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Mar 25, 2011

Issue Brief Launch: “‘Strategically Lonely’ Iran Exploits Opportunities for Regional Influence”: 3/25/11 – Transcript

By Jason Harmala

Return to Issue Brief Launch page THE ATLANTIC COUNCIL OF THE UNITED STATES “STRATEGICALLY LONELY” IRAN EXPLOITS OPPORTUNITIES FOR REGIONAL INFLUENCE WELCOME: DAMON WILSON, EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT, THE ATLANTIC COUNCIL INTRODUCTIONS: CHUCK HAGEL, CHAIRMAN, THE ATLANTIC COUNCIL AMBASSADOR STUART EIZENSTAT, CO-CHAIR, IRAN TASKFORCE, THE ATLANTIC COUNCIL MODERATOR: MICHAEL BRZEZINSKI, DIRECTOR, IRAN TASKFORCE, THE ATLANTIC COUNCIL […]

New Atlanticist

Mar 10, 2011

The Shark Stops Swimming

By Barbara Slavin

Iranian politics increasingly resemble a brutal game of musical chairs. Last month, two former senior politicians who ran against President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in 2009 disappeared into political detention. On Tuesday, March 8, Ayatollah Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani — a former president and for three decades one of Iran’s most powerful politicians — lost his post as […]

New Atlanticist

Feb 17, 2011

As Talks Stall with Iran, U.S. Steps Up Propaganda War

By Barbara Slavin

Egypt’s revolution appears to have stiffened the spine of the Barack Obama administration when it comes to Iran. In the wake of the mass protests that ousted Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, Washington has begun to "tweet" in Farsi as well as Arabic. President Obama – and to an even greater extent, Secretary of State Hillary […]

Barbara Slavin was the director of the Future of Iran Initiative and a nonresident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council, a lecturer in international affairs at George Washington University. The author of Bitter Friends, Bosom Enemies: Iran, the US and the Twisted Path to Confrontation (2007), she is a regular commentator on US foreign policy and Iran on NPR, PBS, and C-SPAN.

A career journalist, Slavin previously served as assistant managing editor for world and national security of the Washington Times, senior diplomatic reporter for USA TODAY, Cairo correspondent for the Economist, and as an editor at the New York Times Week in Review.

She has covered such key foreign policy issues as the US-led war on terrorism, policy toward “rogue” states, the Iran-Iraq war, and the Arab-Israeli conflict. She has traveled to Iran nine times. Slavin also served as a public policy scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, where she wrote Bitter Friends, and as a senior fellow at the US Institute of Peace, where she researched and wrote the report Mullahs, Money and Militias: How Iran Exerts Its Influence in the Middle East.