Internationally known
U.S. Ambassador visits; addresses war and world
Britany Price
Issue date: 3/22/07 Section: News
Say hello to David Dunford.
Dunford is a U.S. Ambassador and retired Foreign Service Officer who worked as a ministerial liaison in Iraq to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. He has come to campus to speak about how we should think about the Middle East conflicts that are occurring.
Dunford has been on campus for the week as a Woodrow Wilson Visiting Fellow. The Woodrow Wilson Visiting Fellow program brings prominent professionals to campuses across the U.S. for five days of teaching and dialogue. Dunford has had a week long residential program of discussions, workshops and classes and will share his personal experiences and expertise with students Thursday for his lecture in the Edgerton Center.
Dunford an adjunct instructor at the University of Arizona where he teaches courses on the Arab-Israeli Conflict and the Middle East Business Environment explained that Iraq has a national identity issue. "Security is, was and will be the issue in Iraq," said Dunford.
Dunford believes that the process has gone backward and thus has created fear and insecurities. We will create an "international chess piece if Iraq is split up," said Dunford.
Mistakes have been made Dunford says. "If we leave, there will not be much difference there will still be violence and chaos."
Dunford believes that attacking Iraq is a huge mistake. "Iraq didn't attack us Afghanistan did." He believes this is because Al Qaeda had no links with Iraq. "It [Iraq] wasn't a ground for insurgent movements, but now it is."
The Middle East policy was originally created as a form of democracy that will breed in the Middle East said Dunford. Yet according to Dunford "the Middle East policy is failing at a time when how we are thought of in the Middle East is important."
Students like Nick Lipeika, sophomore, Litchfield, believe that the prices we, as American's pay is not worth what we have had to deal with. "This administration has only hurt us," said Lipeika.
Dunford is a U.S. Ambassador and retired Foreign Service Officer who worked as a ministerial liaison in Iraq to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. He has come to campus to speak about how we should think about the Middle East conflicts that are occurring.
Dunford has been on campus for the week as a Woodrow Wilson Visiting Fellow. The Woodrow Wilson Visiting Fellow program brings prominent professionals to campuses across the U.S. for five days of teaching and dialogue. Dunford has had a week long residential program of discussions, workshops and classes and will share his personal experiences and expertise with students Thursday for his lecture in the Edgerton Center.
Dunford an adjunct instructor at the University of Arizona where he teaches courses on the Arab-Israeli Conflict and the Middle East Business Environment explained that Iraq has a national identity issue. "Security is, was and will be the issue in Iraq," said Dunford.
Dunford believes that the process has gone backward and thus has created fear and insecurities. We will create an "international chess piece if Iraq is split up," said Dunford.
Mistakes have been made Dunford says. "If we leave, there will not be much difference there will still be violence and chaos."
Dunford believes that attacking Iraq is a huge mistake. "Iraq didn't attack us Afghanistan did." He believes this is because Al Qaeda had no links with Iraq. "It [Iraq] wasn't a ground for insurgent movements, but now it is."
The Middle East policy was originally created as a form of democracy that will breed in the Middle East said Dunford. Yet according to Dunford "the Middle East policy is failing at a time when how we are thought of in the Middle East is important."
Students like Nick Lipeika, sophomore, Litchfield, believe that the prices we, as American's pay is not worth what we have had to deal with. "This administration has only hurt us," said Lipeika.
2008 Woodie Awards
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