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Meghan O'Sullivan

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President
  
Succeeded by
  
Political party
  
Preceded by
  
Frank Taylor

Religion
  
Roman Catholicism

Meghan O'Sullivan rightwebirconlineorgwpcontentuploads201603

Born
  
September 13, 1969 (age 47)Lexington, Massachusetts, U.S. (
1969-09-13
)

Alma mater
  
Georgetown UniversityBrasenose College, Oxford

Books
  
Shrewd sanctions, Iran: The Nuclear Challenge

Similar
  
Richard N Haass, Robert Blackwill, Richard A Falkenrath, Ray Takeyh, Elliott Abrams

Meghan o sullivan on decision making


Meghan L. O'Sullivan (born September 13, 1969) is a former deputy national security adviser on Iraq and Afghanistan. She is Jeane Kirkpatrick Professor of the Practice of International Affairs, and senior fellow at Harvard University's John F. Kennedy School of Government Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs. She is an adjunct senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations.

Contents

Meghan O'Sullivan O39Sullivan

Early life and education

O'Sullivan grew up in Lexington, Massachusetts.

Meghan O'Sullivan Meghan O39Sullivan on Decision Making YouTube

She received her bachelor's degree from Georgetown University in 1991. O'Sullivan later received her master's degree in economics and her D.Phil. in politics from the University of Oxford. Her doctoral dissertation was about the Sri Lankan Civil War.

Career

Meghan O'Sullivan Meghan O39Sullivan on the Future of Iraq YouTube

O'Sullivan was an aide to Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, and a fellow at the Brookings Institution under Richard N. Haass.

Meghan O'Sullivan Meghan O39Sullivan Richard Haass39 righthand woman keen to work at

O'Sullivan has also served in the Office of Policy Planning at the State Department, where she assisted Colin Powell in developing the smart sanctions policy proposal.

Meghan O'Sullivan Meghan L O39Sullivan Belfer Center for Science and International

Following the 2003 invasion of Iraq, she volunteered for the Office for Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance under Jay Garner. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld told Jay Garner that he could not keep her (or Tom Warrick) on in Iraq, though Rumsfeld later relented. She was an assistant to Paul Bremer in the Coalition Provisional Authority. She was Senior Director for Iraq at the United States National Security Council. O'Sullivan's last position at the White House was as the Special Assistant to the President and Deputy National Security Advisor for Iraq and Afghanistan where she frequently communicated via telephone with Fort Leavenworth's General David Petraeus on a new military strategy for Iraq.

During her time in Iraq, O'Sullivan was involved with many key decisions on the political front, including helping to negotiate the early transfer of sovereignty to the Iraqis and assisting the Iraqis in writing their interim constitution. She is remembered for driving herself around Baghdad to meet with Iraqis, and endured some harrowing experiences while in Iraq, including escaping from a terrorist attack by scaling a building ledge ten stories up.

On May 31, 2007, President Bush announced that Ms O'Sullivan was returning to Baghdad:

to serve with Ambassador Crocker, to help the Iraqis – and to help the Embassy help the Iraqis – meet the benchmarks that the Congress and the President expect to get passed.

With Stephen Hadley, she is also credited as being one of the original advocates in the White House of the 2007 "surge" strategy. On September 15, 2007, she left the White House and began teaching at Harvard.

She has also acted as an advisor to Mitt Romney. In 2013, O'Sullivan was a signatory to an amicus curiae brief submitted to the Supreme Court in support of same-sex marriage during the Hollingsworth v. Perry case. During 2013, she acted as Vice-Chair to Richard Haass at talks between the political parties in Northern Ireland.

O'Sullivan is also a One Young World Counsellor, speaking about "Peace & Conflict Resolution to a group of 1,300 young people in Dublin, Ireland in 2013.

Published works

  • Shrewd Sanctions: Statecraft and State Sponsors of Terrorism. Brookings Institution Press. 2003. ISBN 0-8157-0601-4. 
  • Honey and Vinegar: Incentives, Sanctions, and Foreign Policy, edited with Richard N. Haass, Brookings Institution Press (2000), ISBN 0-8157-3355-0. [edit] By Meghan L. O'Sullivan
  • Sanctioning 'Rogue' States: A Strategy in Decline?, Harvard International Review, Summer 2000.
  • "Terms of Engagement: Alternatives to Punitive Policies" with Richard N. Haass, Survival, 42:2 (Summer 2000), The International Institute for Strategic Studies.
  • "Iraq: Time for a Modified Approach", Brookings Institution (IraqWatch), February 2001.
  • "Sanctions and U.S. Foreign Policy", with Raymond Tanter, Washington Institute for Near East Policy, March 13, 2001.
  • "The Response to Terrorism: America Mobilizes", Brookings Institution Forum, September 21, 2002. Moderator: James B. Steinberg; Scholars: Thomas E. Mann, Michael E. O'Hanlon, and Meghan L. O'Sullivan.
  • "The Politics of Dismantling Containment", The Washington Quarterly 27:1 (Winter 2001), pp. 67–76. Copyright 2000 by The Center for Strategic and International Studies, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
  • "The Problem with Obama's Decision to Leave Iraq," Foreign Affairs Magazinge, October 28, 2011.
  • References

    Meghan O'Sullivan Wikipedia