparked the Syrian civil war. The subsequent humanitarian catastrophe has killed almost half a million people and displaced an estimated 12 million others.

In their new book, “Syrian Requiem,” Brookings Distinguished Fellow Itamar Rabinovich and Carmit Valensi, research fellow at the Institute for National Security Studies, draw on more than 200 specially conducted interviews to tell the story of the conflict in Syria. The authors detail the long-developing divisions in Syrian politics, survey the various actors who fought in Syria directly or through proxies, and examine the policy choices that the conflict currently presents to the United States and others.

Speakers:

Susan Maloney: Vice President and Director, Foreign Policy

Steven Heydemann: Nonresident Senior Fellow, Foreign Policy, Center for Middle East Policy

Itamar Rabinovich: Distinguished Fellow, Foreign Policy

Carmit Valensi: Research Fellow and Syria Program Manager, Institute for National Security Studie

6. Exploring Innovative Measures to Map and Mitigate Illicit Weapons Transfers  | February 4, 2021 | 12:00 PM-1:00 ET | Atlantic Council | Register Here

Tim Michetti, an investigative researcher on illicit weapon transfers, recently wrote a new Atlantic Council report, “A Guide to Illicit Iranian Weapon Transfers: The Bahrain File.” During this discussion, Mr. Michetti will present his report, which is a comprehensive, field-based case study on illicit Iranian weapon transfers. Following his presentation, he will be joined in discussion by Rachel Stohl, vice president of the Stimson Center; David Mortlock, a nonresident senior fellow with the Atlantic Council’s Global Energy Center and a partner at the law firm Willkie Farr & Gallagher; Jay Bahadur, investigator, author, and former coordinator of the UN Panel of Experts on Somalia; and moderator Norman Roule, former National Intelligence Manager for Iran in the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. 

Using findings from the report, the panelists will explore ways to improve mitigation measures to prevent illicit weapon transfers and strengthen the efficacy of arms embargoes. The discussion will explore how current international arms control architecture, sanctions enforcement mechanisms, and lessons from WMD non-proliferation may be applied to mapping and dismantling underlying networks that facilitate the international trade in illicit weapons.

Speakers:

Time Michetti: Investigative Researcher on Illicit Weapon Transfers

Rachel Stohl: Vice President for Conventional Defense, Stimson Center

Jay Bahadur: Investigator, Author and Former Coordinator of the UN Panel of Experts on Somalia

David Mortlock: Nonresident Fellow, Global Energy Center

Moderated By:

Norman Roule: Former National Intelligence Manager for Iran, Office of the Director of National Intelligenc

7. Nuclear Policy and Posture in the Biden Administration | February 5, 2021 | 9:30-10:30 AM ET | Carnegie Endowment for International Peace| Watch Here

Even with an agreement to extend New START, the Biden Administration confronts important policy choices regarding nuclear doctrine, managing nuclear tensions with Russia, China, and North Korea; which offensive and defensive weapons systems to retain, build, or eliminate; and how to pursue arms control. 

Speakers:

Michèle Flournoy: Co-Founder and Managing Partner of WestExec Advisors, and former Under Secretary of Defense

George Perkovich: Policy Expert of the Carnegie Endowment’s Nuclear Policy Program

Pranay Vaddi: Fellow, Nuclear Policy Program, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

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Pakistan is about more than Afghanistan and India

The incoming Biden administration faces many challenges in West/South Asia, but also has an opportunity to strengthen relations with Pakistan, which could deepen peace to the region. The Wilson Center January 21 hosted a one-on-one discussion between Michael Kugelman, the Asia Program Deputy Director, and Moeed Yusuf, the current Pakistani National Security Advisor, on the future of US-Pakistan relations.

Breaking through lenses

According to Yusuf, the United States needs to stop categorizing the relationship with Pakistan through different lenses. Previous administrations have approached Pakistan with a focus on Afghanistan and India, letting those relationships guide US-Pakistan relations. This is neither beneficial nor prudent. Pakistan is a primary actor in countering terrorism in Afghanistan, but Pakistan is also a potentially strong ally economically and geopolitically.

Pakistan has been seen mainly through the prism of Afghanistan. The incoming Biden administration should capitalize on a fresh start. While Afghanistan remains a priority for both Pakistan and the United States, Islamabad and Washington also need to build stronger bilateral relations. Pakistan is able to provide counterterrorism support, but the relationship with the US needs to be expanded far beyond that. There needs to be a bilateral relationship that transcends conflict, various regional other partnerships, and geopolitical dynamics.

Pakistan’s troublesome neighbors

The relationship that the United States has with Pakistan’s neighbors can be a building block with Pakistan, but should not be seen as the core of the relationship.

As the United States continues to combat terrorism in Afghanistan, and more broadly throughout the region, Pakistan should be identified as a key facilitator of peace talks in bringing the relevant actors to the negotiating table, in partnership with the US. Similarly, India remains the priority issue in Pakistan’s foreign policy, but Islamabad wants the US to deal with India and Pakistan separately and on their own merits. If the United States wants a stronger relationship with India, to counter a rising China, there could be repercussions for the relationship with Pakistan.

Beyond business as usual

Business as usual, or a continuation of the policies of the Trump administration, is illogical. The tumultuous relations the United States has had with Pakistan over the last four years are no longer pertinent in today’s vastly different geopolitical environment. Islamabad is prioritizing an economic security paradigm that includes combatting terrorism in neighboring countries as well as internally, enabling Pakistan to engage in new economic opportunities within and beyond its borders. The economic partnerships that Pakistan envisages are rooted in cooperation and investment, rather than aid. Creating long-term development within Pakistan would benefit the United States.  

There are many opportunities for the Biden administration to build stronger relations with Pakistan, but the new approach should recognize that Pakistan is more than a partner in US Afghanistan policy. The prospects of economic growth, geopolitical strategy, and regional peace are just a few of the many factors that the US must consider when building stronger relations with Pakistan.

To watch the event in full, please click here. And here:

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Peace Picks | January 18-22 2021

Notice: Due to public health concerns, upcoming events are only available via live stream.

1. Truth and Accountability Post-Insurrection: Where does the country go from here? | January 19, 2021 | 10:00 AM- 11:30AM ET | Brookings Institute | Register Here

On January 6, following a rally where President Trump urged his supporters to “fight much harder” against “bad people” and “show strength,” a mob of rioters aiming to halt the count of Electoral College ballots that would formally seal Joe Biden’s victory violently stormed and overtook the United States Capitol. One Capitol police officer and four pro-Trump extremists lost their lives as a result.

Now, in the aftermath of the insurrection, lawmakers are exploring ways to strip the president of his authority, hold those who participated accountable, and investigate the massive security failures that jeopardized the lives of elected officials and legislative staff. The House of Representatives impeached President Trump for the second time in his term in the absence of Vice President Mike Pence invoking the 25th Amendment to remove him from power. Senate leaders are now hashing out parameters for Trump’s trial in the Senate. Some lawmakers are also urging the expulsion of Republican lawmakers who participated in the efforts to overturn the election via the 14th Amendment.

On January 19, Governance Studies at Brookings will host a webinar to discuss the aftermath of the January 6 insurrection. Panelists will assess the options lawmakers are exploring to remove President Trump from office, the impeachment process, how the insurrection affects American democracy, and what it all means for President-elect Biden’s first 100 days in office.

Speakers:

John Hudak: Deputy Director Center for Effective Public Management and Senior Fellow for Governance Studies

Susan Hennessey: Senior Fellow for Governance Studies and Executive Editor of Lawfare

Elaine Kamarck: Founding Director Center for Effective Public Management and Senior Fellow for Governance Studies

Rashawn Ray: David M. Rubenstein Fellow for Governance Studies

Molly E. Reynolds: Senior Fellow for Governance Studies


2. Defeating Corruption and Promoting Democracy: The Role of USAID | January 19, 2021 | 2:00 PM- 3:00 PM ET | CSIS | Register Here

USAID has been working on anti-corruption issues for more than 20 years. CSIS published a paper in April of 2020 suggesting that given the Great Power Competition, the United States needs to “get back at the front of the anti-corruption parade” and lead on these issues. Globally corruption is a vote-moving issue. There are enormous costs to corruption, and it holds back private investment and jobs. Ultimately, civil society, religious institutions, the private sector, and governments need to create coalitions to defeat corruption. USAID is a catalytic funder, a convenor, a talent developer, and a policy partner to help make these sorts of changes and coalitions happen. In line with USAID’s longstanding anti-corruption work in Eastern Europe, USAID will be launching its new US-Albania Transparency Academy at this event.

Speakers:

Brock Beirman: Assistant Administrator, Bureau for Europe and Eurasia USAID

Susan K. Fritz: Former Regional Mission Director to Ukraine and Belarus, USAID

Frank Brown: Director of the Anti-Corruption and Governance Center, CIPE

Juela Hamati: Former President, European Democracy Youth Network (EDYN)

3. The Impact of European Policy on the Migration Crisis | January 19, 2021 | 10:00 AM-11:00 AM ET | European Council on Foreign Relations |Register Here

The Paris office of the European Council on Foreign Relations is delighted to invite you to a virtual seminar on the migration crisis and European cooperation.

This is the third seminar of a partnership between the H2020 project MAGYC and ECFR Paris, entitled “Crises, migration and European cooperation”. The recordings of the first two seminars, “How the Covid-19 shaped European migratory governance?” and “Migration and climate change: what can European cooperation achieve?“, are available online.

Speakers:

Thibaut Jaulin: Researcher at Science Po University

Andrew Lebovich: Policy Fellow, European Council on Foreign Relations

Gerasimos Tsourapas: Senior Lecturer, University of Birmingham

Rym Momtaz (Moderator): France Correspondent, POLITICO

4. United States Presidential Inauguration | January 20, 2021 | 12:00 PM ET | United States Capitol- Live Streamed | Watch Here

Per the Twentieth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, Inauguration Day is set for January 20th every four years — that’s a Wednesday in 2021.

The theme of this year’s inauguration is “America United,” an issue that’s long been a central focus for Biden but one that’s taken on added weight in the wake of the violence at the U.S. Capitol earlier this month. The Presidential Inaugural Committee said that the theme “reflects the beginning of a new national journey that restores the soul of America, brings the country together, and creates a path to a brighter future.


5. U.S Pakistan Relations in the Biden Era: A Conversation with Moeed Yusuf | January 21, 2021 | 9:00 AM-10:00 AM ET | Wilson Center | Register Here

After a tense period during the first part of the Trump administration, U.S.-Pakistan relations have improved over the last few years amid the launch of a peace and reconciliation process in Afghanistan. However, with U.S. troops drawing down, the future of U.S. relations with Pakistan-which in Washington have long been viewed through the lens of Afghanistan-is uncertain. This online-only event will feature a discussion with Dr. Moeed Yusuf, Pakistan’s national security advisor and special assistant to the prime minister on national security and strategic policy planning. He will discuss Islamabad’s expectations for U.S.-Pakistan relations in the Joe Biden era, and what the situation in Afghanistan may mean for the relationship moving forward. This conversation is moderated by Michael Kugelman.

Speakers:

Moedd Yusuf: National Security Advisor to the Prime Minsiter of Pakistan

Michael Kugelman: Deputy Director and Senior Associate for South Asia Program at the Wilson Center


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