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Assistant Secretary Of State For East Asian And Pacific Affairs: Who

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  • Assistant Secretary Of State For East Asian And Pacific Affairs: Who

    ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE FOR EAST ASIAN AND PACIFIC AFFAIRS: WHO IS KURT CAMPBELL?

    AllGov
    Monday, August 17, 2009

    United States policy toward the troubled and perilous region of East
    Asia-home of volatile conflicts between North and South Korea, China
    and Taiwan, and the military junta of Burma and its own people-is
    now the province of a highly esteemed academic and international
    relations specialist, Dr. Kurt Campbell. Campbell was confirmed by
    the Senate on June 26, 2009, as the new Assistant Secretary of State
    for East Asian and Pacific Affairs. Perhaps a harbinger of political
    conflicts to come, conservative Republican Kansas Senator Sam Brownback
    had put a hold on Campbell's nomination as a way to press the Obama
    administration to consider imposing more restrictive economic sanctions
    on the military dictatorship ruling Burma (also called Myanmar).

    Born in 1957, Campbell earned a B.A. in Science, Technology, and Public
    Affairs from the University of California, San Diego, a certificate
    in music and political philosophy from the University of Yerevan in
    Soviet Armenia, and a doctorate in international relations from Oxford
    University in 1985. As an officer in the U.S. Navy, Campbell served as
    an assistant on the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and between 1987 and 1995
    as a reserve naval officer in a special Chief of Naval Operations
    advisory unit in the Pentagon. Early in his career, he worked as a
    stringer for The New York Times Magazine in southern Africa.

    In his academic career, Campbell has been an Olin Fellow at the
    Russian Research Center at Harvard University, a Lecturer in
    International Relations at Brown University, and, from 1988 to
    1993, he was associate professor of public policy and international
    relations at the John F. Kennedy School of Government and Assistant
    Director of the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs,
    both at Harvard University. Campbell is the author or co-author of
    numerous books, including Difficult Transitions: Why Presidents Fail
    in Foreign Policy at the Outset of Power; Hard Power: The New Politics
    of National Security; and To Prevail: An American Strategy for the
    Campaign against Terrorism. He is the editor of Climatic Cataclysm:
    The Foreign Policy and National Security Implications of Climate Change
    and Nuclear Tipping Point. He has also written numerous scholarly
    articles and opinion pieces on a wide range of international subjects.

    Campbell has been a member of a number of think tanks, including the
    International Institute for Strategic Studies in London, the Council on
    Foreign Relations and the Wasatch Group. He has also been a consultant
    to the Rockefeller Foundation. In the early and mid 2000s, he served as
    Senior Vice President, Director of the International Security Program,
    and Henry A. Kissinger Chair in National Security Policy at the Center
    for Strategic and International Studies. From January 2007 through
    June 2009, Campbell was the Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer
    of the centrist-Democratic Center for a New American Security. He
    concurrently served as Director of the Aspen Strategy Group and the
    Chairman of the Editorial Board of the Washington Quarterly, and is
    the Founder and Principal of StratAsia, a strategic advisory company
    focused on Asia, especially Japan.

    Campbell served in several capacities in government during the Clinton
    administration, including as Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for
    Asia and the Pacific, Director on the National Security Council Staff,
    Deputy Special Counselor to the President for the North American Free
    Trade Agreement (NAFTA), and as a White House fellow at the Department
    of the Treasury.

    A Democrat, Campbell was Hillary Clinton's chief adviser on Asian
    affairs during her campaign for the presidency in 2008. Since 2004, he
    has contributed more than $28,000 to Democratic candidates and causes,
    including $6,900 to Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign, followed
    by $4,600 to Barack Obama's presidential campaign after the former's
    withdrawal from the Democratic nomination contest. He had previously
    donated $4,100 to Senator Clinton's 2006 re-election campaign.

    Campbell is a member of the advisory boards of Aegis Capital
    Corporation, Civitas Group, STS Systems, PLC, the O'Gara Group, New
    Media Strategies, and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. He is
    on the board of the US-Australian Leadership Dialogue, the Advisory
    Committee of the International Relations Program at the College of
    William and Mary, and the policy advisory board of the Asia Society.

    Campbell is married to Under Secretary of Treasury for International
    Affairs Lael Brainard, and they have three daughters.

    - Matt Bewig
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