Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Amb. Ghougassian Speaks at UC Riverside on Recent Diplomacy in Iraq

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Amb. Ghougassian Speaks at UC Riverside on Recent Diplomacy in Iraq

    UC Riverside, CA
    March 24 2006

    Ambassador Ghougassian Speaks at UC Riverside About Recent Diplomacy
    in Iraq

    Inland area residents have a chance to hear one part of the Iraq
    story from someone who was there
    (March 23, 2006)


    U.S. Forces accompany Ambassador Ghougassian at Bahgdad University


    RIVERSIDE, Calif. (www.ucr.edu) -- UC Riverside will welcome The
    Honorable Joseph Ghougassian, Ph.D., J.D., former Ambassador of the
    United States to the State of Qatar and a government advisor in Iraq,
    for a public lecture at 6 p.m. Tuesday, April 18 in the University
    Theatre. He is the final speaker in the 2006 Chancellor's
    Distinguished Lecture Series.

    His topic is "Diplomacy: A Tool for Peace, Education and Human
    Rights," and he will draw on his experience as an advisor on higher
    education issues to the Coalition Provisional Authority - the
    U.S.-led organization charged with running Iraq until power shifted
    to the Iraqi-led transitional government.

    Ambassador Ghougassian has an interesting story to tell. He worked as
    a senior adviser to President Ronald Reagan in the Department of
    Domestic Policy; directed the Peace Corps in the Yemen Arab Republic;
    and then was named Ambassador to the State of Qatar, which shares a
    border with Saudi Arabia. He was the first naturalized U.S.
    Ambassador from the Middle East, and in the job he honed his skills
    in bringing disparate, antagonistic peoples together, realizing such
    skills could change the world. He was able to negotiate an end to a
    14-century ban on the public practice of Christianity in Qatar, and
    was subsequently knighted by the Pope in the Order of St. Gregory the
    Great. Most recently, he was tapped to help find a solution to the
    turmoil in Iraq.

    `Our job was go to Kirkuk, look into the property disputes between
    the Turks, the Kurds, the Arabs and the Christians, and to calm down
    the situation." Ghougassian was well qualified. `My fluent Arabic won
    the confidence of the Arab tribal sheiks; my Armenian ethnicity
    helped me with the Kurds and my Christian religion put the people at
    ease, because Christians in Iraq are viewed as fair-minded and honest
    people."

    In his role as advisor to the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq
    in the effort to rebuild the country's higher education system, he
    directed the Iraq Fulbright Program that brought the first 25 Iraqi
    scholars to American universities after a long absence. During his
    time as an advisor, he lived in one of Saddam Hussein's former
    palaces in the `green zone.'

    Born in Cairo, Egypt, he was an early bloomer in academics, receiving
    his first two degrees (a B.A. and an M.A. in philosophy) from the
    Gregorian University in Rome, Italy, in 1964 and 1965. He earned a
    doctorate in philosophy from Louvain University in Belgium by the age
    of 22, and was brought to the United States by a job offer: teaching
    philosophy and psychology at the University of San Diego. He
    subsequently received a bachelor of science degree in family studies
    from Louvain University in 1974 and a master's degree in
    international relations and a law degree from USD.

    He is back in the U.S. now, writing articles on diplomatic and
    international affairs for the media, and lecturing. He is on the
    faculty at Trinity College, Anaheim and chairman of Arabian Gulf
    Consultants, an international business and international law
    corporation. He speaks Armenian, English, French, Arabic, Italian and
    Spanish.



    Sponsored by the Office of the Chancellor, the distinguished lecture
    series is an annual event featuring personalities from the arts,
    sciences, letters, and other sectors of society. It's purpose is to
    stimulate the region's intellectual community, inspire students to
    think beyond the lecture hall and lab, and to involve members of the
    community in the academic life of the UCR campus. The theme this year
    is, "Beyond Boundaries: Explorations and Experimentation in Science,
    Art, and Statecraft.' In addition to formal public presentations,
    each lecturer will participate in seminars with undergraduate and
    graduate students and visits with faculty

    The first speaker in this year's lecture series was Richard R.
    Schrock, an MIT professor who spent his undergraduate years at UCR
    and recently shared the Nobel Prize in Chemistry. The second speaker
    was former U.S. Poet Laureate and UCR alumnus, Billy Collins.

    The lectures are free and open to the public. Parking on campus costs
    $6. The talk will be followed by a reception on the patio outside
    University Theatre.

    http://www.newsroom.ucr.edu/cgi-bin/display.cgi? id=1285
Working...
X