Robert L. Gallucci(born February 11, 1946) is an American academic and diplomat, who formerly worked as president of theJohn D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.He previously served as dean of theEdmund A. WalshSchool of Foreign ServiceatGeorgetown University,from 1996 to June 2009. Prior to his appointment in 1996, for over two decades he had served in various governmental and international agencies, including theDepartment of Stateand theUnited Nations.[1]

Robert Gallucci
11thAssistant Secretary of State for Political-Military Affairs
In office
July 13, 1992 – October 11, 1994
PresidentGeorge H. W. Bush
Bill Clinton
Preceded byRichard A. Clarke
Succeeded byThomas E. McNamara
Personal details
Born(1946-02-11)February 11, 1946(age 78)

Early life and education

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Gallucci was born inBrooklyn,New York.He graduated from Brentwood High School. Afterwards he attendedStony Brook Universityfor his undergraduate studies, later earning his master's degree and doctorate in politics fromBrandeis University.After his post-graduate studies, he taught atSwarthmore College,Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International StudiesatJohns Hopkins UniversityandGeorgetown University.He has received fellowships from theCouncil on Foreign Relations,theInternational Institute for Strategic Studies,Harvard University,and theBrookings Institution.

Career

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Gallucci left the world of academia in 1974 and went on to hold various positions relating to international affairs. He first found employment at theArms Control and Disarmament Agency.Four years later, he became a division chief in the Department of State's Bureau of Intelligence and Research. From 1979 to 1981, he was a member of the Secretary's policy planning staff. He then served as an office director in both the Bureau of Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs and in theBureau of Political-Military Affairsfor a year each.

Ten years after beginning his foreign affairs career, he leftWashington, D.C.,to serve as the deputy director general of theMultinational Force and Observers,the Sinai peacekeeping force headquartered inRome.He returned in 1988 to join the faculty of theNational War College,where he taught for three years. In April 1991 he moved to New York to take up an appointment as the deputy executive chairman of theUnited NationsSpecial Commission (UNSCOM) overseeing the disarmament ofIraq.He returned again to Washington in 1992 to join the Office of the Deputy Secretary as the senior coordinator responsible for nonproliferation andnuclear safetyinitiatives in the former Soviet Union. In July of the same year his appointment as theAssistant Secretary of State for Political-Military Affairswas confirmed. During theNorth Koreannuclear crisis of 1994, Gallucci was the chief U.S. negotiator. He also has served as an ambassador-at-large with the Department of State, since August 1994.

Gallucci returned to Georgetown University as dean of the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service on May 1, 1996. In March 1998, the Department of State appointed him as special envoy to deal with the threat posed by the proliferation ofballistic missilesandweapons of mass destruction,a position which he held until January 2001. As a dean at Georgetown University, Gallucci recommended conservativeDouglas J. Feithto a 2-year faculty position which Feith occupied in the fall of 2006, a move which generated protests from some liberal faculty and students. In 2015, Gallucci became director of TheJohn W. Kluge Centerat theLibrary of Congress.[2]

Published works

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Going Critical: The First North Korean Nuclear Crisis,with Joel S. Wit and Daniel B. Poneman (The Brookings Institution, April 2004).

Neither Peace Nor Honor: The Politics of American Military Policy in Viet-Nam(Johns Hopkins University Press, 1975).

"North Korea, Iran and the Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons: The Threat, U.S. Policy and the Prescription… and the India Deal," in Stephen van Evera, ed.,How to Make America Safe(Cambridge, MA: The Tobin Project, 2006), pp. 23–32.

"Averting Nuclear Catastrophe: Contemplating Extreme Responses to U.S. Vulnerability,"Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science,Vol. 607 (September 2006), pp. 51–58.

"America Deals with North Korea: A Realist's Approach," inPerspectives on Structural Realism,Andrew K. Hanami (Ed.) (Palgrave Macmillan, 2003).

"Weighing Sovereignty in the 'Sit Room:' Does It Enter or End the Debate?" inThe Sacred and The Sovereign: Rethinking Religion and International Politics,John Carlson and Erik Owens, Eds. (Georgetown University Press, 2003).

"A Question of Strategic Nuclear Weapons Policy," Review Essay inNaval War College Review(Winter 2002).

"Negotiating Korean Unification: Options for an International Framework," inKorea's Future and the Great Powers,Nicholas Eberstadt and Richard J. Ellings, Eds. (National Bureau of Asian Research, 2001).

"The U.S. – North Korea Agreed Framework and the Korea Policy of the United States," inThe Two Koreas and the United States(M.E. Sharpe Inc., 2000).

"U.S. Nonproliferation Policy: Lessons Learned from Our Experience with Iraq and North Korea," inPulling Back From the Nuclear Brink: Reducing and Countering Nuclear Threats(Frank Cass Publishers, 1998).

Limiting U.S. Policy Options to Prevent Nuclear Weapons Proliferation: The Relevance of Minimum Deterrence(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Center for Technical Studies on Security, Energy, and Arms Control, 1991).

"Factors Influencing the Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons," in Brito and Intriligator (eds.),Strategies for Managing Nuclear Proliferation: Economic and Political Issues(Lexington Books, 1983).

"Western Europe," in Williams and Desse (eds.),Nuclear Non-Proliferation: The Spent Fuel Problem(Pergamon Policy Studies, 1979).[3]

References

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  1. ^Tucker, Neely."Georgetown U.'s Robert Gallucci Tapped to Be MacArthur Foundation President".washingtonpost.com.Retrieved24 February2017.
  2. ^"Ambassador Robert Gallucci to Serve as Director of the John W. Kluge Center".Library of Congress.
  3. ^"Georgetown School of Foreign Service Faculty Biography".sfs.georgetown.edu.Retrieved20 February2017.
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Government offices
Preceded by Assistant Secretary of State for Political-Military Affairs
July 13, 1992 – October 11, 1994
Succeeded by