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Past Event

A CENTER ON THE UNITED STATES AND EUROPE EVENT

Strategies for Engagement: 2009 CUSE Annual Conference

Europe, Iran, Russia, Terrorism, Diplomacy


Event Summary

President Barack Obama has established a broad policy of engagement as a central feature of his administration’s foreign policy agenda. From the earliest days of his presidency, the president has reached out to Iran, Russia and other nations around the world, marking not only a turning of the page but possibly a whole new chapter in U.S. foreign policy. While Europeans have advocated for increased bi-lateral and multi-lateral dialogue for some time, several important questions remain. With which nations or groups should the United States and Europe engage and should there be limits to dialogue in some cases? What are the consequences if dialogue fails? Do Europeans and Americans now have the same agenda and goals for engagement?

Event Information

When

Friday, May 29, 2009
9:00 AM to 3:30 PM

Where

Falk Auditorium
The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC
Map

Contact: Brookings Office of Communications

E-mail: events@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

On May 29, the Center on the United States and Europe at Brookings (CUSE) will host experts and officials from both sides of the Atlantic for the 2009 CUSE Annual Conference to address these issues. Panelists will examine the prospect of engagement with Iran and Russia, and how to deal with groups such as Hamas and the Taliban. After each panel, participants will take audience questions.

Transcript

STEVEN PIFER:  Barack Obama and his administration are making a large investment of time in the transatlantic relationship.  The President goes to Europe next week. He goes to Europe again in July, so that means he will travel to Europe three times in his first six months in office. The Vice President last week returned already from his third trip to Europe. So there's a significant amount of engagement by the President and the Vice President in getting the transatlantic relationship right. This level of engagement reflect several things: first of all, the importance that's attached here to the transatlantic relationship; second, a recognition here in Washington that the United States needs Europe as a strong and willing partner in tackling key international challenges; and third, a hope that engagement with Europe will produce common policies and cooperative action.

Certainly, there are a wide range of challenges on the agenda: the global financial and economic crisis; nuclear proliferation; Iran; terrorism; climate change; relations with an assertive Russia.  And the question for the transatlantic relationship is: Can we turn this positive feeling, this commitment on both sides to engagement and consultation, into close coordination that yields common policies. And then once we have common policies, are we prepared to devote the energy, the resources, and sometimes the manpower to implement those policies successfully.

The answer to that question will tell us much about the future of the transatlantic relationship.  If the answer is yes, we can see a more solid, closer relationship.  If the answer is no, it will give rise to questions about continuing that relationship. 

Today, we want in this conference to look at several of the key challenges before the United States and Europe: the challenge of Iran and its nuclear ambitions; the challenge of an assertive Russia; and the challenge of how to cope with terrorism. What we hope to do is identify not only areas where U.S.-European cooperation can flourish, but also to discuss some of those areas where, because of different perspectives on the two sides of the Atlantic, it may be that some extra work is necessary to ensure that the United States and Europe can be on the same page.

Participants

Welcome and Introduction

Steven Pifer

Acting Director, Center on the United States and Europe

Panel 1: U.S. and European Approaches to Engaging with Iran

Moderator: Justin Vaisse

Senior Fellow, Foreign Policy

Pierre Levy

Director, Policy Planning, French Ministry of Foreign Affairs

Robert Kagan

Senior Associate, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

Roberto Toscano

Italian Ambassador to India, Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs

Suzanne Maloney

Senior Fellow, Foreign Policy, Saban Center for Middle East Policy

Panel 2: U.S. and European Approaches to Engaging with Russia

Moderator: Steven Pifer

Acting Director, Center on the United States and Europe

Angela Stent

Director, Center for Eurasian, Russian and East European Studies, Georgetown University

Rolf Nikel

Deputy National Security Advisor, Office of the German Chancellor

Strobe Talbott

President, The Brookings Institution

Audrius Bruzga

Ambassador of the Republic of Lithuania

Buffet Lunch

Panel 3: U.S. and European Approaches to Engaging Against Terrorism

Moderator: Jeremy Shapiro

Fellow and Director of Research, Center on the United States and Europe

Vanda Felbab-Brown

Fellow, Foreign Policy

Gideon Rachman

Chief Foreign Affairs Columnist, Financial Times

Olivier Roy

Director of Research, French National Center for Scientific Research

Tamara Cofman Wittes

Director, Middle East Democracy and Development Project


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