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Topic: Robert Gallucci


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In the News (Fri 18 Dec 09)

  
  Former ambassador urges focus on weapons proliferation in Korea - MIT News Office
Gallucci acknowledged the likely presence in Iraq of biological and chemical weapons of mass destruction despite the presence of UN inspectors, and he advocated the inspection team's ongoing presence in Iraq.
Gallucci recommended that North Korea be required to meet demands for 'transparency' in its production and handling of fissile material; that it accept monitoring and verification by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and that its spent reactor fuel containing plutonium be sealed in canisters and shipped out of the country.
Gallucci also revealed in his 90-minute address some of the personal qualities that have kept him engaged in international politics, including clear enthusiasm for the process of negotiation itself, a sense of humor and a concern for human rights.
web.mit.edu /newsoffice/2003/iraq-korea.html   (420 words)

  
 Korea
GALLUCCI: Let me make clear that should the North Koreans decide that they are going to unfreeze their nuclear facilities, break the freeze, that move would go to the very essence, the very heart of the Agreed Framework that we negotiated together last October.
GALLUCCI: I don't think I would leap to use the word "confidence." I believe that they should accept South Korean reactors, both because that was the model that we agreed to in Geneva, and also because it is in their interests to do so.
GALLUCCI: I cannot fully go into an answer to your question, for some reasons you may be able to appreciate, in terms of some of the portions of the Agreed Framework, which I described to you as containing a confidential minute.
www.fas.org /news/dprk/1995/950314-dprk-usia.htm   (7870 words)

  
 CGS Seminars:  Robert L. Gallucci
Gallucci began his presentation by stressing the link between nuclear energy and nuclear weapons, and highlighting some of the larger debates over nuclear energy.
Gallucci also spoke of the advantages of a "tried and true vanilla reactor," suggesting that one could be jointly pursued by the US government and private industry.
Gallucci ended his presentation with his commentary on implementation of the Agreed Framework with North Korea and the importance of engaging the nation.
pnwcgs.pnl.gov /conferencesseminars/SpeakerMaterials/gallucci.htm   (926 words)

  
 George Bush Presidential Library and Museum   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
The President today announced his intention to nominate Robert L. Gallucci, of Virginia, to be an Assistant Secretary of State for Politico-Military Affairs.
Gallucci served at the Department of State as Office Director for the Office of Politico-Military Affairs, 1983 - 84; and the Office of Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs, 1982 - 83.
Dr. Gallucci graduated from the State University of New York at Stony Brook (B.A., 1967) and Brandeis University (M.A. and Ph.D., 1973).
bushlibrary.tamu.edu /research/papers/1992/92052905.html   (174 words)

  
 Online NewsHour: Ambassador Robert Gallucci -- May 8, 1996
CHARLAYNE HUNTER-GAULT: Robert Gallucci joined the State Department in 1974 as a low profile career civil servant, but he leaves as a high profile ambassador at large, having negotiated the accord over nuclear reactors that averted a confrontation between North Korea and the United States.
Gallucci left the State Department to become dean of the Georgetown University's School of Foreign Service, among whose alumni is President Clinton.
GALLUCCI: I, I think over 16 months we got to know them a lot better than we did at that first meeting in June of 1993, but I don't--wouldn't say that they have become less of a mystery overall than they were over those months.
www.pbs.org /newshour/bb/bosnia/gallucci_5-8.html   (1290 words)

  
 Foreign Affairs - Red-Handed - Mitchell B. Reiss, Robert Gallucci, et al.
Robert L. Gallucci is Dean of the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University.
Similarly, Reiss, Gallucci, and Garwin blur the critical distinction between weapons-grade enrichment and lower levels of enrichment that are permitted by the NPT.
Reiss and Gallucci cite the exposure in April 2003 of a North Korean attempt to import high-strength aluminum tubes as if the attempt itself proves that Pyongyang actually acquired the tubes.
www.foreignaffairs.org /20050301faresponse84214/mitchell-b-reiss-robert-gallucci/red-handed.html   (2803 words)

  
 The Georgetown Voice | The negotiator - March 2, 2006
The School of Foreign Service Dean Robert Gallucci embodies the philosophy of Georgetown’s relationship with government by drawing on both political theory and practice, whether facing down Saddam Hussein’s lackeys or negotiating the twists of university politics.
According to a published interview from a conference at the University of California, Berkeley, Gallucci entered government service when he was “losing a little faith” in political science and hoping to understand how political theory worked in practice.
Gallucci first spoke with Feith about coming to Georgetown while the undersecetary was still part of the Bush administration, and he argues that the need to keep those discussions private prevented him from speaking to faculty.
www.georgetownvoice.com /2006-03-02/news/the-negotiator   (553 words)

  
 The Hoya | Gallucci Seeks New Position
Citing privacy concerns, however, Clow said that he could not confirm that Gallucci had been one of the two finalists for the position, or even that the SFS dean had been considered at all.
Gallucci’s bid for Lafayette’s top position follows the departure of other prominent Georgetown professors in the past year.
The article "Gallucci Seeks New Position" (THE HOYA, Jan. 21, 2005, A5), was unclear as to whether Gallucci withdrew his candidacy or was eliminated by the committee.
www.thehoya.com /news/012105/news8.cfm   (560 words)

  
 Robert Gallucci - SourceWatch
Robert L. Gallucci is Dean of the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University.
Robert Gallucci, "Reflections on Establishing and Implementing the Post-Gulf War Inspections of Iraq's Weapons of Mass Destruction Programs".
Harry Kreisler, "U.S. Foreign Policy and Multilateral Negotiations: Conversation with Robert Gallucci," "Conversations with History," Institute of International Studies, UC Berkeley, 2002.
www.sourcewatch.org /index.php?title=Robert_Gallucci   (757 words)

  
 Democracy Now! | Georgetown Faculty Object to Appointment of Iraq War Architect Douglas Feith as Professor in School of ...
And Robert Gallucci is the Dean of the School of Foreign Service and was instrumental in Feith’s hiring.
ROBERT GALLUCCI: It had been my view for some time that, as we moved into the first Bush administration, that my responsibility and the responsibility of the university, really, was to present a spectrum of views when we could.
ROBERT GALLUCCI: Look, there is a process, and the process, in fact, is different for career scholars than it has been for those who come to us as practitioners, and we have followed in both cases a standard procedure.
www.democracynow.org /article.pl?sid=06/05/11/1445248   (2794 words)

  
 Patentee Index
Kim, Sung Dug; Gallucci, Robert Russell; and Mishra, Sanjay Braj 07119141 Cl. 524-513.
Gieseke, Thomas J.; Kuklinski, Robert; Varghese, Abraham N.; and Grant, John R., to United States of America as represented by the Secretary of the Navy, The Array system for supercavitating hydrofoils 07120088 Cl. 367-99.
Greenfield, Robert S.; An, Seong Soo A.; Trifonov, Latchezar; Vaugeois, Jean; and Slemon, Clarke, to American Diagnostica, Inc. Methods of screening for compounds that modulate TAFIa activity, compounds, and methods of using the compounds 07119068 Cl. 514-12.
www.uspto.gov /web/patents/patog/week41/OG/patentee/alphaG.htm   (7381 words)

  
 Robert Gallucci
Dr. Gallucci began his foreign affairs career at the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency in 1974.
In July 1992, Dr. Gallucci was confirmed as the Assistant Secretary of State for Political-Military Affairs.
Dr. Gallucci was born in Brooklyn on February 11, 1946.
www.udel.edu /global/agenda/2004/speakers/speaker2.html   (445 words)

  
 Robert Gallucci - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gallucci left the world of academia in 1974 and went on to hold various positions relating to international affairs.
During the North Korean nuclear crisis of 1994, Dr. Gallucci was the chief U.S. negotiator.
Robert L. Gallucci returned to Georgetown University as Dean of the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service on May 1, 1996.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Robert_Gallucci   (535 words)

  
 CNN.com - Transcripts
Gallucci is now dean of the Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University.
GALLUCCI: No. I think if what one means by smoking gun is that this is a nuclear weapon, no this is a -- these are from what I understand components of a gas centrifuge.
GALLUCCI: Well, I think it would be a very good idea if he, his family, and those close to him were protected.
edition.cnn.com /TRANSCRIPTS/0306/25/se.09.html   (785 words)

  
 Robert L. Gallucci   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
In March 1998, the Department of State announced his appointment as Special Envoy to deal with the threat posed by the proliferation of ballistic missiles and weapons of mass destruction.
Gallucci began his foreign affairs career at the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency in 1974.
Gallucci was born in Brooklyn on February 11, 1946.
globetrotter.berkeley.edu /people2/Gallucci/gallucci-vita.html   (404 words)

  
 State Library Board Minutes
Bob Gallucci stated that he would be willing to write to Lt. Governor Rell about this since he is the librarian in her home town of Brookfield.
Robert Gallucci invited everyone to attend the Legislator of the Year reception which will be held at the Watertown Library on August 5, at 3:30p.m.
Gallucci stated that he will not be able to attend the next Board meeting for that reason.
www.cslib.org /libbrd/min0799.htm   (2610 words)

  
 ISIS: Robert Gallucci on Post-Gulf War Inspections in Iraq - June 14-15, 2001
Robert Gallucci: The short answer to that question is: I don't know why Iraq would subject itself to intrusive inspections.
Robert Gallucci: I said it less dramatically than that but yes, that is correct.
Robert Gallucci: There was a time, a decade ago when I could have answered that question with precision and correctly.
www.iraqwatch.org /perspectives/isis-gallucci-6-14-01.htm   (9758 words)

  
 NTI: Global Security Newswire - Tuesday, October 15, 2002   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
Gallucci: You don’t want to have a repeat of those cases in which a guy in a white shirt stands in front of the gate on which there’s a padlock, and tells a team of 30 U.N. inspectors in little blue hats and armbands that they can’t come in today.
Gallucci: We have to expect that to be one of the consequences of an invasion aimed at regime change.
Gallucci: If you can read the British white paper and not worry about the threat, there is nothing in the file cabinets at the CIA or anyplace else that would worry you.
www.nti.org /d_newswire/issues/newswires/2002_10_15.html   (6425 words)

  
 Hugh Hewitt   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
Robert L. Gallucci, the chief negotiator of the accord and now dean of the Georgetown School of Foreign Service, said it is a "ludicrous thing" to say that the Clinton agreement failed.
Thus the deal was flawed from the start, but what Gallucci refuses to admit is that the North Koreans broke that deal, and commenced a clandestine uranium enrichment program which North Korea later admitted to.
The charade that is underway --underscored by Gallucci's refusal to defend the deal in the round with the uranium enrichment acknowledged-- is painful to watch because the people involved did their best and they got hornswoggled.
hughhewitt.townhall.com /g/b8dbd030-373a-4041-b43f-9df35bcdec02   (811 words)

  
 The Daily Princetonian: Thursday, October 21, 1999
Gallucci, appointed in 1998 as the State Department's special envoy to deal with nuclear proliferation, warned that the republics of the former Soviet Union harbor a staggering supply of nuclear material that could easily fall into the hands of enemies of the United States.
Gallucci added that his goal "is not to get rid of nuclear weapons; it is to achieve security."
Contrary to claims that nuclear proliferation is neither a new nor serious problem, Gallucci said the breakup of the Soviet Union 10 years ago and the ensuing chaos in the region have provided an unstable environment in which nuclear materials such as uranium and plutonium are far less secure.
www.dailyprincetonian.com /Content/1999/10/21/news/3richardson.html   (445 words)

  
 Gallucci Bio   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
Robert L. Gallucci became the dean of Georgetown University’s Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service in 1996, after completing twenty-one years of government service, serving since August 1994 with the Department of State as ambassador-at-large.
In March 1998, the State Department announced his appointment as special envoy to deal with the threat posed by the proliferation of ballistic missiles and weapons of mass destruction.
Gallucci is the author of a number of publications on political-military issues, including Neither Peace nor Honor: The Politics of American Military Policy in Vietnam (Johns Hopkins Univ. Press, 1975).
www.nwc.navy.mil /press/Review/2002/winter/re1-bio-w02.htm   (123 words)

  
 Robert L. Gallucci Biographic Sketch
Robert L Gallucci began as Dean of Georgetown University's Edmund A Walsh School of Foreign Service on May 1, 1996.
In 1978, Bob became a division chief in the Department of State's Bureau of Intelligence and Research.
Dean Gallucci was born in Brooklyn on February 11, 1946.
www.icasinc.org /bios/gallucci.html   (508 words)

  
 Korea Institute Newsletter
Ezra Vogel, Robert Gallucci, Edward Baker, and Prof.
On May 8 and 9, 1998, the Korea Institute organized what may be the most extensive public education program examining the culture and society of North Korean held in the United States to date.
The conference was organized by Christine Kim, a graduate student in HEAL (History of East Asian Languages) at Harvard, with the advice and support of Prof.
www.fas.harvard.edu /~korea/newsletter/newsletter42_009.html   (241 words)

  
 Robert Gallucci
Robert Gallucci, former Deputy Executive Director of UNSCOM
Dean Gallucci played an integral role in setting up the UN inspectorate, UNSCOM, and then served as the Deputy Executive Chairman of that organization.
Robert Gallucci: Pardon me for not answering that question with either a yes or a no. Right now, I don't see a clear path to an inspection regime in Iraq that I would feel comfortable with or have confident in.
www.isis-online.org /publications/iraq/gallucci.html   (9740 words)

  
 East Asia Bureau: 95/04/21 BRIEFING BY R. GALLUCCI ON NORTH KOREA NUCLEAR ISSUE
AMBASSADOR GALLUCCI: I would like to apologize on behalf of the Administration if we have let a day go by without saying that what we seek here, and have always sought, is the implementation of the Agreed Framework.
That would mean, with respect to the portion of the Framework which refers to the provision of a light-water reactor project, that the Republic of Korea would play a central role in the design, manufacture, construction and financing of the project.
AMBASSADOR GALLUCCI: When we were negotiating the Agreed Framework, we were aware that the North Koreans were -- and as I've said this before -- unhappy about the prospect of having South Korean reactors built in North Korea.
dosfan.lib.uic.edu /ERC/bureaus/eap/950421GallucciNorthKorea.html   (3018 words)

  
 Events   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
Gallucci: The United States is more likely to have friends and allies if it follows Peter’s “keep it simple, stupid” prescription and does not regard Iraq as a model that should be replicated whenever it has trouble with another regime.
Gallucci: I would like to come out completely in favor of a nuclear-weapons-free zone in the Middle East and then express my skepticism at the likelihood that we could move there any time soon.
Gallucci: I recognize that there are political seasons in this country, but if halfway through an administration it becomes too late to deal with issues critical to the national security, then we are in deep trouble.
www.washingtoninstitute.org /templateC07.php?CID=145   (7309 words)

  
 Lessons From The Agreed Framework
Essay by Joel Wit, Dan Poneman, and Robert Gallucci
Joel Wit, Daniel Poneman, and Robert Gallucci lay out seven lessons from the 1994 Agreed Framework negotiations that bear directly on the current six party talks in Beijing.
A career civil servant in the Department of State, he led the team that negotiated the Agreed Framework and served as assistant secretary for political-military affairs and ambassador-at-large.
www.nautilus.org /fora/security/0424A_Wit.html   (4963 words)

  
 frontline: kim's nuclear gamble: interviews: robert gallucci | PBS
frontline: kim's nuclear gamble: interviews: robert gallucci
Gallucci was the chief U.S. negotiator with North Korea during the nuclear crisis of 1994.
He is skeptical of the current administration's refusal to negotiate with North Korea.
www.pbs.org /wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/kim/interviews/gallucci.html   (3923 words)

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