Is there hope for the Israel-Palestine Peace Process? - The Middle East Institute
The Middle East Institute's
George and
Rhonda Salem Family Foundation Lecture
Series presents a discussion about the current status of the
peace process and the challenges faced by
Secretary of State John Kerry as he seeks to forge a historic agreement. The talk will feature three veteran peace process experts -
Daniel Levy,
Aaron David Miller, and
Shibley Telhami - who will analyze the obstacles and opportunities and assess the next steps key actors and international players must take to ensure the success of the negotiations.
Bios:
Daniel Levy is the director of the
Middle East and North Africa Programme at the
European Council on Foreign Relations. He is also senior research fellow at the
New America Foundation and senior fellow at
The Century Foundation. Mr. Levy was a policy adviser in the
Israeli Prime Minister's office and head of the
Jerusalem Affairs
Unit during the
Barak government. He was a member of the
Israeli delegation to the
Taba negotiations with the
Palestinians in
January 2001, and of the negotiating team for the '
Oslo B'
Agreement from May to
September 1995, under
Prime Minister Rabin. Mr. Levy served as senior policy adviser to former Israeli
Minister of Justice,
Yossi Beilin. He was the lead Israeli drafter of the
Geneva Initiative and directed policy planning and international efforts at the
Geneva Campaign Headquarters in
Tel Aviv.
Daniel has a masters degree from
Cambridge University, was chairperson of the
World Union of Jewish Students, and has published extensively in a broad range of publications including Ha'aretz,
The Jerusalem Post,
The Boston Globe,
The American Prospect,
The International Herald Tribune, and
The Washington Monthly.
Aaron David Miller is the vice president for new initiatives and a distinguished scholar at the
Woodrow Wilson International Center for
Scholars. From 2006-2008 he served as a policy scholar at the
Wilson Center, where he wrote his fourth book, The Much Too
Promised Land:
America's
Elusive Search for Arab-Israeli
Peace (
Bantam, 2008).
Miller previously served as president of
Seeds of Peace, a nonprofit organization dedicated to empowering young leaders from regions of conflict with the skills required to advance reconciliation and coexistence. He also served at the
Department of State, where he helped formulate
U.S. policy on the
Middle East as an advisor to
Republican and
Democratic Secretaries of State, most recently as the senior advisor for Arab-Israeli
Negotiations. He has received the Department of State's Distinguished,
Superior, and
Meritorious Honor Awards. His articles have appeared in
The New York Times,
The Washington Post,
The Los Angeles Times, and The International Herald Tribune. He is the author of the forthcoming.
The End of Greatness: Why America Can't Have (and Doesn't
Want) Another
Great President (
Palgrave Macmillan, 2014).
Shibley Telhami is the
Anwar Sadat Professor for Peace and
Development at the
University of Maryland, College Park, and non-resident senior fellow at the
Saban Center at the
Brookings Institution. Professor
Telhami served as advisor to the
US Mission to the UN (1990-91), as advisor to former Congressman
Lee Hamilton, senior advisor to
President Obama's
United States Special Envoy for Middle East Peace (2009-2011)
George Mitchell, and as a member of the US delegation to the
Trilateral US-Israeli-Palestinian Anti-Incitement Committee, which was mandated by the
Wye River Agreements. He has also served as an advisor to the
United States Department of State and was a member of the
Iraq Study Group's Strategic
Environment Working Group. He has contributed to The Washington Post, The New York Times, and the
Los Angeles Times and regularly appears on national and international radio and television. He has served on the
U.S. Advisory
Group on
Public Diplomacy for the
Arab and
Muslim World, which was appointed by the Department of State at the request of
Congress, and he co-drafted the report of their findings,
Changing Minds,
Winning Peace. He has also co-drafted several
Council on Foreign Relations reports on US public diplomacy, on the
Arab-Israeli peace process, and on
Persian Gulf security.
Kate Seelye (
Moderator) is senior vice president of The Middle East Institute, where she oversees
MEI's programs and communications. Prior to joining MEI, Seelye worked as a radio and television journalist covering the
Arab world from 2000-2009 from her base in
Beirut, Lebanon. She reported on the region for
NPR,
BBC's The World,
PBS' Frontline/
World and the renowned
Channel Four British investigative news series,
Unreported World. Prior to that she worked as a producer for the
Newshour with Jim Lehrer on
PBS.