Posted on Fri, Jan. 23, 2004
Bio Box for Charles Duelfer
Associated Press
NAME - Charles A. Duelfer.
AGE - 51.
EDUCATION - B.A., University of Connecticut; M.S. Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
EXPERIENCE - Oversaw Defense Department nuclear and space programs at the Office of Management and Budget, 1977-1983; regional director, State Department Politico-Military Bureau, 1983; director, Office of International Security Policy, 1984-1985; director, Center for Defense Trade, 1990-1992; director, State Department Task Force in support of Desert Storm, 1991; deputy executive chairman, United Nations Special Commission on Iraq, 1993-2000.
QUOTE -
"My goal is to find out what happened on the ground, what is the status on the Iraqi weapons programs, what was their game plan, what were the goals of the regime." http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/news/breaking_news/7782785.htmCharles Duelfer is currently a visiting resident scholar at the
CSIS*. He served as the deputy executive chairman of the UN Special Commission on Iraq (UNSCOM) from 1993 until its termination in 2000.
For the last several months of its existence he was the acting chairman. The commission was established following the Gulf War by the UN Security Council and charged with eliminating Iraq's weapons of mass destruction as well as monitoring Iraq to assure such activities are not restarted. Before joining the commission, he was deputy assistant secretary of state for arms control and multilateral defense matters.
From 1990 to 1992, Mr. Duelfer was in charge of defense trade matters as the director of the Center for Defense Trade and deputy to the assistant secretary of state for politico-military affairs. In this capacity he had responsibility for arms transfers, munitions licensing, and conventional arms control.
From January to March 1991 he was tasked with directing the State Department's Task Force in support of Desert Storm. Mr. Duelfer first joined the Politico-Military Bureau of the State Department in 1983 and was responsible for special regional activities (conflicts in Chad, Libya, and Grenada), as well as ongoing strategic verification, space and strategic defense issues.
In 1984, he became deputy director of the Office of International Security Policy and was responsible for European, African, and Latin American regions. He became director, with responsibility for regional security issues worldwide, in 1985. During this period, Mr. Duelfer also worked with the special coordinator for counterterrorism to develop, implement, and exercise the State Department's terrorism response system.
Before joining the Department of State, Mr. Duelfer worked at the White House Office of Management and Budget (1977-1983), where he was responsible for Department of Defense strategic nuclear forces and space programs. Prior to entering government service, he worked in the private sector with the Foundation Institute on a commercial space launch vehicle. He holds a B.A. from the University of Connecticut and a M.Sc. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
http://www.csis.org/experts/4duelfer.htm*Neo-cons appear to run CSISBoard of Trustees
Chairman
Sam Nunn*
Chairman and CEO, Nuclear Threat Initiative
Vice Chairman
David M. Abshire
President, Center for the Study of the Presidency,
and Cofounder of CSIS
Chairman, Executive Committee
Anne Armstrong*
Former U.S. Ambassador to Great Britain
Members
Betty Stanley Beene
Kenneth G. Langone
Reginald K. Brack
Donald B. Marron
William E. Brock
E. Stanley O'Neal
Harold Brown
Felix G. Rohatyn
Zbigniew Brzezinski
Charles A. Sanders
William S. Cohen
James R. Schlesinger
Ralph Cossa
William A. Schreyer*
Douglas N. Daft
Brent Scowcroft
Richard Fairbanks
Murray Weidenbaum
Michael P. Galvin*
Dolores D. Wharton
John J. Hamre*
Frederick B. Whittemore
Benjamin W. Heinman, Jr.
R. James Woolsey
Carla A. Hills
Amos A. Jordan, (Emeritus)
Ray L. Hunt
Leonard H. Marks, (Emeritus)
Henry A. Kissinger
Robert S. Strauss, (Emeritus)
*Member of the Executive Committee
Counselors
William E. Brock
Henry A. Kissinger
Harold Brown
Sam Nunn
Zbigniew Brzezinski
James R. Schlesinger
William S. Cohen
Brent Scowcroft
Richard Fairbanks
Senior Advisers
J. Carter Beese
John Kornblum
Bradley D. Belt
Robert H. Kupperman
James M. Bodner
Charles Manatt
Stanton H. Burnett
Laurence Martin
Richard R. Burt
David McCurdy
Wesley K. Clark ... Presidential candidate
Thomas F. (Mack) McLarty (Kissinger Associates partner and Acxiom Board member)
William K. Clark, Jr.
Laurence H. Meyer (Distinguished Visiting Scholar)
Kenneth Courtis
Arthur Money
Arnaud de Borchgrave
Thomas Pickering (Distinguished Senior Adviser)
is this the backdoor judge???
Diana Lady Dougan
Joseph W. Ralston (Distinguished Senior Adviser)
Robert J. Einhorn
J. Stapleton Roy (Distinguished Senior Adviser)
Michele Flournoy
Robert Tyrer
Louis J. Freeh
Walter Slocombe
Luis E. Giusti
Anne Solomon
Fred C. Iklé (Distinguished Scholar in Residence)
Robert Tyrer
Amos A. Jordan
Dale Watson
Anthony Zinni (Distinguished Senior Adviser)
http://csis.org/about/index.htm#4Charles Duelfer Warns on Inspections
Beware of Saddam's tricks, UN arms inspector warned
(September 30, 2002)
By David Wastell
Diplomatic Correspondent
The Sunday Telegraph
The United Nations weapons inspector who led the only official visits to Saddam Hussein's presidential palaces in 1998 has warned the head of the new UN team that Iraq will seek to trick him when the two sides meet in Vienna tomorrow.
Charles Duelfer, the former deputy chief inspector, said last night that he feared that Hans Blix, the chief weapons inspector, would concede too much during the discussions with Baghdad officials on practical arrangements for inspections.
In particular he fears that, without a fresh UN resolution to change the ground rules, Mr Blix will give in to Iraqi demands to restrict inspectors' access at key locations - not just the eight presidential palaces described in last week's British government dossier, but also to dozens of other "sensitive sites" around the country.
Mr Blix's team is planning to fly to Iraq on October 15 to resume the search for weapons of mass destruction - four years after the last UN attempts at inspection.
"There is a danger in the Vienna meeting," Mr Duelfer told The Sunday Telegraph. "I worry what he is going to accept in terms of procedures, implementation and other practical questions."
~snip~
http://www.iraqfoundation.org/news/2002/isept/30_duelfer.html&imgrefurl=
http://www.gulflink.osd.mil/fisher_final/fisher_final_refs/n63en085/8191_010_0000001.htm&hl=en&h=792&w=611&prev=/images%3Fq%3DCharles%2BDuelfer%26svnum%3D10%26hl%3Den%26lr%3D%26ie%3DUTF-8%26oe%3DUTF-8%26sa%3DN