
Ambassador Dennis Ross, the Washington Institute for Near
Middle East Policy’s Ziegler Distinguished fellow and counselor from 2001-2009,
rejoined the Institute as counselor in December 2011 after serving two years as
special assistant to President Obama as well as National Security Council
senior director for the Central Region, and a year as special advisor to
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, focusing on Iran.
For more than twelve years, Ambassador Ross played a leading
role in shaping U.S. involvement in the Middle East peace process and dealing
directly with the parties in negotiations. A highly skilled diplomat,
Ambassador Ross was U.S. point man on the peace process in both the George H.
W. Bush and Bill Clinton administrations. He was instrumental in assisting
Israelis and Palestinians to reach the 1995 Interim Agreement; he also
successfully brokered the 1997 Hebron Accord, facilitated the 1994
Israel-Jordan peace treaty, and intensively worked to bring Israel and Syria
together.
A scholar and diplomat with more than two decades of
experience in Soviet and Middle East policy, Ambassador Ross worked closely
with Secretaries of State James Baker, Warren Christopher, and Madeleine
Albright. Prior to his service as special Middle East coordinator under
President Clinton, Ambassador Ross served as director of the State Department's
Policy Planning Staff in the first Bush administration. In that capacity, he
played a prominent role in U.S. policy toward the former Soviet Union, the
unification of Germany and its integration into NATO, arms control
negotiations, and the 1991 Gulf War coalition.
During the Reagan administration, he served as director of
Near East and South Asian affairs on the National Security Council staff and
deputy director of the Pentagon's Office of Net Assessment. Ambassador Ross was
awarded the Presidential Medal for Distinguished Federal Civilian Service by
President Clinton, and Secretaries Baker and Albright presented him with the
State Department's highest award.
A 1970 graduate of UCLA, Ambassador Ross wrote his doctoral
dissertation on Soviet decisionmaking, and from 1984 to 1986 served as
executive director of the Berkeley-Stanford program on Soviet International
Behavior. He received UCLA's highest medal and has been named UCLA alumnus of
the year. He has also received honorary doctorates from Brandeis, Amherst,
Jewish Theological Seminary, and Syracuse University.
Ambassador Ross has published extensively on the former
Soviet Union, arms control, and the greater Middle East, contributing numerous
chapters to anthologies. In the 1970s and 1980s, his articles appeared in World Politics, Political Science Quarterly, Orbis,
International Security, Survival, and Journal of Strategic Studies. Since leaving government at the end
of 2011, he has authored many op-eds in the New
York Times, Washington Post, and Wall Street Journal.
Ross is the author of several influential books on the peace
process, most recently Myths, Illusions,
and Peace: Finding a New Direction for America in the Middle East,
coauthored with Institute peace process expert David Makovsky. An earlier
study, The Missing Peace: The Inside
Story of the Fight for Middle East Peace (Farrar, Straus, and Giroux,
2004), offers comprehensive analytical and personal insight into the Middle
East peace process. The New York Times
praised his 2007 publication, Statecraft,
And How to Restore America's Standing in the World (Farrar, Straus and
Giroux, 2007), as "important and illuminating."
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