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The Alaska
World Affairs Council
Presents
Barbara
Slavin

Former
Assistant Managing Editor
for
the Washington Times,
responsible for
world and national security
news
“The
Crisis In The U.S. Media And
The Disappearing Foreign
Correspondent"
Event Supported by the
Alaska Humanities Forum

Friday,
26th March, 2010 – Hilton
Hotel
Doors open at 11:30 a.m. -
Program begins at 12:00 p.m.
For Reservations
RSVP by Wednesday, 24th
March to the Alaska World
Affairs Council
by telephone 276-8038 or by
email to
AlaskaWorldAffairs.org
.
Lunch Program $20 for
Members - $25 for
Non-Members - $6 for Coffee
Only Barbara
Slavin is Assistant Managing
Editor for World and
National Security of The
Washington Times and the
author of a 2007 book on
Iran entitled "Bitter
Friends, Bosom Enemies:
Iran, the U.S. and the
Twisted Path to
Confrontation.” Prior to
joining The Times in July
2008, she was senior
diplomatic reporter for USA
TODAY, responsible for
analyzing foreign news and
U.S. foreign policy.
Beginning in 1996, she
covered such key issues as
the U.S.-led war on
terrorism and in Iraq,
policy toward "rogue" states
and the Arab-Israeli
conflict. She accompanied
three secretaries of State
on their official travels
and also reported from Iran,
Libya, Israel, Egypt, North
Korea, Russia, China, Saudi
Arabia and Syria. Ms. Slavin,
who has lived in Russia,
China, Japan and Egypt, is a
regular commentator on U.S.
foreign policy on National
Public Radio, the Public
Broadcasting System and
C-Span. She wrote her book
on Iran, which she has
visited seven times, as a
public policy scholar at the
Woodrow Wilson International
Center for Scholars in 2006
and spent October 2007-July
2008 as senior fellow at the
U.S. Institute of Peace,
where she researched and
wrote a report on Iranian
regional influence, entitled
“Mullahs, Money and
Militias: How Iran Exerts
Its Influence in the Middle
East.”
Prior to
joining USA TODAY, she was a
Washington-based writer for
The Economist and the Los
Angeles Times, covering
domestic and foreign policy
issues, including the
1991-93 Middle East peace
talks in Washington. From
1985-89, she was The
Economist correspondent in
Cairo. She traveled widely
in the Middle East, covering
the Iran-Iraq war, the 1986
U.S. bombing of Libya, the
political evolution of the
Palestine Liberation
Organization and the
resurgence of Islamic
fundamentalism. Earlier in
the 1980s, she served as The
Economist correspondent in
Beijing and also reported
from Japan and South Korea.
Prior to moving abroad, she
was a writer and editor for
The New York Times Week in
Review section and a
reporter and editor for
United Press International
in New York City. She got
her BA in Russian language
and literature at Harvard
University and also studied
at Leningrad State
University. She is a member
of the Council on Foreign
Relations. |