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  • Science representatives seek to ease tensions in Middle East

    URL: http://ptonline.aip.org/journals/doc/PHTOAD-ft/vol _62/iss_5/28_1.shtml Published: May 2009

    Issues and Events

    Science representatives seek to ease tensions in Middle East

    US science delegation visits Syria with hope of improving bilateral
    relations. Similar overtureswith Iran suffer a setback.

    David Kramer

    May 2009, page 28

    Members of a US scientific delegation visiting Syria in March were
    expecting only a perfunctory handshake from President Bashar
    al-Assad. Instead, the 10 US visitors began their scientific diplomacy
    mission at the top, conversing for 90 minutes with the
    ophthalmologist-turned-ruler about the role of science and education
    in meeting national economic and social needs.

    It may have helped that Assad's father-in-law took part in arranging
    the visit. Still, as Vaughan Turekian, director of science diplomacy
    at the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) and
    one of the visitors, observed, it came as a pleasant surprise that the
    Syrian president `could talk with some level of comfort and detail
    about the role of science and technology to economic development.'

    Cold war origins
    Scientific cooperation was a frequent tool for defusing tensions
    between the superpowers during the cold war. In recent years the
    concept has been extended to help thaw relations between the US and
    many Muslim nations in the Middle East. Although Secretary of State
    Hillary Clinton has not explicitly proposed ramping up scientific
    diplomacy, her science adviser, Nina Fedoroff, said cooperation
    between scientists of nations having poor or nonexistent diplomatic
    relations is `immensely important.' Fedoroff, a molecular biologist,
    believes that connections between US and Soviet physicists helped to
    `keep the cold war cold.'

    Fedoroff speaks from experience. She served on the founding board of
    the International Science Foundation, a nonprofit organization that
    was established in 1992 with $100 million from billionaire George
    Soros to find new jobs for Soviet scientists after the breakup of the
    Soviet Union. Fedoroff also recalled organizing, 30 years ago, the
    first US`Soviet workshop on agricultural biotechnology, jointly
    sponsored by the science academies of the two nations. The US`Russian
    collaborative relationship, she related, is about to celebrate its
    50th year as a stabilizing force.

    `I would love to see a more official scientific cooperation program
    [at State], and I will work hard to enhance [scientific exchanges],'
    Fedoroff said. She adds that exchanges are especially useful for
    addressing issues such as wildlife and water management that transcend
    national boundaries.

    An unofficial visit
    US government officials did not participate in the scientific mission
    to Syria. The science trip came about through the efforts of multiple
    nongovernmental organizations, including the Washington-based Center
    for the Study of the Presidency and Congress and the British Syrian
    Society, whose cochair, London cardiologist Fawaz Akhras, is the
    father of Assad's wife. Akhras acted as head of the Syrian scientific
    delegation throughout the four days of meetings held with the US
    team. Syrian-born British businessman and philanthropist Wafic Said
    provided his Boeing 737 to whisk the US delegation to Damascus and
    back. The US team also included Nobel laureate biologist David
    Baltimore, immediate past board chairman of AAAS.

    The two teams identified water, energy, and agriculture as topics of
    mutual interest for possible collaboration. According to Turekian,
    Assad said that he hopes to build a Western-style system for bringing
    innovations to the marketplace. Other topics addressed included
    assistance for Syrian hospitals to win accreditation, establishment of
    a Syrian`American institute to help develop programs for medical
    technicians and nurses, and an examination of how the US visa system
    hinders scientific exchanges.

    As the next step, the parties agreed to select a Syrian scientist to
    come to the US later this year for a three- to six-month fellowship at
    the Washington headquarters of AAAS. That individual will help
    organize US`Syrian joint activities, put together a program for the
    AAAS annual meeting, and interact with the broader US science and
    technology community.

    Syria's ambassador to the US, Imad Moustapha, a computer scientist,
    told a post-visit gathering at AAAS that the trip could mark a
    `watershed' in bilateral relations that, while always testy, had
    worsened after the US invasion of Iraq in 2003. Syria has been on the
    State Department's list of statesthat sponsor terrorism since
    1979. Angered by the alleged incursion of US troops from Iraq into
    Syrian territory last October, Assad retaliated by closing three US
    educational and cultural institutions in Damascus. Ironically, those
    actions were harmful mainly to Syrian citizens aspiring to obtain a
    Western-style education, noted Theodore Kattouf, a former US
    ambassador to Syria who accompanied the scientists.

    But Moustapha also cautioned that more extensive cooperation will
    require that scientific activities be separated from the broader
    political relationship between the countries. That requirement can
    easily be accomplished by having universities manage the joint
    efforts, said Norman Neureiter, director of the AAAS Center for
    Science, Technology and Security Policy and a member of the
    delegation. Topics of mutual interest, such as agriculture in arid
    regions and illnesses that occur in the Middle East, must be
    delineated, he said, adding that cooperation does not imply aid. `We
    are not in the assistance business,' Neureiter emphasized.

    Incident in Iran
    Syria isn't the only nation in the Middle East where scientists are
    attempting to bridge the political divide with the West. Most
    strikingly, American scientists have traveled to Iran several times in
    recent years on visits that were brokered by the National Academies
    (see PHYSICS TODAY, May 2008, page 51, and August 2008, page
    30). Among the topics discussed on those trips were medicine and
    public health, water management, earthquakes, and higher education.

    But scientific relations with Iran were damaged by an incident in
    Tehran in December 2008. Glenn Schweitzer, who has arranged numerous
    trips to Iran as director of the Academies' Central Europe and Eurasia
    program, was twice detained in his Tehran hotel room and interrogated
    for a total of nine hours by individuals claiming to be government
    security officials. The Academies' presidents immediately wrote to
    protest Schweitzer's treatment and to demand assurances that it would
    not be repeated. But as PHYSICS TODAY went to press, their letter had
    gone unanswered. In the meantime, Schweitzer said he has been
    arranging meetings to be held in third countries. A visit to the US by
    Iranian scientists also lies ahead, but Schweitzer won't discuss the
    itinerary for fear that it may not happen. He said the combination of
    economic sanctions, travel restrictions, and US export controls makes
    Iranian trips the toughest to pull together.

    Hosein Dabiri, a microbiologist at Tehran University of Medical
    Sciences, was a member of an Iranian delegation that visited the US in
    2007 to discuss food safety. He said that apart from their scientific
    value, exchanges are useful `to give [a] true view of each country
    [that] can influence opinions of politicians and the general public.'
    But he expressed frustration with what he describes as the lack of
    follow-up communication from the US scientists he met. Without ongoing
    contacts, the delegation meetings had `very limited scientific
    benefit,' Dabiri lamented.

    Cooperative approaches
    More formal cooperative science and technology programs sponsored by
    the US have been under way with states in the region that have a
    cordial relationship with the US. A program with Pakistan has provided
    funding for 46 mainly applied research projects since its
    establishment in 2005. The US Agency for International Development and
    the State Department have contributed $7.5?million in grants that
    range up to $350?000 each over three years. The Pakistani government
    has kicked in a somewhat higher amount for the projects, which must
    involve researchers from both countries. But this year a new round of
    awards has been delayed as the Pakistanis struggle to come up with
    their share of the money, said Kelly Robbins, the National Academies
    staffer who administers the US side of the program.

    A State Department`sponsored program with Egypt, in which inventions
    arising from Egyptian academic research are assessed for their
    commercial potential, is taking a different sort of cooperative
    approach. Managed on the US side by the University of Texas at Austin
    IC2 Institute, an incubator for technology startup businesses, the
    program selected four candidates for commercialization from more than
    400 submissions. Each of those is to receive a grant of at least
    $15?000 from the Egyptian Ministry of Scientific Research, and the
    aspiring inventor-entrepreneurs will also get support and training in
    the business skills needed to bring their inventions to market. The
    winning inventions are a compound that could regenerate teeth
    following a root canal or other dental procedure, a bacterial culture
    to give low-fat cheese the same texture and taste as full-fat, a
    genetically modified plant for combating whitefly disease in the
    developing world, and a thermally stable, solid hydrogel support for
    immobilizing enzymes used in industrial or laboratory processes.

    The same model has been applied in Jordan, which, like Egypt, has
    signed an umbrella science and technology agreement with the
    US. Robert Senseney, senior adviser for science partnerships in the
    State Department's Bureau of Oceans, Environment, and Science, said
    department officials are examining how to apply the approach to help
    strengthen economies and create jobs in Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia,
    Libya, Lebanon, and even the West Bank. Syria, which Senseney said has
    `strong science,' would also be a good candidate, but that level of
    cooperation will probably have to await improvements in diplomatic
    relations.

    In March a subcommittee of the House Committee on Science and
    Technology approved legislation designed to better coordinate
    international science and technology activities across federal
    agencies. The bill would mandate formation of a new, cabinet-level
    interagency policy coordinating mechanism. The committee acted out of
    concern that significant opportunities at the intersection of science
    and diplomacy may be missed through the lack of coordination.

    The subcommittee's chairman, Daniel Lipinski (D-IL), said he welcomed
    the news that John Holdren, new director of the White House Office of
    Science and Technology Policy, intends to reestablish the position of
    associate director for international and national security affairs in
    OSTP. Holdren's predecessor, John Marburger, had eliminated the
    position.

    copyright © American Institute of Physics
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